Centre for Global Child Health, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Cuidados Intensivos Pediátricos Especializados, Casa de Galicia, Montevideo, Uruguay.
Crit Care Med. 2021 Apr 1;49(4):671-681. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000004769.
To describe the infrastructure and resources for pediatric emergency and critical care delivery in resource-limited settings worldwide.
Cross-sectional survey with survey items developed through literature review and revised following piloting.
The electronic survey was disseminated internationally in November 2019 via e-mail directories of pediatric intensive care societies and networks and using social media.
Healthcare providers who self-identified as working in resource-limited settings.
None.
Results were summarized using descriptive statistics and resource availability was compared across World Bank country income groups. We received 328 responses (238 hospitals, 60 countries), predominantly in Latin America and Sub-Saharan Africa (n = 161, 67.4%). Hospitals were in low-income (28, 11.7%), middle-income (166, 69.5%), and high-income (44, 18.4%) countries. Across 174 PICU and adult ICU admitting children, there were statistically significant differences in the proportion of hospitals reporting consistent resource availability ("often" or "always") between country income groups (p < 0·05). Resources with limited availability in lower income countries included advanced ventilatory support, invasive and noninvasive monitoring, central venous access, renal replacement therapy, advanced imaging, microbiology, biochemistry, blood products, antibiotics, parenteral nutrition, and analgesic/sedative drugs. Seventy-seven ICUs (52.7%) were staffed 24/7 by a pediatric intensivist or anesthetist. The nurse-to-patient ratio was less than 1:2 in 71 ICUs (49.7%).
Contemporary data demonstrate significant disparity in the availability of essential and advanced human and material resources for the care of critically ill children in resource-limited settings. Minimum standards for essential pediatric emergency and critical care in resource-limited settings are needed.
描述全球资源有限环境下儿科急诊和危重症治疗的基础设施和资源情况。
通过文献回顾制定调查项目并进行试点修订后,开展横断面调查。
2019 年 11 月,通过儿科重症监护学会和网络的电子邮件名录以及社交媒体在国际范围内发布电子调查。
自我报告在资源有限环境中工作的医疗保健提供者。
无。
使用描述性统计方法总结结果,并比较世界银行收入组国家的资源可用性。我们共收到 328 份回复(238 家医院,60 个国家),主要来自拉丁美洲和撒哈拉以南非洲(n=161,67.4%)。医院分布在低收入(28 家,11.7%)、中等收入(166 家,69.5%)和高收入(44 家,18.4%)国家。在 174 家收治儿童的儿科重症监护病房和成人重症监护病房中,报告资源可用性(“经常”或“总是”)的医院在国家收入组之间存在统计学显著差异(p<0·05)。在收入较低的国家,有限的资源包括高级通气支持、有创和无创监测、中心静脉通路、肾脏替代治疗、高级影像学、微生物学、生物化学、血液制品、抗生素、肠外营养和镇痛/镇静药物。77 家 ICU(52.7%)由儿科重症医师或麻醉师 24/7 轮班。71 家 ICU(49.7%)的护士与患者比例小于 1:2。
目前的数据表明,资源有限环境下,重症患儿治疗所需的基本和高级人力及物力资源存在显著差异。需要制定资源有限环境下基本儿科急诊和危重症治疗的最低标准。