scholarly journals Mental health-related visits in a pediatric emergency department during the COVID-19 pandemic

2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Arnaud Fernandez ◽  
Morgane Gindt ◽  
Phillipe Babe ◽  
Florence Askenazy

AbstractWe aimed to describe the epidemiology of all pediatric emergency department visits (focusing on mental health-related visits versus total visits) at the University Children’s Hospital of Nice (France) from 1 January to 31 December 2020 (year of the COVID-19 pandemic) and to compare it with the earlier 3-year period. The increase in mental health-related visits (44.2%) that we observed, while total visits decreased (30.0%), suggests an impact of the pandemic on children’s and adolescents’ mental health.

2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S109-S110
Author(s):  
Jackelyn lau ◽  
Shamim Islam ◽  
Emily Polischuk

Abstract Background Up to 20% of pediatric emergency department visits result in an antimicrobial prescription. The objective of this study was to evaluate the appropriateness and dosing accuracy of antimicrobial prescriptions given at discharge from an ED of a freestanding children’s hospital. Methods Electronic medical records of patients seen in the ED at Oishei Children’s Hospital from 12 dates (3 in each of 4 seasons) were screened. All patients discharged from the ED with a prescription for an antimicrobial were included. Diagnosis, provider type, antibiotic dose per weight, duration and frequency were recorded. Appropriateness of antibiotic choice and dosing accuracy were assessed using major medical society guidelines, pharmacy references and hospital antibiograms. Antibiotic doses were considered inaccurate if >10% outside of recommended weight-based dose ranges. Results Of a total of 1733 screened patients, 12% (207) were discharged with a systemic antimicrobial prescription. The percentage of visits resulting in an antimicrobial prescription varied by season, and was highest during the winter at 19%. Amoxicillin (33% of all) and oseltamivir (15%) were most frequently prescribed. Overall, 98% of patients were prescribed the appropriate antimicrobial, but only 65% of systemic antimicrobial prescriptions had accurate dosing. Amoxicillin was dosed incorrectly in 32% of prescriptions, Figure 1, specifically being below the high-dose recommended range in 28% of otitis media (OM) and 29% of pneumonia cases. Despite being the most common diagnosis, OM was treated with accurate dosing only 57% of the time, Figure 2. Also, more than 40% of patients with UTI or pneumonia had inaccurate drug dosing. Nurse practitioners (NP) prescribed the most antibiotics. Appropriate prescribing did not vary by provider, but accuracy of dosing did; for example, NP dosing accuracy was 58%, vs. 73% for residents (p < 0.04), Figure 3. Dosing Accuracy of Antimicrobials Dosing Accuracy by Diagnosis Appropriateness and Accuracy by Prescriber Group Conclusion An eighth of pediatric ED visits resulted in an antimicrobial prescription. Inaccurate dosing occurred regularly for common infections; most notably underdosing of amoxicillin for OM and pneumonia. Education and audit related to specific drugs and providers promises to be of high stewardship impact in pediatric EDs. Disclosures All Authors: No reported disclosures


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 89 (6) ◽  
pp. 1089-1090
Author(s):  
Douglas S. Nelson

Humorous events often take place in pediatric emergency departments without being recorded. A written account of amusing situations occurring in an emergency department has been compiled over 20 years by personnel at a large urban children's hospital. Data from this reference were analyzed for humorous content and presented in the following categories: most interesting chief complaints, suspicious sounding chief complaints, favorite telephone inquiries, and illustrative cases. This study demonstrates that an emergency department may be a fertile source of medical humor. Recognition of these statements and events helps to relieve the stress of medical training and emergency department work.


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