AI Article Synopsis

  • There has been an increase in urgent pediatric hospital admissions, necessitating the need for community-based interventions aimed at reducing emergency department visits and urgent hospitalizations.
  • A systematic review analyzed literature on various interventions such as reconfiguration of staff roles, telemedicine, pathways of urgent care, and point-of-care testing, finding mixed results on their effectiveness in reducing hospital admissions and ED visits.
  • The study concludes that new outpatient models for urgent pediatric care are essential and should be implemented and evaluated promptly.

Article Abstract

Background: There has been a rise in urgent paediatric hospital admissions and interventions to address this are required.

Objective: To systemically review the literature describing community (or non-hospital)-based interventions designed to reduce emergency department (ED) visits or urgent hospital admissions.

Data Sources: MEDLINE, Embase, OVIS SP, PsycINFO, Science Citation Index Expanded/ISI Web of Science (1981-present), the Cochrane Library database and the Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effectiveness.

Study Eligibility Criteria: Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and before-and-after studies.

Participants: Individuals aged <16 years.

Study Appraisal And Synthesis Methods: Papers were independently reviewed by two researchers. Data extraction and the Critical Appraisals Skills Programme checklist was completed (for risk of bias assessment).

Results: Seven studies were identified. Three studies were RCTs, three were a comparison between non-randomised groups and one was a before-and-after study. Interventions were reconfiguration of staff roles (two papers), telemedicine (three papers), pathways of urgent care (one paper) and point-of-care testing (one paper). Reconfiguration of staff roles resulted in reduction in ED visits in one study (with a commensurate increase in general practitioner visits) but increased hospital admissions from ED in a second. Telemedicine was associated with a reduction in children's admissions in one study and reduced ED admissions in two further studies. Interventions with pathways of care and point-of-care testing did not impact either ED visits or urgent admissions.

Conclusions And Implications: New out-of-hospital models of urgent care for children need to be introduced and evaluated without delay.

Prospero Registration Number: CRD42021274374.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2022-324986DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

urgent paediatric
8
paediatric hospital
8
hospital admissions
8
interventions primary
4
primary community
4
community care
4
care reduce
4
reduce urgent
4
admissions systematic
4
systematic review
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!