Pediatric and neonatal critical care transport: A comparison of therapeutic interventions
OBJECTIVE:To compare the therapeutic interventions provided to newborn and pediatric patients by a dedicated combined neonatal pediatric critical care transport team. METHOD:From November 1987 through December 1989 we prospectively compared the number of therapeutic interventions performed by the cr...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Pediatric emergency care 1996-02, Vol.12 (1), p.23-26 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | OBJECTIVE:To compare the therapeutic interventions provided to newborn and pediatric patients by a dedicated combined neonatal pediatric critical care transport team.
METHOD:From November 1987 through December 1989 we prospectively compared the number of therapeutic interventions performed by the critical care transport team on newboras and pediatric patients. The transport team (critical care physician [PL3 or greater], pediatric respiratory therapist, critical care nurse), recorded all therapeutic interventions, including both procedural and pharmacologic, for 213 newborn and 149 pediatric consecutive transports. Data were analyzed by analysis of variance or x statistic.
RESULTS:All patients were admitted to either the pediatric or the neonatal intensive care unit, and over 80% of both age groups received assisted ventilation. Newborns commonly suffered from respiratory diseases (159/213), while pediatric patients suffered from respiratory (52/149), central nervous system (28/149), and traumatic conditions (37/149). Airway maintenance procedural interventions (intubation, ventilation) were the commonest in both groups, although more frequent in neonates. Neonates received antibiotics and morphine (P < 0.05) while pediatric patients received anticonvulsants and respiratory drugs (P < 0.05) more frequently. Newborns received significantly more interventions than pediatric patients (average 3.56 vs 2.93, P < 0.05). Newborns also received significantly more procedural interventions (2.06 vs 1.36, P= |
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ISSN: | 0749-5161 1535-1815 |
DOI: | 10.1097/00006565-199602000-00007 |