The Pediatric EMS Podcast
This episode is brought to you by Styker Medical Corporation with their comittment to improving medical education. In this episode we discuss the priorities of pediatric head and cervical spine imagine with the experts in the fields of Pediatric Emergency Medicine and Neurosurgery. Learn from those who know about how to manage your next pediatric patient with traumatic brain injury or cervical spine injury. With TBI a major cause of pediatric death, you don't want to miss this episode with all you need to know. Rememer: Avoid the H bombs Hypotension (<90mmhg) Hypoxia (<90%)...
info_outline Pediatric Prehospital Trauma Overview: Hitting the HighlightsThe Pediatric EMS Podcast
This series is a collaboration with the EMS for Children Innovation and Improvement Center (EIIC) and will be part of the pre-hospital resources for its Pediatric Education and Advocacy Kit (PEAK) for multisystem trauma. Click on the link to learn more! . In this episode we kick off a multipart series on pediatric trauma just in time for summer and trauma season. Join your two hosts as they tackle the prehospital management of pediatric trauma. Everything from head to toe and the pathophysiology that makes pediatric trauma unique from the adult population. Below are the episode...
info_outline Evidence Empowers Judgement: Evidence Based Guidance on the Management of Traumatic Brain Injury and Cervical Spine InjuryThe Pediatric EMS Podcast
In this episode we discuss the future of pediatric head and cervical spine imagine with the very physicians who brought us the groundbreaking research that will forever change how we approach these pediatric injuries. This episode will have you rethinking the evidence behind your own protocols and making adjustments going forward. Brought to you by The National Association of EMS Physicians (NAEMSP) and Missouri Emergency Medical Services for Children (MO-EMSC). Hosts: Dr. Joelle Donofrio-Odmann and Dr. Joseph Finney Website: GET CEU CREDIT THROUGH PRODIGY EMS ...
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Brought to you by The National Association of EMS Physicians (NAEMSP) and Missouri Emergency Medical Services for Children (MO-EMSC) and The Emergency Medical Services for Children Innovation and Improvement Center (EIIC) Hosts: Dr. Joelle Donofrio-Odmann and Dr. Joseph Finney Website: GET CEU CREDIT THROUGH PRODIGY EMS Content Experts: Joelle Donofrio-Odmann, DO and Joseph Finney, MD Guest Experts: Welcome back for a special episode outside our normal schedule! This episode was recorded in collaboration with The to provide expert review of prehospital pediatric...
info_outline Resus Recess: Pediatric Cardiac Arrest Literature ReviewThe Pediatric EMS Podcast
Brought to you by The National Association of EMS Physicians (NAEMSP), Emergency Medical Services for Children (EMSC) and The Emergency Medical Services for Children Innovation and Improvement Center (EIIC) Hosts: Dr. Joelle Donofrio-Odmann and Dr. Joseph Finney Website: Direct Download: GET CEU CREDIT THROUGH PRODIGY EMS In this episode we bring you two experts in pediatric prehospital care who are working tirelessly to identify why caring for children in cardiac arrest is so unique and so challenging. Join us as we review two papers that shed light on this critical care...
info_outline The Prehospital Pediatric Readiness ProjectThe Pediatric EMS Podcast
Brought to you by The National Association of EMS Physicians (NAEMSP) and Missouri Emergency Medical Services for Children (MO-EMSC) Hosts: Dr. Joelle Donofrio-Odmann and Dr. Joseph Finney Website: Direct Download: GET CEU CREDIT THROUGH PRODIGY EMS: Unfortunately, not this episode but check out episode 8 in a few weeks for CEU credits! Content Experts: Joelle Donofrio-Odmann, DO and Joseph Finney, MD Guest Experts: Kathleen Adelgais, MD, MPH/MSPH Project Director, Colorado EMS for Children Program Professor of Pediatrics - Children's Hospital Colorado Kathryn...
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Brought to you by The National Association of EMS Physicians (NAEMSP) and Missouri Emergency Medical Services for Children (MO-EMSC) Hosts: Dr. Joelle Donofrio-Odmann and Dr. Joseph Finney Website: Direct Download: GET CEU CREDIT THROUGH PRODIGY EMS: Content Experts: Joelle Donofrio-Odmann, DO and Joseph Finney, MD Special Guests: Molly A. Greenshields, MD: Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at Children's Minnesota Caitlin Farrell, MD: Associate Physician in Pediatrics, Division of Emergency Medicine and Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and Emergency...
info_outline A Silent Epidemic: Prehospital Priorities in the Management of Pediatric DrowningThe Pediatric EMS Podcast
Brought to you by The National Association of EMS Physicians (NAEMSP) Hosts: Dr. Joelle Donofrio-Odmann and Dr. Joseph Finney Website: Direct Download: GET CEU CREDIT THROUGH PRODIGY EMS: Content Experts: Joelle Donofrio-Odmann, DO and Joseph Finney, MD Special Guests: Bryan Clark: Marine Safety Lieutenant at San Diego Fire-Rescue Lifeguard and Paramedic Gina Pellerito: Critical Care Paramedic with Mehlville Fire Protection District, Research Analyst/MOEMSC Chair at MU school of Medicine Jon Boisvert: City of San Diego Oceanfront Lifeguard, San...
