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1.
Case Rep Pediatr ; 2022: 5135456, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35677568

ABSTRACT

Carbamazepine is a common anticonvulsant medication used to treat seizure disorders and is generally considered a safe medication. We describe the case of a 9-year-old female who presented with acute altered mental status and respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation. She was found to be intoxicated with carbamazepine through a urine drug test which was confirmed by bloodwork. After her medical condition improved, the patient admitted to self-injury through ingestion to cope with the death of a family member. She received a complete psychiatric assessment and was eventually discharged without permanent neurologic sequelae. To our knowledge, this is the first case of intentional self-injury with carbamazepine intoxication in an elementary school-aged child. When intoxication is suspected in children presenting with altered mental status, all medications available at home should be investigated. Preadolescent children may engage in nonfatal self-injury behavior, and diagnosis requires a high index of suspicion.

2.
Pediatr Emerg Care ; 38(4): e1229-e1232, 2022 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35358151

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Transitions of care are a well-identified source of adverse events. At our academic tertiary children's hospital, no standardized verbal handoff is used in the emergency department with a lack of education provided to clinicians on handoff. We aimed to increase the percent of handoffs from the pediatric emergency department to inpatient medical services including 7 critical elements and increase clinician score of individual handoffs and overall clinician satisfaction with handoff key components. METHODS: Study occurred from Fall 2017 through Winter 2019. After collecting baseline data, a modified I-PASS tool was visually integrated into work areas. Tool education was performed by brief lecture, with iterative education occurring cyclically. Handoff assessment and clinician satisfaction surveys were then recollected. Outcome measures included clinician scores of individual handoffs and overall satisfaction with handoff. Process measure was percent handoffs including 7 critical elements. Balancing measure was handoff length in minutes. RESULTS: Clinician satisfaction scores improved from baseline (response rate, 38%) to postintervention (response rate, 30%) in efficiency (57%-69%), detail (57%-66%), and safety (55%-64%). Clinician scores of individual handoffs improved from 66% rating very good or excellent at baseline to 77% postintervention. Handoff time did not increase. Percent handoffs with all 7 critical elements did not show improvement. CONCLUSIONS: Trainee-led implementation of handoff standardization increased clinician satisfaction and clinician score of individual handoffs without compromising handoff length. Although feasibility can be a challenge, trainee-led quality improvement is meaningful and should be promoted and valued in graduate medical education, despite limitations.


Subject(s)
Patient Handoff , Child , Emergency Service, Hospital , Hospitals, Pediatric , Humans , Inpatients , Quality Improvement
4.
Clin Pediatr (Phila) ; 59(4-5): 369-374, 2020 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31976762

ABSTRACT

Summer camps have a unique supervisory environment that may lead to increased head injury risk for children. The epidemiology of head injuries in camps is unclear. We partnered with CampDoc.com to review head injury reports from camp nurses in 2016 from 197 camps in 36 states. A total of 4290 (92%) reports were coded as definite head injuries, 47% (n = 2002) in female campers, with median camper age of 10 years. Head injury severity was coded as mild (94%, n = 4040), moderate (6%, n = 248), or severe (<1%, n = 2). Only 3% (n = 134) were medically evaluated, and 29% (n = 1221) were sports-related. Head injuries were categorized as definite (3%, n = 137) and probable (13%, n = 572) concussions, with 39% (n = 277) being sports-related and 61% (n = 83) of definite concussions incurred by female campers. Summer camps, while an important location of head injury risk, appear to be a safe environment for youth.


Subject(s)
Camping , Craniocerebral Trauma/classification , Craniocerebral Trauma/epidemiology , Adolescent , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Risk Factors , Severity of Illness Index , United States/epidemiology
5.
J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract ; 8(4): 1247-1252.e1, 2020 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31770654

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Training of camp staff to recognize and treat anaphylaxis is recommended because food allergies are prevalent among summer campers. The frequency of food allergy anaphylaxis events and the extent of anaphylaxis training for camp staff are unknown. OBJECTIVE: To estimate the frequency of food-allergic reactions in camps across the United States and to assess the state of food allergy anaphylaxis training for camp staff. METHODS: We partnered with CampDoc.com to send a 20-question survey in February 2016 to camp leadership representing 528 camps. Questions addressed demographic characteristics, food allergy policies, training, medication availability, anaphylaxis events, and confidence in staff to recognize and treat anaphylaxis. RESULTS: A total of 559 responses were received, representing 258 camps. The majority surveyed (n = 529 [94.6%]) reported food-allergic children attending their camps. Only 47.6% (n = 266) respondents reported requiring individualized emergency action plans as required for camper attendance. Anaphylaxis treated with epinephrine was reported by 24% (n = 134) of leadership within the previous 2 years at their camp. These respondents were more likely to have a training session for staff (odds ratio, 2.46; 95% CI, 1.4-4.3). A total of 63.3% (n = 354) reported training session presence. However, 15.6% (n = 87) of leadership were unsatisfied with training materials and one-third were not confident in staff to manage anaphylaxis. CONCLUSIONS: Appropriate policies to manage food anaphylaxis events and anaphylaxis management training were missing in a substantial proportion of camps. Camp-tailored food allergy training is needed given the number of camps reporting food allergy reactions requiring epinephrine.


