Assessing proximity effect of high‐acuity pediatric emergency departments on the pediatric readiness scores in neighboring general emergency departments

Abstract Study Objectives The objective of this study was to determine if there is a proximity effect of high‐acuity, pediatric‐capable emergency departments (EDs) on the weighted pediatric readiness score of neighboring general EDs and whether this effect is attributable to specific components of t...

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Published in:Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open
Main Authors: Kristina Brumme, Hilary A. Hewes, Rachel Richards, Marianne Gausche‐Hill, Katherine Remick, Joelle Donofrio‐Odmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2022-12-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/emp2.12850
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author Kristina Brumme
Hilary A. Hewes
Rachel Richards
Marianne Gausche‐Hill
Katherine Remick
Joelle Donofrio‐Odmann
author_facet Kristina Brumme
Hilary A. Hewes
Rachel Richards
Marianne Gausche‐Hill
Katherine Remick
Joelle Donofrio‐Odmann
author_sort Kristina Brumme
collection DOAJ
container_title Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open
description Abstract Study Objectives The objective of this study was to determine if there is a proximity effect of high‐acuity, pediatric‐capable emergency departments (EDs) on the weighted pediatric readiness score of neighboring general EDs and whether this effect is attributable to specific components of the National Pediatric Readiness Guidelines. Methods Pediatric readiness was assessed using the weighted pediatric readiness score of EDs based on the 2013 National Pediatric Readiness Project assessment. High‐acuity, pediatric‐capable EDs were defined as those with a separate pediatric ED and inpatient pediatric services, including the following: pediatric ICU, pediatric ward, and neonatal ICU. Neighboring general EDs are within a 30‐minute drive time of a high‐acuity, pediatric‐capable ED. Analysis was stratified by annual ED pediatric volume: low (<1800), medium (1800–4999), medium‐high (5000–9999), and high (>10,000). We analyzed components of the readiness guidelines, including quality improvement/safety initiatives, pediatric emergency care coordinators, and availability of pediatric‐specific equipment. Groups were compared using chi‐squared or Wilcoxon rank‐sum test with P values <0.05 considered significant. Results Of the 4149 surveyed hospitals, 3933 general EDs (not high‐acuity, pediatric‐capable EDs) were identified, of which 1009 were located within a 30‐minute drive to a high‐acuity, pediatric‐capable ED. Neighboring general EDs had a statistically significantly higher median weighted pediatric readiness score across pediatric volumes (weighted pediatric readiness score 76.3 vs 65.3; P < 0.001). Neighboring general EDs were more likely to have a pediatric emergency care coordinator, a notification policy for abnormal pediatric vital signs, and >90% of pediatric‐specific equipment. Conclusions We found neighboring general EDs have a higher level of pediatric readiness as measured by the median weighted pediatric readiness score. High‐acuity, pediatric‐capable EDs may influence the pediatric readiness of neighboring general Eds, but further investigation is needed to clarify target areas for outreach by state and national partners to improve overall pediatric readiness.
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spelling doaj-art-bdf4ec313e454432a97a0f9ee6b9dcdf2025-08-20T03:04:44ZengElsevierJournal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open2688-11522022-12-0136n/an/a10.1002/emp2.12850Assessing proximity effect of high‐acuity pediatric emergency departments on the pediatric readiness scores in neighboring general emergency departmentsKristina Brumme0Hilary A. Hewes1Rachel Richards2Marianne Gausche‐Hill3Katherine Remick4Joelle Donofrio‐Odmann5Department of Pediatrics Section of Emergency Medicine Children's Hospital Colorado University of Colorado School of Medicine Aurora Colorado USADepartment of Pediatrics Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine School of Medicine University of Utah Salt Lake City Utah USADepartment of Pediatrics School of Medicine University of Utah Salt Lake City Utah USALos Angeles County EMS Agency Los Angeles California USANational EMS for Children Innovation and Improvement Center Departments of Pediatrics and Surgery Dell Medical School University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USADepartment of Emergency Medicine and Pediatrics Rady Children's Hospital of San Diego University of California San Diego California USAAbstract Study Objectives The objective of this study was to determine if there is a proximity effect of high‐acuity, pediatric‐capable emergency departments (EDs) on the weighted pediatric readiness score of neighboring general EDs and whether this effect is attributable to specific components of the National Pediatric Readiness Guidelines. Methods Pediatric readiness was assessed using the weighted pediatric readiness score of EDs based on the 2013 National Pediatric Readiness Project assessment. High‐acuity, pediatric‐capable EDs were defined as those with a separate pediatric ED and inpatient pediatric services, including the following: pediatric ICU, pediatric ward, and neonatal ICU. Neighboring general EDs are within a 30‐minute drive time of a high‐acuity, pediatric‐capable ED. Analysis was stratified by annual ED pediatric volume: low (<1800), medium (1800–4999), medium‐high (5000–9999), and high (>10,000). We analyzed components of the readiness guidelines, including quality improvement/safety initiatives, pediatric emergency care coordinators, and availability of pediatric‐specific equipment. Groups were compared using chi‐squared or Wilcoxon rank‐sum test with P values <0.05 considered significant. Results Of the 4149 surveyed hospitals, 3933 general EDs (not high‐acuity, pediatric‐capable EDs) were identified, of which 1009 were located within a 30‐minute drive to a high‐acuity, pediatric‐capable ED. Neighboring general EDs had a statistically significantly higher median weighted pediatric readiness score across pediatric volumes (weighted pediatric readiness score 76.3 vs 65.3; P < 0.001). Neighboring general EDs were more likely to have a pediatric emergency care coordinator, a notification policy for abnormal pediatric vital signs, and >90% of pediatric‐specific equipment. Conclusions We found neighboring general EDs have a higher level of pediatric readiness as measured by the median weighted pediatric readiness score. High‐acuity, pediatric‐capable EDs may influence the pediatric readiness of neighboring general Eds, but further investigation is needed to clarify target areas for outreach by state and national partners to improve overall pediatric readiness.https://doi.org/10.1002/emp2.12850Emergency department pediatric readinesspediatric emergency carepediatric readinesspediatric emergency care coordinator
spellingShingle Kristina Brumme
Hilary A. Hewes
Rachel Richards
Marianne Gausche‐Hill
Katherine Remick
Joelle Donofrio‐Odmann
Assessing proximity effect of high‐acuity pediatric emergency departments on the pediatric readiness scores in neighboring general emergency departments
Emergency department pediatric readiness
pediatric emergency care
pediatric readiness
pediatric emergency care coordinator
title Assessing proximity effect of high‐acuity pediatric emergency departments on the pediatric readiness scores in neighboring general emergency departments
title_full Assessing proximity effect of high‐acuity pediatric emergency departments on the pediatric readiness scores in neighboring general emergency departments
title_fullStr Assessing proximity effect of high‐acuity pediatric emergency departments on the pediatric readiness scores in neighboring general emergency departments
title_full_unstemmed Assessing proximity effect of high‐acuity pediatric emergency departments on the pediatric readiness scores in neighboring general emergency departments
title_short Assessing proximity effect of high‐acuity pediatric emergency departments on the pediatric readiness scores in neighboring general emergency departments
title_sort assessing proximity effect of high acuity pediatric emergency departments on the pediatric readiness scores in neighboring general emergency departments
topic Emergency department pediatric readiness
pediatric emergency care
pediatric readiness
pediatric emergency care coordinator
url https://doi.org/10.1002/emp2.12850
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