Pediatric emergency care
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Pediatric emergency care · Mar 2024
Clinical Outcomes of Children With COVID-19 by SARS-CoV-2 Strain: A Cohort Study.
We sought to investigate the disease outcomes and predictors of severe outcomes among children infected with the Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2 compared with pre-Delta strains. ⋯ The severity of measured disease outcomes was similar in pediatric patients when comparing children infected with the pre-Delta and Delta variants of SARS-CoV-2, even among children with comorbidities once adjusting for acuity.Ongoing research is essential to determine disease severity and risk for children with comorbidities because SARS-CoV-2 continues to mutate, including with Omicron subvariants.
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Pediatric emergency care · Mar 2024
Applying Topical Anesthetic on Pediatric Lacerations in the Emergency Department: A Quality Improvement Project.
Caring for pediatric lacerations in the emergency department (ED) is typically painful because of irrigation and suturing. To improve this painful experience, we aimed to increase the use of a topical anesthetic, Eutectic Mixture of Local Anesthetics (EMLA) on eligible pediatric lacerations with an attainable, sustainable, and measurable goal of 60%. The baseline rate of applying topical anesthetic to eligible lacerations was 23% in our ED. We aimed to increase the use of topical anesthetics on eligible pediatric lacerations to a measurable goal of 60% within 3 months of implementing our intervention. ⋯ With a few simple interventions, our aim of applying EMLA to 60% of eligible pediatric lacerations was attained and maintained.
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Pediatric emergency care · Mar 2024
ReviewVariation in the Guidelines for the Acute Management of Anaphylaxis in Pediatric Patients: An International Narrative Review.
Evidence-based guidelines have been created and disseminated by multiple organizations to standardize the care of pediatric patients with anaphylaxis. Differences across these guidelines can cause confusion and potentially errors in clinical practice leading to patient harm. The aim of this study was to describe and identify patterns of variation in the current guidelines. ⋯ Notable variation in the current guidelines for the acute management of anaphylaxis in the pediatric population was identified. Flagging this variability could help inform a consensus-based approach toward harmonization of guidelines, which in turn could streamline the management of anaphylaxis in pediatric patients across the United States, Canada, Ireland, the United Kingdom, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand, and hopefully prevent errors and mitigate patient harm.
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Pediatric emergency care · Mar 2024
Utilization of Transport Data to Decrease Unnecessarily Repeated Laboratory Tests.
In pediatric patients being transported for management of diabetic ketoacidosis, laboratory tests will frequently be trended throughout transportation and subsequently immediately repeated upon arrival to a particular institution. These laboratory tests may not add value to a patient's care trajectory and therefore may be unnecessary. This study examines differences between pH, sodium, potassium, chloride, bicarbonate, and glucose levels drawn during transportation and those drawn at our home institution immediately upon arrival to determine if repeating those laboratory tests upon arrival to the emergency department serves any purpose in adding to patient care. ⋯ Although there were some statistically significant differences between the laboratory value sets, it is arguable whether there are any clinically significant differences between them.Based on our failure to show a clinically significant difference between laboratory values drawn during transportation and those drawn immediately upon presentation to the institution, repeating laboratory draws after transportation do not add value to a patient's care trajectory. We should therefore rely on the laboratory values that were drawn from our transportation teams as part of the continuum of patient care.