Subject(s)
Anaphylaxis , Food Hypersensitivity , Anaphylaxis/epidemiology , Anaphylaxis/therapy , Child , Epinephrine/therapeutic use , Food Hypersensitivity/epidemiology , Food Hypersensitivity/therapy , Humans , Leadership , Surveys and Questionnaires , United States/epidemiology
6.
Health Secur ; 15(5): 463-472, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28937791

ABSTRACT

School absenteeism is an inefficient and unspecific metric for measuring community illness and does not provide surveillance during summertime. Web-based biosurveillance of childcare centers may represent a novel way to efficiently monitor illness outbreaks year-round. A web-based biosurveillance program ( sickchildcare.org ) was created and implemented in 4 childcare centers in a single Michigan county. Childcare providers were trained to report sick children who required exclusion or had parent-reported absences due to illness. Deidentified data on age range, number of illnesses, and illness categories were collected. Weekly electronic reports were sent to the county public health department. Data for reports were gathered beginning in December 2013 and were summarized using descriptive statistics. A total of 385 individual episodes of illness occurred during the study period. Children with reported illness were infants (16%, n = 61), toddlers (38%, n = 148), and preschoolers (46%, n = 176). Illness categories included: fever (30%, n = 116), gastroenteritis (30%, n = 115), influenzalike illness (8%, n = 32), cold without fever (13%, n = 51), rash (7%, n = 26), conjunctivitis (1%, n = 3), ear infection (1%, n = 5), and other (10%, n = 37). The majority of reports were center exclusions (55%, n = 214); others were absences (45%, n = 171). The detection of a gastroenteritis outbreak by web-based surveillance during winter 2013-14 preceded county health reports by 3 weeks; an additional outbreak of hand-foot-mouth disease was detected during June 2014 when standard school-based surveillance was not available. Web-based biosurveillance of illness in childcare centers represents a novel and feasible method to detect disease trends earlier and year-round compared to standard school-based disease surveillance.


Subject(s)
Child Day Care Centers/statistics & numerical data , Communicable Diseases/epidemiology , Population Surveillance/methods , Absenteeism , Biosurveillance/methods , Child, Preschool , Disease Outbreaks , Gastroenteritis/epidemiology , Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease/epidemiology , Humans , Infant , Internet , Michigan/epidemiology
7.
J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract ; 5(2): 358-362, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27923649

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Pediatric campers with food allergies are at greater risk for exposure and anaphylaxis. A diagnosis of asthma increases risk for anaphylaxis. Epidemiological investigations of food-allergic children at high risk for allergic reactions requiring intervention in camp settings are lacking. OBJECTIVE: The objectives of this study were to estimate the prevalence of food allergies among otherwise healthy campers in summer camps throughout the United States and Canada, and to assess asthma comorbidity and determine rates of epinephrine autoinjector prescriptions present in this population. METHODS: We partnered with CampDoc.com, a web-based camp electronic health record system. Deidentified data were abstracted from 170 camps representing 122,424 campers. Only food allergies with a parental report of symptoms requiring intervention or with a camp prescription for an epinephrine autoinjector were included, whereas gluten, lactose intolerance, and food dyes were excluded. Asthma status and epinephrine presence on the camp medication list were assessed. RESULTS: Overall, 2.5% of campers (n = 3055) had documented food allergies. Of these campers, 22% had multiple food allergies. Median age was 11 years; 52% were female. Nuts (81%), seafood (17.4%), egg (8.5%), fruit (8.1%), and seeds (7.2%) were the top 5 food allergies reported. Of food-allergic campers, 44.3% had concurrent asthma and 34.7% of those campers were taking multiple asthma medications. Less than half (39.7%) of food-allergic children brought an epinephrine autoinjector to the camp. CONCLUSIONS: Life-saving epinephrine is not necessarily available for food-allergic children in camp settings. A substantial proportion of food-allergic campers are at higher risk for anaphylaxis based on concurrent asthma status.


Subject(s)
Anaphylaxis/epidemiology , Asthma/epidemiology , Epinephrine/administration & dosage , Food Hypersensitivity/epidemiology , Anaphylaxis/prevention & control , Camping , Canada/epidemiology , Child , Electronic Health Records , Female , Humans , Injections , Male , Play and Playthings , Population Groups , Prevalence , Risk , Self Medication , United States/epidemiology
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