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PEDIATRICS Vol. 103 No. 5 May 1999, pp. 1048-1049
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ABSTRACT |
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Freestanding urgent care centers are increasing as a source of after-hours pediatric care. These facilities may be used as an alternative to hospital emergency departments for the care and stabilization of serious and critically ill and injured children. The purpose of this policy statement is to provide recommendations for assuring appropriate stabilization in pediatric emergency situations and timely transfer to a hospital for definitive care when necessary.
Freestanding urgent care facilities remain a fixture in
provision of health services in a managed care environment. Although the Academy does not approve of the routine use of urgent care facilities because it detracts from the medical home
concept,1,2 the use of these facilities as part of urgent
and emergent care systems is increasing in the managed care
environment. The term urgent care may imply to the public
that a facility is capable of managing critical or life-threatening
emergencies. Therefore, these facilities must have the capability to
identify patients with emergency conditions, stabilize them, and
provide timely access to definitive care should critically ill or
injured children need care. Urgent care facilities must have
appropriate pediatric equipment and staff trained and experienced to
provide critical support for ill and injured children until transferred
for definitive care. It is necessary for urgent care facilities to have
prearranged access to comprehensive emergency services through transfer
and transport agreements to which both facilities adhere. Available and
appropriate modes of transport should be identified in advance.
When after-hours urgent care clinics are used as a resource for
pediatric urgent care, they should solicit help from the pediatric professional community, and pediatricians should be accessible who are
prepared to assist in the stabilization and management of critically
ill and injured children. Pediatricians responsible for managing the
health care of children may occasionally need to use the resources of
urgent care facilities after hours. When such clinics are recommended
to patients, pediatricians should be certain that the urgent care
center is prepared to stabilize and manage critically ill and injured
children.
Urgent Care Facility Emergency Preparedness
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RECOMMENDATIONS
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Abstract
Recommendation
References
Pediatrician's Role in Urgent Care Facilities
If freestanding urgent care centers are properly staffed and equipped and have appropriate triage, transfer, and transport guidelines, the safety of children using these services for emergencies can be protected.5
COMMITTEE ON PEDIATRIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 1998-1999
Robert A. Wiebe, MD, Chairperson
Barbara A. Barlow, MD
Ronald A. Furnival, MD
Barry W. Heath, MD
Steven E. Krug, MD
Karin A. McCloskey, MD
Lee A. Pyles, MD
Deborah Mulligan-Smith, MD
Timothy S. Yeh, MD
LIAISON REPRESENTATIVES
Richard M. Cantor, MD
American College of Emergency Physicians
Dennis W. Vane, MD
American College of Surgeons
Jean Athey, PhD
Maternal and Child Health Bureau
David Markenson, MD
National Association of EMS Physicians
SECTION LIAISONS
Joseph P. Cravero, MD
Section on Anesthesiology
M. Douglas Baker, MD
Section on Emergency Medicine
Michele Moss, MD
Section on Critical Care
Dennis W. Vane, MD
Section on Surgery
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FOOTNOTES |
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The recommendations in this statement do not indicate an exclusive course of treatment or serve as a standard of medical care. Variations, taking into account individual circumstances, may be appropriate.
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REFERENCES |
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The following policy statement is a revision:
This article has been cited by other articles:
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W. C. Bordley, D. Travers, P. Scanlon, K. Frush, and S. Hohenhaus Office Preparedness for Pediatric Emergencies: A Randomized, Controlled Trial of an Office-Based Training Program Pediatrics, August 1, 2003; 112(2): 291 - 295. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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L. C. Hampers, S. G. Faries, and S. R. Poole Regional After-Hours Urgent Care Provided by a Tertiary Children's Hospital Pediatrics, December 1, 2002; 110(6): 1117 - 1124. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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