Structure and Functions of Pediatric Aerodigestive Programs: A Consensus Statement
- PMID: 29437862
- DOI: 10.1542/peds.2017-1701
Structure and Functions of Pediatric Aerodigestive Programs: A Consensus Statement
Abstract
Aerodigestive programs provide coordinated interdisciplinary care to pediatric patients with complex congenital or acquired conditions affecting breathing, swallowing, and growth. Although there has been a proliferation of programs, as well as national meetings, interest groups and early research activity, there is, as of yet, no consensus definition of an aerodigestive patient, standardized structure, and functions of an aerodigestive program or a blueprint for research prioritization. The Delphi method was used by a multidisciplinary and multi-institutional panel of aerodigestive providers to obtain consensus on 4 broad content areas related to aerodigestive care: (1) definition of an aerodigestive patient, (2) essential construct and functions of an aerodigestive program, (3) identification of aerodigestive research priorities, and (4) evaluation and recognition of aerodigestive programs and future directions. After 3 iterations of survey, consensus was obtained by either a supermajority of 75% or stability in median ranking on 33 of 36 items. This included a standard definition of an aerodigestive patient, level of participation of specific pediatric disciplines in a program, essential components of the care cycle and functions of the program, feeding and swallowing assessment and therapy, procedural scope and volume, research priorities and outcome measures, certification, coding, and funding. We propose the first consensus definition of the aerodigestive care model with specific recommendations regarding associated personnel, infrastructure, research, and outcome measures. We hope that this may provide an initial framework to further standardize care, develop clinical guidelines, and improve outcomes for aerodigestive patients.
Copyright © 2018 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Conflict of interest statement
POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST: Drs Deboer, Prager, Friedlander, and Deterding are co-founders (Secretary, Treasurer, President, and Vice-President, respectively) and board members of Triple Endoscopy, Inc. They are also co-inventors with University of Colorado on Patent Cooperation Treaty application “Pediatric Nasal Endoscope PCT/US16/39352.” They have not received funding from these entities for this project or at the time of the writing of this manuscript; Dr Rutter serves as consultant to Bryan Medical, which produces and markets an airway balloon of his patent. This is unrelated to the current study and he receives no revenue from this stent; Dr Gold has received grants and funding from Johnson and Johnson, Takeda Pharmaceuticals, Nestle Nutrition, Nutricia Nutrition, and Mead Johnson (unrelated to the current study); Dr Putnam has received payment for lectures including service on speaker bureaus for Abbott Nutrition (unrelated to the current study); the other authors have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.
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