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Expedite The Route, Simplify The Dose: Managing Pediatric Prehospital Seizures Brought to you by The National Association of EMS Physicians (NAEMSP) Hosts: Dr. Joelle Donofrio-Odmann and Dr. Joseph Finney Website: Direct Download: Content Experts: Manish Shah, MD, Denise Whitfield, MD, Rejean Guerriero, DO B-side Narrator: Joelle Donofrio-Odmann, DO Editing and Publication: Joseph Finney, MD Episode Summary I know it’s been a minute, but we are glad to be back to bring you an extremely important episode focused on the prehospital management of pediatric seizures. Seizures...
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Breaking Down Silos: Pediatric Disaster Preparation and Management Is your community ready for a disaster event involving children? Well, it’s time to get ready. In this episode of The Pediatric EMS Podcast our guest experts recount firsthand experience of Hurricane Katrina and the shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas as they guide you through the necessary components of preparing for the next pediatric disaster event. We have experts in Disaster Medicine, EMS, and Pediatric Emergency medicine to give you critical insight into planning, preparation, management, and recovery....
info_outlineOuch-less Pediatrics
Safely and effectively managing pain in our pediatric patients is a primary responsibility for our EMS clinicians. Medical directors must be able to identify gaps in pediatric pain management and provide the necessary QA/QI to close those gaps. In this episode we focus on exactly that, with several experts in EMS joining us to offer their knowledge and critical appraisal of the evidence in order to identify and close the gaps in the management of pain in children.
Brought to you by:
Dr. Joelle Donofrio-Odmann and Dr. Joseph Finney
Take Home Points
Medical Directors can utilize QA/QI to improve management of pediatric pain within their EMS systems. Protocols for managing pediatric pain benefit from mirroring the most current evidence. This podcast provides information on how to develop protocols, what QA/QI to consider, the current evidence to optimize your ouch-less EMS agency, and how to use your tertiary Children’s hospital to help. Below are all the tools you need to make your agency “ouch-less”.
The NASEMSO Model Guidelines are also a great option to help guide protocol development (link below).
DON’T WAIT TO TREAT PAIN!
https://nasemso.org/projects/model-ems-clinical-guidelines/
We also recommend utilizing the EIIC Pain management resources available at the link below. The EIIC has educational resources, tools, and recommendations for improving pediatric pain management.
https://emscimprovement.center/education-and-resources/toolkits/pediatric-pain-management-toolkit/
Literature Review Recap
Analgesia Use in Children with Acute Long Bone Fractures in the Pediatric Emergency Department. Published in The Journal of Emergency Medicine in 2020
Where: Assessment of the management of pediatric pain in a tertiary children’s hospital emergency department in the setting of long bone fractures.
What: Retrospective single center study
Who: Age 18yo and younger with ED diagnosis of long bone fracture, 2005-2016
- 905 patients included
- 63% male
- 48% African American
- Median age 6yo
- 72% fracture in upper arm, 77% sent home
Outcome:
- 28% received no pain medication
- Median time to document a pain score was 6 minutes
- Pain medication order time was 63 minutes
- 87 minutes to time of administration of pain medications
- Factors related to undertreatment
- African American children
- Public insurance
- Single fracture
- POV arrival to ED
- Factors related to faster treatment
- Arriving when ED is busier
- Private insurance
- Lower extremity fracture
- EMS arrival to ED
Implications: Even in the ED, we don’t do a very good job of quickly treating pain or even treating it at all.
Consider standing orders for managing pain in certain situations such as long bone fractures.
Prehospital Pain Management: Disparity By Age and Race published in Prehospital Emergency Care in 2018
Where: Research data set
What: Retrospective descriptive study from 2012-2014
Who: Patients <18yo captured in the database
Outcome:
- > 69 million EMS activations, 276,925 were for patients transported with primary impression of fracture, burn or penetrating injury.
- 6% of EMS activations with these potentially painful medical impressions received any pain meds and this was lowest in amongst infants and toddlers where it was only 6.4%.
- The most administered meds were Morphine and fentanyl. < 7% of children age < 11 received either med.
- Only 29.5% had pain documented as a symptom
- Significantly lower amongst infants and toddlers at 14.6%.
- When pain was documented as a symptom, only 19.9% received pain medication (only 68% of infants and toddlers vs. 26.4% of children aged 11-14)
- To examine racial disparities, patients were grouped by age < 15 and > 15yrs of age.
