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Development of an evidence-based ESCALATION system for recognition and response to paediatric clinical deterioration
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Development of an evidence-based ESCALATION system for recognition and response to paediatric clinical deterioration

Fenella Gill, Alannah Cooper, Pania Falconer, Scott Stokes and Gavin D Leslie
Australian critical care, Vol.35(6), pp.668-676
2022
PMID: 34711495

Abstract

Critical Care Medicine General & Internal Medicine Life Sciences & Biomedicine Nursing Science & Technology
Aim: The aim of this study was to develop an evidence-based paediatric early warning system for infants and children that takes into consideration a variety of paediatric healthcare contexts and addresses barriers to escalation of care. Methods: A three-stage intervention development framework consisted of Stage 1: evidence review, benchmarking, stakeholder (health professionals, decision-makers, and health consumers) engagement, and consultation; Stage 2: planning and coproduction by the researchers and stakeholders using action research cycles; and Stage 3: prototyping and testing. Results: A prototype evidence-based system incorporated human factor principles, used a structured approach to patient assessment, promoted situational awareness, and included family as well as clinician concern. Family involvement in detecting changes in their child's condition was supported by posters and flyers codesigned with health consumers. Five age-specific observation and response charts included 10 weighted variables and one unweighted variable (temperature) to convey a composite early warning score. The escalation pathway was supported by a targeted communication framework (iSoBAR NOW). Conclusion: The development process resulted in an agreed uniform ESCALATION system incorporating a whole-system approach to promote critical thinking, situational awareness for the early recognition of paediatric clinical deterioration as well as timely and effective escalation of care. Incorporating family involvement was a novel component of the system.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

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#3 Good Health and Well-Being

Source: InCites

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.154 Assisted Ventilation
1.154.1088 Intensive Care
Web Of Science research areas
Critical Care Medicine
Nursing
ESI research areas
Clinical Medicine
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