Children are not miniature adults, nor are newborns small children. Each is distinct and needs various treatments and treatment techniques. Nurses and other healthcare practitioners in all settings, from home to primary to acute care, must be prepared to detect and intervene as soon as possible with respiratory issues, GI-related disorders, and two of the most common pediatric maladies: fever and diarrhea.
As pediatric healthcare practitioners, we must comprehend and comprehend the fundamental reasons of these pediatric clinical issues. Children with these problems may appear with acute illnesses, flare-ups of chronic ailments, or life-threatening consequences as a result of both anatomical and physiological etiologies.
A variety of reasons might contribute to the juvenile patient’s unexplained symptoms. Is this something you’ve heard before… Your patient’s parents say that her symptoms have worsened in the last 7 to 10 days. He’s “always been an excellent sleeper,” but his sleep is now disrupted. The tiny kid has recurring fevers and appears to be resistant to antipyretics. He seems agitated and “not himself,” and his appetite and hydration consumption have decreased. While his asthma had been “stable”, he seems to be showing worsening symptoms and the albuterol is not helping with the wet cough and is causing him choke and “vomit”. Could this case go wrong? And how fast might that happen?
This video will teach you practical ways for incorporating symptomology and suitable tests into your differential diagnosis. You will have an expanded capacity to determine etiology by comprehending the inter-relationship of signs/symptoms with new differentiating abilities to know when to address the “cause” vs the “symptom”. You will leave with the ability to respond swiftly and properly for the young patients in your care!
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