- Administration of pain medications varied significantly amongst racial groups.
- Black patients were the least likely to be administered pain medication (8.7%) while white patients were the most like (22.4%). This disparity held for both age groups.
Implications: There is likely bias leading to disparities in the management of pain prehospital both by age and race.
Consider establishing protocols for pain management especially in our youngest patients. QA and QI focused on bias in prehospital medicine is critical for medical directors.
Multicenter Evaluation of Prehospital Opioid Pain Management in Injured Children published in Prehospital Emergency Care in 2016
Objective: Assess the change in frequency of pain documentation and the change in frequency of opioid administration in kids with injuries after applying evidence-based guidelines
Where: 3 separate EMS agencies, part of CHAMP research node of PECARN
Who: <18yo prehospital patients with blunt, penetrating, laceration, and/or burn trauma
What: Updated pain protocols and implemented mandatory CE
Outcome:
- No improvement after implementation of evidence-based guidelines for managing pain
- 3600 pre and 3700 post intervention
- Opioid administration pre/post remained 5% (15% if moderate to severe pain score 4 or higher)
- 18% had pain score documented pre/post (75% moderate to severe pain)
- Only one agency gave intranasal opioids despite all three agencies having the capability
- No implementation of QI protocols along with these changes
Implications: Implementation of protocol changes alone does not translate to clinical practice change. If you make changes “you really have to own it”
Consider adding quality improvement projects to improve adherence to protocol changes. Robust QA/QI is a must for any medical director. Measuring an intervention over time before deciding if they worked or not helps to avoid false results during the "washout period". Consider an EMR prompt to encourage assessing and treating pain.
Evidence-Based Guidelines for Prehospital Pain Management: Recommendations published in Prehospital Emergency Care in 2021
Objective: Provide evidence-based guidelines for the management of pain prehospital in adults and pediatrics
What: RECENT Systematic review of the comparative effectiveness of analgesics in the prehospital setting prepared by the University of Connecticut Evidence-Based Practice Center for the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) with funding by NIHTSA.
(Mostly) Pediatric-focused Recommendations
- Intranasal fentanyl is preferred over IM/IV fentanyl for prehospital pain management in pediatrics. Don’t delay for IV access.
- IV acetaminophen is preferred over IV opioids for the management of moderate to severe pain IF it is available
- IV NSAIDs or IV opioids is appropriate for initial prehospital pain management.
- IV NSAIDS are preferred over IV acetaminophen, also consider PO for both.
- IV ketamine or IV NSAIDs for initial pain management prehospital is appropriate
- IV ketamine or IV opioids for initial pain management prehospital is appropriate
- If IV opioids are selected for prehospital pain management, Morphine or fentanyl are preferred
- Avoid mixing opioids and ketamine IV
Implications: Follow evidence-based guidelines when developing your pediatric pain management protocols
Don't Forget:
- Don’t forget intranasal options and be careful when mixing IV ketamine and IV opioids
- If administering sedating medication to pediatric patients, ALWAYS use ETCO2.
- Implement both non-pharmacologic and pharmacologic pain treatments into EMS protocols.
- For pharmocologic treatments, have both opioid and non-opioid options available.
- Have PO meds as well as IN, IM and IV options.
- Teach your medics how to document and treat pain.
Disclaimer
The Emergency Medical Services for Children Innovation and Improvement Center is supported by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) as part of an award (U07MC37471) totaling $3M with 0 percent financed with nongovernmental sources. The contents are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the official views of, nor an endorsement, by HRSA, HHS, or the U.S. Government. For more information, please visit HRSA.gov.
To learn more about the Emergency Medical Services for Children Innovation and Improvement Center visit https://emscimprovement.center
Email [email protected]
Follow on Twitter @EMSCImprovement
Sources:
- International Association for the Society of Pain Subcommittee on Taxonomy
- WT Zempsky NL Schechter 2003 What’s new in the management of pain in children Pediatrics Rev 24 10 337 347 16
- SJ Weisman B Bernstein NL Schechter 1998 Consequences of inadequate analgesia during painful procedures in children Arch Pediatrics Adolescent Med 152 2 147 149 17
- JT Pate 1996 Childhood medical experience and temperament as predictors of adult fu
- Educational Module on Prehospital Pain Management in Children (Targeted Issues Grant): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tn3MF_4-9iQ&feature=youtu.be
- Lorin R. Browne, Manish I. Shah, Jonathan R. Studnek, Daniel G. Ostermayer, Stacy Reynolds, Clare E. Guse, David C. Brousseau & E. Brooke Lerner (2016) Multicenter Evaluation of Prehospital Opioid Pain Management in Injured Children, Prehospital Emergency Care, 20:6, 759-767, DOI: 10.1080/10903127.2016.1194931