From the Division of Emergency Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA.
Pediatr Emerg Care. 2024 Aug 1;40(8):e120-e125. doi: 10.1097/PEC.0000000000003133. Epub 2024 Feb 14.
We sought to describe patterns of and indications for surgical specialty consultation for facial laceration repair in pediatric emergency departments (PEDs).
We performed a multicenter survey of PED leadership throughout the United States and Canada evaluating the practice patterns of surgical specialty consultation for patients presenting for facial lacerations requiring repair. We measured demographics of PEDs, factors influencing the decision to obtain a surgical specialty consultation, and the presence and components of consultation guidelines. Factors related to consultation were ranked on a Likert scale from 1 to 5 (1 = Not at all important, 5 = Extremely important). We evaluated relationships between reported rates of surgical specialty consultation and PED region, annual PED volume, and reported factors associated with PED consultation.
Survey responses were received from 67/124 (54%) queried PEDs. The median self-reported rate of surgical specialty consultation for facial lacerations was 10% and ranged from 1% to 70%, with resident physicians performing the repair 71% of the time a subspecialist was consulted. There was regional variability in specialty consultation, with the highest and lowest rate in the Midwest and Canada, respectively ( P = 0.03). The top 4 influential factors prompting consultation with the highest percentage of responses of "Extremely Important" or "Very Important" were: discretion of the physician caring for the patient (95%), parental preference (39%), limited PED resources (32%), and patient requires sedation (32%). Surgical specialty consult guidelines were used in only 6% of PEDs with consensus that depth necessitating more than 2-layer repair or involvement of critical structures should prompt consultation.
Surgical specialty usage in the management of patients who present with facial lacerations to PEDs has significant variation related to patient, provider, and department-level factors that influence the decision to consult. Lack of consult guidelines represent a potential opportunity to standardize care delivery to this common presentation.
我们旨在描述小儿急诊科(PED)面部裂伤修复中外科专业咨询的模式和指征。
我们对美国和加拿大的多个 PED 领导层进行了多中心调查,评估了因需要修复的面部裂伤而就诊的患者接受外科专业咨询的实践模式。我们测量了 PED 的人口统计学特征、影响决定获得外科专业咨询的因素,以及咨询指南的存在和组成部分。与咨询相关的因素按 1 到 5 的李克特量表进行评分(1 = 一点也不重要,5 = 极其重要)。我们评估了报告的外科专业咨询率与 PED 区域、PED 年容量以及与 PED 咨询相关的报告因素之间的关系。
共收到 124 个被调查 PED 中的 67 个(54%)的调查回复。自我报告的面部裂伤外科专业咨询率中位数为 10%,范围为 1%至 70%,当咨询顾问时,住院医师进行修复的比例为 71%。在专科咨询方面存在区域性差异,中西部和加拿大的咨询率最高和最低(P = 0.03)。促使咨询的前 4 个最有影响力的因素,其回应“非常重要”或“重要”的比例最高,分别是:照顾患者的医生的裁量权(95%)、家长偏好(39%)、PED 资源有限(32%)和患者需要镇静(32%)。只有 6%的 PED 使用外科专业咨询指南,共识是需要超过 2 层修复或涉及关键结构的深度应提示咨询。
在 PED 中管理面部裂伤患者的外科专业使用存在显著差异,这与影响咨询决策的患者、提供者和部门层面的因素有关。缺乏咨询指南代表了为这一常见就诊提供标准化护理的潜在机会。