Paediatric dental pain and infection during the COVID period
During the coronavirus pandemic, paediatric patients will still likely present with dental pain and infection. In order to streamline care at King's College Hospital (KCH), Paediatric Dentistry and Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery (OMFS) have developed a collaborative working approach allowing pa...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The surgeon (Edinburgh) 2021-10, Vol.19 (5), p.e270-e275 |
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Zusammenfassung: | During the coronavirus pandemic, paediatric patients will still likely present with dental pain and infection.
In order to streamline care at King's College Hospital (KCH), Paediatric Dentistry and Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery (OMFS) have developed a collaborative working approach allowing patients to be treated effectively and to streamline patient care in the absence of easy access to general anaesthetic facilities.
Presenting complaints, treatment need and the treatment received were recorded for all paediatric patients presenting with dental pain and infection in the “lockdown” period (23rd March- 14th June) during “normal” working hours and “out of hours” to either paediatric dentistry or OMFS.
420 calls were triaged which converted to 67 patients seen face-to-face for oro-facial pain and infection. 41% of children were treated successfully under Local anaesthetic alone, only 13% required a general anaesthetic (GA) in the “lockdown” period. The vast majority of patients had antibiotics prescribed prior to attendance (80%).
We have demonstrated the demographic, presenting complaints and treatment need of patients who presented to KCH during the lockdown period with dental pain and infection. The majority were able to be treated without needing for GA facilities. This paper highlights how a collaborative approach between paediatric dentistry and OMFS can help streamline patient care and is a model which can be adopted by other units in the event of further “lockdowns”.
•Paediatric patients continued to present with dental pain/infection during COVID-19.•During “lockdown”; 420 calls triaged and 67 patients treated for dental infection.•Higher percentage of paediatric patients presenting had previous antibiotics (80%).•More patients managed under LA/Inhalation sedation (57%).•Collaboration between specialties optimised care and reduced burden on secondary care. |
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ISSN: | 1479-666X 2405-5840 1479-666X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.surge.2020.12.011 |