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Pediatrics

Introduction

Pediatrics - Patient Safety, products, federal legislation, product identificiation, perinatal safetyChildren are not just little adults. Physical size is just one of the many differences. Children’s body surface area, organ and system maturity and function, as well as cognitive and emotional development can result in differences in response to illness, diagnosis, treatment, medications and medical devices. Often medications, products and devices are developed and tested only on adults and then scaled down in size, dose or application for use with pediatric patients, creating a potential patient safety risk.

All stages of pediatric growth and development from pre-term newborn through adolescence must be considered in providing safe and high quality care, including medications, treatments and medical devices that are appropriate for patients in each stage of development.

Government, professional, manufacturing and pharmaceutical organizations are working together to address this situation— but there is still more work to be done.

The purpose of this Web site is to provide key information on selected topics related to pediatric patient safety, including resources, tools, and recent national and legislative activity.

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Patient safety

There are five key differences between children and adults that present patient care challenges and potential safety issues unique to children. These include:

The release of the first Institute of Medicine (IOM) report on patient safety, To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System (IOM-1), in November 1999 was responsible for an unprecedented number of new publications, process improvement initiatives, research studies and educational programs that focus on preventing medical errors in hospitals. However, both the IOM report and most of the early work in patient safety focused on adult populations. Recently, several pediatric organizations have collaborated to improve general understanding, reporting, process improvement methodologies, and quality of pediatric inpatient care. A selection of resources from these organizations is being made available on this Web site.

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Device/product safety

The vast majority of products used with pediatric patients are developed for adults and adapted for use in children. These products may lack the durability required to withstand the more active lifestyles of children and may fail as a result of material fatigue. Additionally, biocompatibility of materials with tissue in children of different ages may differ from adults. Unique needs, coupled with ongoing growth and development, also make medical and surgical device safety a particular challenge in pediatric patients.

Devices developed for adult populations, even when made smaller to accommodate children, may not account for the anatomical and functional differences. While there are devices designed specifically for the needs of the pediatric population and not used in adults (infant incubators, bilirubin lights, bili blankets, etc.), the challenges of designing devices in a small size with smaller market potential, make the development of devices exclusively for children less attractive to manufacturers. Although people under age 20 make up approximately 30% of the population, it is estimated that they only account for 2% of deaths and 11% of hospital discharges (excluding newborns), resulting in a small market for pediatric medical devices

There have been a number of legislative, regulatory and scientific community responses to the issue of safety of pediatric devices, each with a different emphasis. There is general agreement that we still need a coordinated public-private partnership to develop a central clearinghouse for pediatric devices to enhance communication with all stakeholders, including pediatric clinicians.

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Federal legislation and activity

In an effort to address this issue, the Medical Device User Fee and Modernization Act of 2002 (P.L. 107–250) called for the Institute of Medicine to assess whether the current system for the postmarket surveillance of medical devices provided adequate safeguards regarding the use of devices in pediatric populations.

In its report, Safe Medical Devices for Children, released in 2005, the Institute of Medicine made numerous recommendations, including:

Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

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Identification of products for pediatric patients

One of the challenges for clinicians caring for children is finding medical devices that are specifically designed for children, as well as those that are appropriate for use in pediatric care. Premier has developed several resources to help members and other pediatric healthcare providers identify these products.

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Medication safety

Adverse drug events are among the most frequently reported medical errors for both adult and pediatric patients. Adverse drug events as defined by the IOM include injuries related to a drug, which can be attributable to preventable and non-preventable causes. Non-preventable causes typically involve adverse reactions to medications, such as unexpected allergic responses or toxic reactions related to the inherent pharmacologic properties of the drug.

Adverse drug events, both medication errors and adverse reactions, occur far more often in pediatric patients than in adult patients. Because the majority of drugs used in pediatric medicine have not been appropriately tested for use in children, pediatricians often prescribe drugs for "off-label" use, which means there have not been FDA-approved pediatric clinical trials with such medications. Since children differ from adults in many ways beyond size, simply adjusting the dose for a smaller size person will not necessarily produce the same response and can lead to adverse drug reactions.

In contrast, preventable adverse drug events, typically called medication errors, are any preventable event that may lead to inappropriate medication use or patient harm. Research has shown that medication errors occur across the entire spectrum of medication delivery, including prescribing; order communications; product labeling, packaging, and nomenclature; dispensing; distribution; administration; monitoring; and documentation. Medication errors are also a significant source of concern for pediatric patients across all settings of care, including within the home.

Some medication errors have a greater potential for harm in pediatric patients. For example, dosing errors can easily occur with pediatric dosing that requires weight-based calculations, fractional dosing and use of decimal points. Many medications are formulated and packaged primarily for adults and must be prepared and re-packaged within the hospital prior to administration to children. Because dosages are small and weight-based, a small error may have much larger consequences. Additionally, due to size and developmental differences, young children may be less able, physiologically, to tolerate a medication error, such as an overdose.

Several organizations have published guidelines and strategies aimed at reducing pediatric medication errors.

Additional information, including copies of these documents is available in the resources section.

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Perinatal safety

Pediatric safety begins at birth. There are nearly three birth-related injuries for every 1,000 babies born in the United States each year. Many of these are preventable. Five recurring clinical issues are commonly cited for the majority of perinatal harm. These issues include:

Premier is currently leading 16 of its member hospitals in the Perinatal Safety Initiative, a national collaborative designed to achieve the consistent delivery of evidence-based care with the goal of eliminating preventable birth-related injuries and deaths. More information about the Premier Perinatal Safety Initiative

 

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