Children Need Specialized Care In Hospital Emergency Departments
Posted on: Monday, 21 September 2009, 09:24 CDT
With onset of novel H1N1 flu, pediatric preparedness is essential
According to a recent IOM report, only 6 percent of U.S. hospital emergency departments are fully equipped to properly care for children. With high rates of novel H1N1 (swine) flu expected this winter, the time to address these deficiencies is immediate.
In a joint policy statement published in Pediatrics, "Guidelines for Care of Children in the Emergency Department," pediatric emergency medicine specialists and others provide recommendations for appropriate equipment, training, medications, and policies for pediatric emergency care.
"Children account for 20 percent of all emergency department visits, yet most hospitals are unprepared to provide appropriate care," said Joseph L. Wright, MD, MPH, Senior Vice President of the Child Health Advocacy Institute at Children's National Medical Center. "The potential widespread impact of the Novel H1N1 strain of influenza underscores the urgency to ensure that our kids receive the best care when they come to their community hospital's emergency department."
Dr. Wright is trained as a pediatric emergency medicine physician and helped write the revised policy statement, released in the journal Pediatrics. Dr. Wright was also on the Institute of Medicine committee that wrote the 2006 report, "Emergency Care for Children: Growing Pains."
Examples of appropriate care can include the size of equipment, such as tubes for intubation, as well as ready access to specialists like pediatric anesthesiologists. The existence of specific policies and procedures to address the needs of children and families, particularly in times of surge, are also critically important.
This policy statement was funded in part by the federal Emergency Medical Services for Children (EMSC) program, which, along with 21 other professional organizations, has endorsed the statement. Children's National Medical Center houses the EMSC National Resource Center, which was established in 1991 to help improve the pediatric emergency care infrastructure throughout the United States and its territories.
---
On the Net:
Related Articles
- National Children's Museum Unveils Building Design; New Space Inspires Children to Care About and Improve the World
- Aurora Health Care's Kradwell School Receives National Planetree Award
- Oregon to Vote on Children's Health Care
- Daxor Announces Publication in Journal of Emergency and Intensive Care Medicine Which States: "Measurement of Blood Volume at Bedside: New Era in Critical Care Medicine"
- Nation's Children's Hospitals Endorse Senate Bill to Address Need for Quality and Performance Measures for Children's Health Care
- Co-Developer of the Measles Vaccine, Samuel L. Katz, MD, Receives the Alfred I. duPont Award for Excellence in Children's Health Care
- Emergency Physicians' Prescribing of Asthma Controller Medications
- Press Statement on Cutting Medicaid and Children's Health Care By Eileen M. Ouellette, MD, JD, American Academy of Pediatrics President
- Screening and Interventions for Overweight in Children and Adolescents: Recommendation Statement
- Children in Care Get Extra Learning Boost
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds