Copyright
©The Author(s) 2025.
World J Clin Pediatr. Sep 9, 2025; 14(3): 108140
Published online Sep 9, 2025. doi: 10.5409/wjcp.v14.i3.108140
Published online Sep 9, 2025. doi: 10.5409/wjcp.v14.i3.108140
Table 1 Summary of systemic barriers and proposed solutions for the quality of pediatric emergency care
Category | Key components |
Quality indicators | |
Timeliness of care | Door-to-doctor time: Influenced by hospital size, staffing, triage[9,10] |
Time to treatment: Quick intervention improves survival[12] | |
ED length of stay (LOS): It is an indicator of efficiency, and prolonged LOS could indicate ineffective therapy, bed shortages, or delayed diagnosis[13-15] | |
Patient safety | Adverse events include medication errors, misdiagnosis, and procedural mistakes[16-18] |
Root causes: Staff fatigue, poor communication, protocol non-adherence[20] | |
Diagnostic accuracy | Trauma: High misdiagnosis risk (e.g., abdominal injuries)[11] |
Sepsis: Early vague symptoms lead to delay[21] | |
Respiratory issues: Misjudged severity impacts outcome[22] | |
Patient & family satisfaction | Influenced by communication, environment, and provider interaction[23] |
Family involvement improves satisfaction and treatment adherence[24] | |
Systemic barriers | |
Resource constraints | Lack of infrastructure[25,26] |
Poor staffing | |
Lack of pediatric emergency physicians and protocols | |
Training gaps | Lack of specific pediatric training among ED practitioners |
Outdated infrastructure | Outdated or ineffective infrastructure puts patient safety at risk and delays care[28] |
Lack of integrated care systems leading to delays in inpatient admissions, specialist consultations, and diagnostic testing | |
Proposed solutions | |
Telemedicine | To provide real-time support to rural and remote areas[30] |
Mobile units | Helpful to stabilize children before transfer to a specialized hospital or to offer on-site care |
Training | Structured pediatric emergency care training to ED members[31] |
Simulation-based trainings improve competence and confidence by enabling them to practice uncommon but crucial procedures under controlled conditions[33] | |
Clinical protocols | Use of protocols is helpful to standardize clinical practices |
Use in trauma/sepsis care has improved the outcome[32] | |
Research networks | Help improve the global standards and diagnostic accuracy |
PECARN: Helped to enhance the evidence-based practices for asthma, trauma, and sepsis | |
Artificial intelligence | Assists with the identification of critical cases using data analytics |
Promising early results in efficiency and safety | |
Quality improvement efforts | Focus on clinical protocols, early warning systems, and symptom-based training |
Effective in improving accuracy and reducing delays | |
Leadership role | Pediatric leaders drive QI, staff training, and policy adherence |
Leads to sustained pediatric care improvements |
- Citation: Soni P, Agrawal A. Pediatric emergency care: Determinants and systematic barriers. World J Clin Pediatr 2025; 14(3): 108140
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2219-2808/full/v14/i3/108140.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.5409/wjcp.v14.i3.108140