Background: Eighty-eight percent of pediatric emergency department (ED) visits occur in general EDs. Exposure to critically ill children during emergency medicine (EM) training has not been well described.
Objective: The objective was to characterize the critically ill pediatric EM case exposure among EM residents.
Methods: This is a secondary analysis of a multicenter retrospective review of pediatric patients (aged < 18 years) seen by the 2015 graduating resident physicians at four U.S. EM training programs. The per-resident exposure to Emergency Severity Index (ESI) Level 1 pediatric patients was measured. Resident-level counts of pediatric patients were measured; specific counts were classified by age and Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Network diagnostic categories.
Results: There were 31,552 children seen by 51 residents across all programs; 434 children (1.3%) had an ESI of 1. The median patient age was 8 years (interquartile range [IQR] 3-12 years). The median overall pediatric critical case exposure per resident was 6 (IQR 3-12 cases). The median trauma and medical exposure was 2 (IQR 0-3) and 3 (IQR 2-10), respectively. For 13 out of 20 diagnostic categories, at least 50% of residents did not see any critical care case in that category. Sixty-eight percent of residents saw 10 or fewer critically ill cases by the end of training.
Conclusion: Pediatric critical care exposure during EM training is very limited. These findings underscore the importance of monitoring trainees' case experience to inform program-specific curricula and to develop strategies to increase exposure and resident entrustment, as well as further research in this area.
Keywords: critical care; medical education; pediatric emergency medicine; residency training.
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