1. Pediatric Readiness in the Emergency Department
- Author
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Katherine Remick, Marianne Gausche-Hill, Madeline M. Joseph, Kathleen Brown, Sally K. Snow, Joseph L. Wright, Joseph Wright, Terry Adirim, Michael S.D. Agus, James Callahan, Toni Gross, Natalie Lane, Lois Lee, Suzan Mazor, Prashant Mahajan, Nathan Timm, Kiyetta Alade, Christopher Amato, Jahn T. Avarello, Steven Baldwin, Isabel A. Barata, Lee S. Benjamin, Kathleen Berg, Jeffrey Bullard-Berent, Ann Marie Dietrich, Phillip Friesen, Michael Gerardi, Alan Heins, Doug K. Holtzman, Jeffrey Homme, Timothy Horeczko, Paul Ishimine, Samuel Lam, Katharine Long, Kurtis Mayz, Sanjay Mehta, Larry Mellick, Aderonke Ojo, Audrey Z. Paul, Denis R. Pauze, Nadia M. Pearson, Debra Perina, Emory Petrack, David Rayburn, Emily Rose, W. Scott Russell, Timothy Ruttan, Mohsen Saidinejad, Brian Sanders, Joelle Simpson, Patrick Solari, Michael Stoner, Jonathan H. Valente, Jessica Wall, Dina Wallin, Muhammad Waseem, Paula J. Whiteman, Dale Woolridge, Tiffany Young, Joyce Foresman-Capuzzi, Rose Johnson, Heather Martin, Justin Milici, Cam Brandt, and Nicholas Nelson
- Subjects
Pediatric Readiness in the Emergency Department ,Emergency Medical Services ,Quality management ,Emergency Nursing ,Pediatrics ,Health Services Accessibility ,Evidence-Based Emergency Medicine ,0302 clinical medicine ,Emergency medical services ,Medicine ,Child ,Trauma care ,Quality Improvement ,Organizational Principles to Guide and Define the Child Health Care System and/or Improve the Health of All Children ,Community hospital ,Organizational Policy ,EMERGENCY NURSES ASSOCIATION, Pediatric Committee ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Emergency Medicine ,Health Resources ,AMERICAN COLLEGE OF EMERGENCY PHYSICIANS, Pediatric Emergency Medicine Committee ,Medical emergency ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Psychosocial ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Resource (biology) ,AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS, Committee on Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Section on Surgery ,Child health care ,Clinical Sciences ,MEDLINE ,Institute of medicine ,Emergency treatment ,03 medical and health sciences ,Pediatric emergency medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,Humans ,Emergency Treatment ,Quality Indicators, Health Care ,Quality of Health Care ,Patient Care Team ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,business.industry ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,United States ,Family medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,POLICY STATEMENT ,business - Abstract
This is a revision of the previous joint Policy Statement titled “Guidelines for Care of Children in the Emergency Department.” Children have unique physical and psychosocial needs that are heightened in the setting of serious or life-threatening emergencies. The majority of children who are ill and injured are brought to community hospital emergency departments (EDs) by virtue of proximity. It is therefore imperative that all EDs have the appropriate resources (medications, equipment, policies, and education) and capable staff to provide effective emergency care for children. In this Policy Statement, we outline the resources necessary for EDs to stand ready to care for children of all ages. These recommendations are consistent with the recommendations of the Institute of Medicine (now called the National Academy of Medicine) in its report “The Future of Emergency Care in the US Health System.” Although resources within emergency and trauma care systems vary locally, regionally, and nationally, it is essential that ED staff, administrators, and medical directors seek to meet or exceed these recommendations to ensure that high-quality emergency care is available for all children. These updated recommendations are intended to serve as a resource for clinical and administrative leadership in EDs as they strive to improve their readiness for children of all ages.
- Published
- 2019