American journal of diseases of children (1960)
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Outpatient oral rehydration in the United States.
Twenty-nine dehydrated, well-nourished infants, who were 3 to 24 months of age and had acute gastroenteritis, were enrolled in a prospective randomized study that compared the safety, efficacy, and costs of oral vs intravenous rehydration. The study was designed to assess the use of a holding room in the emergency room for the outpatient rehydration of dehydrated infants. The oral solution that was used contained 60 mEq/L of sodium, 20 mEq/L of potassium, 50 mEq/L of chloride, 30 mEq/L of citrate, 20 g/L of glucose, and 5 g/L of fructose. ⋯ Outpatient oral rehydration therapy was significantly less costly than inpatient intravenous therapy (+272.78 vs +2,299.50). Our results indicate that oral rehydration is a safe and cost-effective means of treating dehydrated children in an outpatient setting in the United States. The use of a holding room for observation in the emergency room can markedly decrease health care costs and unnecessary hospitalizations.
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This study evaluates emergency room (ER) triage at a large urban children's hospital, in which patients are routinely referred outside of the institution for care. Seven hundred forty-eight children from 1 week to 17 years of age were enrolled in the study over a six-week period. Nearly two thirds (61%) of the patients were sent outside of the hospital for care; 31% of the patients were sent to community health centers, 17% were sent to private physicians' offices, 13% were sent home (self-care), and only 9% were treated in the ER. ⋯ The physician's diagnosis agreed with the triage nurse's diagnosis or was less serious than the nurse's diagnosis in 93.4% of patients. At two weeks after triage, nearly all patients had completely recovered, with no correlation of symptoms with level or site of care. This study indicates that nurse triage of pediatric walk-in patients, in which three of five patients are referred outside of the hospital for care, is a safe and effective alternative to care in the ER and, at the same time, serves to reinforce community health centers as the appropriate setting for primary care.