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. 2002 Mar-Apr;22(2):265-7.

Quality of evaluation and management of children requiring timely orthopaedic surgery before admission to a tertiary pediatric facility

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  • PMID: 11856944

Quality of evaluation and management of children requiring timely orthopaedic surgery before admission to a tertiary pediatric facility

David L Skaggs et al. J Pediatr Orthop. 2002 Mar-Apr.

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the quality of evaluation and management of children requiring timely orthopaedic surgery before admission to a tertiary pediatric facility. A retrospective chart review was performed on 372 consecutive children who underwent orthopaedic surgery for a diagnosis of fracture, infection, slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE), or compartment syndrome during a 22-month period at the authors' facility. Of the 372 children, 142 children (38%) first received medical care elsewhere; these are the subjects of this study. Before being seen at the authors' institution, 27 children (19%) had a problem in treatment or diagnosis and 18 (13%) had a delay in diagnosis or treatment of greater than 48 hours. Problems in diagnosis included five children with unrecognized open fractures, four of whom did not receive antibiotics; six children with missed SCFE, five of whom were not made non-weight-bearing; and six missed closed fractures. Delay in treatment occurred for 15 fractures, with a mean delay of >7 days until surgical treatment. Insurance status and primary language of the family were not associated with problems or delays in treatment. Overall, 32% of children undergoing time-sensitive orthopaedic surgery at a tertiary pediatric center had problems or delays in the medical care they received before transfer.

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