Clinical training experience in district general hospitals. (49/2521)

AIMS: To estimate the nature and quantity of clinical experience available for trainees in paediatrics or general practice in acute general hospitals of differing sizes in the UK. To discuss implications for training and service configuration taking account of current Royal College recommendations (a minimum of 1,800 acute contacts each year and ideally covering a population of 450,000 to 500,000 people). METHODS: Observed frequencies of diagnoses in Pinderfields Hospital, Wakefield were compared with those in five other hospitals in Yorkshire and four in the South of England, and with expected frequencies from a review of selected marker conditions using national routine and epidemiological data. Based on the Pinderfields data, we modelled expected frequencies of a wider range of diagnoses for different sized hospitals. RESULTS: Small units (1,800 or less acute referrals a year) provide adequate exposure to common conditions such as gastroenteritis (157 per annum) and asthma (171 per annum) but encounter serious or unusual disease rarely. When modelled for units serving larger populations, numbers of such disorders remain small. For example, about 0.5% of admissions require intensive care to the level of ventilatory support. Medium size units offer a wide range of experience but differ little from those serving the population of 500,000 proposed as being optimal for training. This standard is not justified by the evidence in this review. Closing or amalgamating units on the scale necessary to achieve this ideal would be impractical as only five hospitals in England have a paediatric workload equivalent to this population; it would also raise issues of access and equity.  (+info)

An assessment of the comparative advantages of paediatric activities using routine hospital records. (50/2521)

Comparison is made of the advantages, in terms of benefit to patients and salary costs, of employing a consultant paediatrician and non-specialist physicians in clinical work, management activities, research, and education. Comparisons are based on data derived by a simple method from inpatient records of 10 125 children aged 0-5 years admitted over a 23-month period to Mbale Hospital, Uganda. Benefits to inpatients were assessed from the quarterly death and failure rates and the proportion of failures occurring within 24 h of admission to hospital. The relative costs of the various items of medical work were based on the salary costs that they incurred. The advantages of one activity compared with another are demonstrated, and the results clearly indicate that greater benefit at lower cost was obtained by the use of physicians in management and supervisory work than by employing them in the routine care of inpatients.  (+info)

Physicians' reports of focused expertise in clinical practice. (51/2521)

Little is known about the prevalence of focused expertise (special areas of expertise within a clinical field) among physicians, yet such expertise may influence how care is delivered. We surveyed general internists, pediatricians, cardiologists, infectious disease specialists, and orthopedic surgeons to describe the prevalence of focused expertise and identify associated physician and practice characteristics. About one quarter of generalists and three quarters of specialists reported a focused expertise within their primary specialty. Hospital-based physicians more often reported such expertise, and physicians reimbursed by capitation less often reported expertise. Learning how focused expertise affects processes and outcomes of care will contribute to decisions about physician training and staffing of medical groups.  (+info)

Long-term effects of asthma education for physicians on patient satisfaction and use of health services. (52/2521)

This randomized clinical trial evaluated the long-term impact of an interactive seminar for physicians based on principles of self-regulation on clinician behaviour, children's use of health services for asthma, and parent's views of physician performance. Seventy-four general practice paediatricians, and 637 of their asthma patients aged 1-12 yrs, were randomized to treatment or control. Children and parents were blind to physicians' participation. Data were collected at baseline and follow-up through self-administered surveys (paediatricians), telephone interviews (parents) and medical records. The seminar focused on development of communication and teaching skills and use of therapeutic medical regimens for asthma as outlined in the National Asthma Education and Prevention Program guidelines. Approximately 2 yrs postintervention, treatment group physicians were more likely than control physicians to: use protocols for delivering asthma education (odds ratio (OR) 4.9, p=0.2), write down for patients how to adjust medicines when symptoms change (OR 5.7, p=0.05), and provide more guidelines for modifying therapy (OR 3.8, p=0.06). Parents scored treatment group physicians higher than control physicians on five specific positive communication behaviours. Children seen by treatment group physicians had fewer hospitalizations (p=0.03) and those with higher levels of emergency department (ED) use at baseline had fewer subsequent ED visits (p=0.03). No differences regarding the number of office visits were noted. There were no significant differences found between treatment and control group physicians in the amount of time spent with patients during office visits (26 versus 29 min) or in the number of patients treated with anti-inflammatory medicine. It is concluded that interactive asthma seminars for paediatricians had significant long-term benefits for their asthma care.  (+info)

