Literature DB >> 11437140

Ability of hospitals to care for pediatric emergency patients.

J Athey1, J M Dean, J Ball, R Wiebe, I Melese-d'Hospital.   

Abstract

CONTEXT: The needs of children in emergency situations differ from those of adults and require special attention, yet there has been no study of the ability of U.S. hospitals to care for emergently or critically ill children.
OBJECTIVE: To estimate the distribution of pediatric services available at U.S. hospitals with emergency departments (EDs).
DESIGN: Self-report survey of 101 hospital EDs. PARTICIPANTS: Stratified probability sample of all U.S. hospitals operating EDs.
RESULTS: The majority of hospitals that usually admit pediatric patients do not have separate pediatric facilities. Hospitals without a pediatric department, ward, or trauma service usually transfer critically injured pediatric trauma patients; however, nearly 10% of hospitals without pediatric intensive care facilities admit critically injured children to their own facilities. Likewise, 7% of hospitals routinely admit pediatric patients known to require intensive care to their adult intensive care units rather than transferring the patient to a facility with pediatric intensive care facilities. Few hospitals have protocols for obtaining pediatric consultation on pediatric emergencies. Appropriately sized equipment for successful care of infants and children in an emergency situation was more likely to be missing than adult-sized equipment, and significant numbers of hospitals did not have adequate equipment to care for newborn emergencies.
CONCLUSION: Emergent and critical care of infants and children may not be well integrated and regionalized within our health care system, suggesting that there is room for improvement in the quality of care for children encountering emergent illness and trauma.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11437140     DOI: 10.1097/00006565-200106000-00005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Emerg Care        ISSN: 0749-5161            Impact factor:   1.454


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8.  Pediatric trauma primary survey performance among surgical and non-surgical pediatric providers in a Brazilian trauma center.

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9.  National survey of pediatric services available in US emergency departments.

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10.  Predicting mortality, hospital length of stay and need for surgery in pediatric trauma patients.

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