Archives de pédiatrie : organe officiel de la Sociéte française de pédiatrie
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A ten-month-old boy presented with a severe auto-immune hemolytic anemia. Direct antiglobin test was positive only for IgA class autoantibodies. He recovered with a high dose corticosteroid treatment. ⋯ IgA class autoantibodies should be searched for in the case of a high suspicion of auto-immune hemolytic anemia with negative direct antiglobin test for IgG and complement. Corticosteroid treatment is most often successful.
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The purpose of the present study was to determine the main schedules of a visit in a paediatric emergency ward. ⋯ This study shows the main schedules of a visit in a paediatric emergency ward which took care of 26,726 children in 1999. The results of this survey confirmed that waiting before consultation, for not severe emergencies, is sometimes long or very long because of a constant increasing number of patients and their preferential breakdown according to specific periods (weekends, public or school holidays, winter) which are the result of demographic, social and economic changes. At present, the only available possibility to control both phenomena consists in adjusting and adopting medical tools and staffs to crowds and flows. This study also confirms the usefulness for paediatric emergency ward to have a short hospitalization unit.
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A retrospective survey has been conducted in the Pediatric Intensive Care Units (PICUs) affiliated to the Groupe Francophone d'Urgence et de Réanimation Pédiatrique over two years (1999 and 2000). The purpose was to determine the number of children aged from 10 days to 18 years who died from community acquired bacterial infections and to compare the data to those obtained from official surveys (statistics of death from the Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale) and from the Institut National de Veille Sanitaire as well as from punctual studies. Thirty two (60%) PICUs have participated and 100 cases of children without known risk factors, dead from community acquired documented bacterial infection have been considered for analysis (36 in 1999, 54 in 2000). ⋯ These data fit with those provided by the Institut National de Veille Sanitaire with respect to meningococcal infections and the Renacoq network with respect to pertussis, as well as the data provided by a previous GPIP survey on pneumococcal meningitis. However, the data provided by INSERM seem not to be relevant. In spite of the bias due to a retrospective study and the lack of exhaustivity, this survey provides data which could help decision making with respect to new vaccines against pneumococcus.