African Journal of Emergency Medicine (Mar 2021)
Triage guideline for immunocompromised children with fever in an emergency centre in Ethiopia
Abstract
Fever in children with neutropenia often portends life-threatening bacteremia that may be ameliorated with early recognition and the rapid administration of antimicrobial therapy. Studies demonstrating this effect have been done in resource-endowed countries, but not in resource-limited settings. We attempted to decrease the time to antibiotics in patients with fever and neutropenia presenting to a paediatric emergency centre at a tertiary care referral hospital in Ethiopia. In 3 phases we performed baseline data collection, instituted triaging and treatment guidelines, and provided antibiotics. We tracked a variety of outcomes, most importantly time from arrival to initiation of antibiotics. While this time was reduced during the guideline institution phase of our intervention, time reductions were inconsistent and not sustained. This was likely due to competing clinical priorities among providers caring for a high volume of ill children. While in the U.S., fever and neutropenia is easy to prioritise within the paediatric emergency centre, future quality improvement measures in this setting may have a greater benefit on critical presentations such as shock or respiratory failure. Alternative strategies geared towards general efficiency improvement and teamwork, rather than focusing on one patient group may be a higher yield approach for improving care in this paediatric emergency centre.