Handle questions about pediatric care with confident accuracy:
Telephone Triage Protocols for Pediatrics is the quick-access guide to providing fast, efficient phone assessments and accurate care recommendations.
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This comprehensive, on-the-spot resource lists a broad range of symptoms alphabetically. A flow chart format provides the crucial Yes or No questions to ask, with each answer moving quickly to optimal recommendations or instructions. A vital resource for all nurses, this is irreplaceable to those in pediatric or family practice.
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Tap into top-level guidance for fast, efficient assessments …
- Step-by-step guidance for making accurate assessments—170 proven protocols addressing a wide range of symptoms, disorders, and medical emergencies, for newborn to age 18
- Sorts life-threatening problems from those not requiring physician or emergency care—callers are directed to make an appointment, seek emergency care, or follow home care instructions
- Increases consistency of advice and documentation
- Supports nurses of all knowledge and experience levels
- Color tabs for each section enable quick access
- Symptoms alpha-organized and grouped by level of urgency, addressing injuries, trauma, pain, swelling, and other symptoms for:
- Head, eyes, ears, nose, throat, mouth, back, neck, arm, and leg
- Body system problems – chest/cardiovascular, respiratory GI, genital/obstetrics and gynecological problems, urination, and skin problems
- Chronic and infectious diseases
- Behavioral problems
- Infant-specific problems
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Sections under every symptom include:- Key Questions to ask the caller
- Other Protocols to Consider
- Reminders – for proper documentation
- Assessment – symptoms and conditions that determine urgency
- Actioncolumn – Following Yes or No answers to assessment questions, with emergency actions appearing first
- Immediate actions – proven protocols and/or referrals to emergency, physician, or at-home care
- Home Care Instructions – before emergency care, before appointment, or at-home care
- Emergency Instructions – in-the-moment first aid
- Report the Following Problems – what caller should tell their physician or emergency department
- Seek Emergency Care Immediately – if certain symptoms occur
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Must-have resource for medical offices, clinics, schools, emergency departments, urgent care centers, home health agencies, and managed healthcare providers
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About The Authors Â
Julie Briggs, RN, BSN, MHA, is Director of the Emergency Department at Good Samaritan Community Healthcare in Puyallup, Washington.
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Mikki Meadows-Oliver, PhD, RN, PNP-BC, is an Associate Professor at the Yale University School of Nursing in Orange, Connecticut.
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