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Feverish Illness in Children

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Antipyretic interventions. Tepid sponging. Do not over dress or under dress child ... Do not routinely give antipyretics with sole aim just to reduce fever or prevent ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Feverish Illness in Children


1
Feverish Illness in Children
  • 2007

2
Detection of fever
  • Children aged 4 weeks to 5 years
  • Measure temperature by
  • Electronic thermometer in axilla
  • Chemical dot thermometer in axilla
  • Infra red tympanic thermometer

3
Assessment of child with fever
  • Check
  • Airway
  • Breathing
  • Circulation
  • Decreased level of consciousness
  • Use traffic light system to predict risk of
    serios illness
  • Look for source of fever

4
Detecting fever
  • Take all reports seriously
  • Do not measure temperature by oral or rectal
    route
  • Do not use forehead chemical thermometers

5
Assessment
  • Measure and record
  • Temperature
  • Heart rate
  • Respiratory rate
  • Capillary refill time

6
Assessment
  • Assess for signs of dehydration
  • Prolonged capillary refill time
  • Abnormal skin turgor
  • Abnormal respiratory pattern weak pulse
  • Cool extremities

7
Safety netting
  • Provide carer with verbal and/or written
    information on warning symptoms and how to access
    further health care
  • Arrange follow up appointment
  • Liase with other healthcare professionals,
    includin gout of hours providers to ensure the
    carer has direct access to a further assessment

8
Traffic light system
  • Green
  • Activity responding normally
  • Respiration normal
  • Hydration normal skin and eyes, moist mucous
    membranes
  • Other no amber or red signs

9
Traffic light system
  • Amber intermediate risk
  • Pallor reported by carers
  • Activity not responding normally to social cues,
    wakes only with prolonged stimulation, no smile
  • Respiratory - nasal flaring, tachypnoea
  • Age 6-12 months RR gt 50/min
  • Age gt 12 months RR gt 40/min
  • Oxygen sats lt 96 in air
  • crackles

10
Traffic light system
  • Amber intermediate risk
  • Hydration
  • Dry mucous membranes
  • Poor feeding in infants
  • CRT gt 3 secs
  • Reduced urine output
  • Other
  • Fever gt 5 days
  • Swelling of joint or limb
  • Non weight bearing/not using an extremity
  • New lump gt 2cm

11
Traffic light system
  • Red high risk
  • Colour pale mottled or ashen blue
  • Activity
  • no response to social cues
  • Appears ill
  • Unable to rouse or wont stay awake
  • Weak high pitched continuous cry
  • Respiratory
  • Grunting
  • Tachypnoea gt 60
  • Moderate or severe chest indrawing

12
Traffic light system
  • Red high risk
  • Hydration
  • Reduced skin turgor
  • Other
  • Age 0-3/12 temp gt 38C
  • Age 3-6/12 temp gt 39C
  • Non blanching rash
  • Bulging fontanelle
  • Neck stiffness
  • Status epilepticus
  • Focal neurological signs or focal seizures
  • Bile stained vomiting

13
Management
  • All green features
  • Child can be managed at home
  • If any amber feature and no diagnosis reached
  • Refer to paediatrician or give safety net
    instructions
  • If any red feature
  • Refer urgently to paediatrician

14
Admission to hospital
  • Consider
  • Social and family circumstances
  • Other illnesses child or family have
  • Carers anxiety
  • Contact with serious infectious diseases
  • Recent travel abroad
  • Previous family experience of serious illness
  • If fever has no obvious cause and is lasting
    longer than expected

15
Antipyretic interventions
  • Tepid sponging
  • Do not over dress or under dress child
  • Consider paracetamol or ibuprofen
  • Take views of parents into account
  • Do not administer paracetamol and ibuprofen at
    same time
  • Do not routinely give antipyretics with sole aim
    just to reduce fever or prevent febrile convulsion

16
Care at home
  • Advise carers
  • Of antipyretic interventions
  • To offer regular fluids
  • Look for signs of dehydration
  • Sunken fontanelle
  • Dry mouth
  • Sunken eyes
  • Absence of tears
  • Poor overall appearance

17
Care at home
  • Advise carers
  • Seek advise if they see signs of dehydration
  • How to identify a non blanching rash
  • Check child during the night
  • Keep away form school or nursery
  • Notify school or nursery of the illness

18
Care at home
  • Advise carers to seek further help if
  • Child has a fit
  • Develops non blanching rash
  • Feel child's health getting worse
  • Fever lasts more than 5 days
  • They are distressed or concerned or unable to
    look after their child

19
Specific Diseases
  • Meningococcal disease
  • Non blanching rash
  • Ill looking child
  • Purpuric lesions gt 2cm
  • CRT . 3 seconds
  • Neck stiffness

20
Specific Diseases
  • Meningitis
  • Neck stiffness
  • Bulging fontanelle
  • Decreased level of consciousness
  • Convulsive status epilepticus

21
Specific Diseases
  • Herpes simplex encephalitis
  • Focal neurological signs
  • Focal seizures
  • Decreased level of consciousness

22
Specific Diseases
  • Pneumonia
  • Tachypnoea
  • 0-5 months RRgt 60/min
  • 6-12 months RR gt 50/min
  • gt 12 months RR gt 40/min
  • Crackles in chest
  • Nasal flaring
  • Chest indrawing
  • Cyanosis
  • Oxygen saturation lt 96

23
Specific Diseases
  • UTI age in children gt 3 months
  • Vomiting
  • Poor feeding
  • Lethargy
  • Irritability
  • Abdominal pain or tenderness
  • Urinary frequency or dysuria
  • Offensive urine or haematuria

24
Specific Diseases
  • Septic arthritis
  • Swelling of a limb or joint
  • Not using an extremity
  • Non weight bearing

25
Specific Diseases
  • Kawasaki disease
  • Fever lasting gt 5 days
  • Bilateral conjunctival injection
  • Dry cracked lips, strawberry tongue, injected
    pharynx
  • Change in extremities oedema, erythema,
    desquamation
  • Polymorphous rash
  • Cervical lymphadenopathy
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