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Defining significant childhood illness and injury in the emergency department : a consensus of UK and Ireland expert opinion

Lillitos, PJ; Lyttle, MD; Roland, D; Powell, CVE; Sandell, J; Rowland, A; Chapman, SM; Maconochie, IK

Authors

PJ Lillitos

MD Lyttle

D Roland

CVE Powell

J Sandell

A Rowland

SM Chapman

IK Maconochie



Abstract

Background: Clarifying whether paediatric early warning scores (PEWS) accurately predict significant illness is a research priority for UK and Ireland paediatric emergency medicine (EM). However, a standardised list of significant conditions to benchmark these scores does not exist.

Objectives: To establish standardised significant illness endpoints for use in determining the performance accuracy of PEWS and safety systems in emergency departments (ED), using a consensus of expert opinion in the UK and Ireland.

Design: Between July 2017 and February 2018, three online Delphi rounds established a consensus on ‘significant’ clinical conditions, derived from a list of common childhood illness/injury ED presentations. Conditions warranting acute hospital admission in the opinion of the respondent were defined as ‘significant’, using a 5-point Likert scale. The consensus was a priori ≥80% (positive or negative). 258 clinical conditions were tested.

Participants and settings: Eligible participants were consultants in acute or EM paediatrics, or adult EM, accessed via 53 PERUKI (Paediatric Emergency Research in the UK and Ireland)’s research collaborative sites, and 27 GAPRUKI (General and Adolescent Paediatric Research in the UK and Ireland)’s sites, 17 of which overlap with PERUKI.

Main outcome measures: To create a list of conditions regarded as ‘significant’with ≥80% expert consensus.

Results: 43 (68%) of 63 PERUKI and GAPRUKI sites responded; 295 experts were invited to participate. Participants in rounds 1, 2 and 3 were 223 (76%), 177 (60%) and 148 (50%), respectively; 154 conditions reached positive consensus as ‘significant’; 1 condition reached a negative consensus (uncomplicated Henoch-Schönlein purpura); and 37 conditions achieved non-consensus.

Conclusions: A list of significant childhood conditions has been created using UK and Irish expert consensus, for research purposes, for the first time. This will be used as the benchmark endpoint list for future research into PEWS/safety systems performance in EDs.

Citation

Lillitos, P., Lyttle, M., Roland, D., Powell, C., Sandell, J., Rowland, A., …Maconochie, I. (2018). Defining significant childhood illness and injury in the emergency department : a consensus of UK and Ireland expert opinion. Emergency Medicine Journal, 2018, #207802. https://doi.org/10.1136/emermed-2018-207802

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 14, 2018
Online Publication Date Oct 3, 2018
Publication Date Oct 3, 2018
Deposit Date Nov 8, 2018
Journal Emergency Medicine Journal
Print ISSN 1472-0205
Publisher BMJ Publishing Group
Volume 2018
Pages #207802
DOI https://doi.org/10.1136/emermed-2018-207802
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.1136/emermed-2018-207802
Related Public URLs https://emj.bmj.com/