Japanese paediatricians' judgement of the appropriateness of bathing for children with colds. (53/2521)

OBJECTIVES: This study investigated the decisions which Japanese paediatricians make regarding bathing a child with a common cold. METHODS: A total of 486 printed questionnaires were mailed to paediatricians systematically sampled from the list of members of the Japanese Pediatric Association. The questionnaire included two main questions. (i) Do you permit a 2- to 4-year-old child with a common cold to take a bath? (ii) If the answer to (i) was 'yes', what conditions should limit bathing of such children, and if the answer was 'no', why do you forbid bathing? In addition, the questionnaire included the age and sex of the practitioner, and the type and location of the practice. RESULTS: A total of 269 paediatricians returned questionnaires (response rate 55%); of these, 88% permitted a child with a cold to take a bath. Of these paediatricians, 5% permitted it without any conditions. The main conditions for taking a bath indicated by these paediatricians were 'no fever' (72%), 'not in a severe physical condition' (27%) and 'after 2 or 3 days from onset' (19%). Thirty-nine paediatricians indicated a specific body temperature at which bathing was appropriate. One-third of these paediatricians did not permit bathing at body temperatures above 38 degrees C. Of the 31 paediatricians (12%) who answered that a child with a cold should not take a bath, 61% were concerned for the physical well-being of the child. However, 29% provided no supporting evidence. CONCLUSIONS: Japanese paediatricians' judgements concerning bathing of a child with a cold are related to the effects of bathing on physical condition. Bathing immersed up to the neck does not always affect physical conditions. It is necessary to establish appropriate parental and patient education concerning bathing of children with colds.  (+info)

Providing after-hours on-call clinical coverage in academic health sciences centres: the Hospital for Sick Children experience. (54/2521)

An increasing number of admissions of patients requiring complex and acute care coupled with a decreasing number of pediatric postgraduate trainees has caused a shortage of house staff available to provide after-hours on-call coverage in the Department of Pediatrics at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children. The Clinical Assistant program created to deal with this problem was short on staff, did not provide adequate continuity of care and was becoming increasingly unaffordable. The Clinical Departmental Fellowship program was created to address the problem of after-hours clinical coverage. The program is aimed at qualified pediatricians seeking additional clinical or research training in one of the subspecialty divisions in the Department of Pediatrics. We describe the hiring process, job description and evolution of the program since its inception in 1996. This program has been mutually advantageous for the individual fellows and their sponsoring divisions as well as the Department of Pediatrics and the Hospital for Sick Children. We recommend the introduction of similar programs to other academic medical departments facing staff shortages.  (+info)

Paediatric day care anaesthesia--our first two years experience at the Paediatric Institute, Hospital Kuala Lumpur. (55/2521)

The first two years anaesthetic experience of paediatric day care surgery is reviewed. Four hundred and three patients underwent 447 general surgical procedures. The mean age of the patients was 5.4 years with the youngest being 5 months old. The commonest procedures performed were herniotomy, circumcision, correction of hydrocoele and orchidopexy. The overall postoperative admission rare was 2.5%. No major complications were seen. Anaesthesia for paediatric day care surgery is safe provided patients are carefully selected and evaluated, appropriate anaesthetic management instituted and proper discharge criteria adhered to.  (+info)

Managing the solitary thyroid nodule. (56/2521)

Solitary thyroid nodules are commonly seen in surgical outpatient clinics. A detailed history and a careful physical examination are essential. In the management of the solitary thyroid nodule, fine needle aspiration cytology has become the cornerstone investigation. Ultrasound cannot differentiate between benign and malignant nodules, however is useful in the follow-up period to identify any further nodular growth. As thyroid malignancy occurs in both hot and cold nodules, radionuclide scans are not useful in the management of solitary thyroid nodules. We have attempted to outline the process of managing the solitary thyroid nodule and discuss the options available.  (+info)