Abstract

Pediatrics Critical Care/Emergency Care: what information Must a Good Strategy Contain?

This write up on critical care and emergency care of children: What must a good strategy contain? Surrounds issues of what a critical care package should be even in resource poor settings. Pediatric critical care consists of identification of children at risk of dying or having adverse outcomes, and in need of intensive monitoring and provision of appropriate interventions. Emergency care is defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as care for the acutely ill and injured delivered by frontline providers who manage medical, surgical, and obstetric emergencies, relying on early recognition and resuscitation.

In developing countries, majority of mortalities occur due to infectious diseases which are treatable and have potential for full recovery if appropriate definitive care as well as intensive care is given to those who come critically ill. In Cameroon, maternal, child and adolescent related diseases account for 18.3% of the burden of disease and 14.4% of deaths. Some of these deaths could be prevented if there are adequate pediatric critical care facilities to handle the critically ill children. However, pediatric critical care services are largely unavailable in most developing countries. The objectives of this seminar are to describe the nursing strategies used in the critical and emergency care of children, outline parent’s expectations of the critical care/ emergency care of their children by nurses and lastly to describe healthcare managers’ responsibilities in critical care/emergency care of children. It has been observed that nursing strategies include monitoring, assessment, vital sign monitoring, ventilator management, medication administration, intravenous insertion and infusion, central line care, catheters care, maintenance of a running record of the patient’s status, performance of cardiopulmonary resuscitation and other lifesaving techniques. Parent’s expectations include guidance, reassurance and timely and comprehensive information on the progress and prognosis of critically ill children. Open visitation policy and involvement in their child’s care, while healthcare managers’ responsibilities were found to be ensuring adequate skill and knowledge among emergency services providers, and availability of pediatric critical care medications, equipment, and supplies. The results can be used to implement good critical care strategies and hence better care outcomes.


Author(s): Florence Ngoran, Mary Bi Suh Atanga

Abstract | Full-Text | PDF

Share This Article