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The impact of critically ill children on paediatric ED medication timeliness

Authors :
Jason A. Levy
Kenneth A. Michelson
Richard G. Bachur
Source :
Emergency Medicine Journal. 34:8-12
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
BMJ, 2016.

Abstract

Objectives The presence of critically ill patients may impact care for other ED patients. We sought to evaluate whether the presence of a critically ill child was associated with the time to (1) receipt of the first medication among other patients, and (2) administration of diagnosis-specific medications. Methods We performed a retrospective cohort study of all paediatric ED visits over 3 years. Patients were exposed if they arrived during the first hour of a critically ill patient's care. The primary outcome was the time from arrival to first medication administration. Secondary outcomes were time to corticosteroids in asthma and time to antibiotics for fever/neutropenia. We modelled times to medication using median regression, adjusting for demographics, arrival time and weekday, and census (number of patients in the ED). Results We analysed 170 112 visits. Median times to first medication for those exposed to 0, 1 and >1 simultaneous critically ill patients were 90 min (IQR 54–146), 96 min (IQR 58–157) and 113 min (IQR 72–166), respectively (p

Details

ISSN :
14720213 and 14720205
Volume :
34
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Emergency Medicine Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....71ac40f6ee27d55ed780bb950ed17c99
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/emermed-2016-205989