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  • 29
    Oct
    2012
    12:23am, EDT

    ER docs learn better ways to help hurting kids

    Taylor Brooks, 14, shown with her mother, Tamiko, has sickle cell disease and struggles with pain.

    By Dr. Tyeese Gaines, NBC News

    Tamiko Brooks tenses as she recalls an emergency room visit two weeks ago with her 14-year-old daughter, Taylor, as she experienced excruciating pain from sickle cell disease.

    “Taylor was crying and moving all around,” says Brooks. “She found someplace comfortable and rocked back and forth in order to deal with the pain. You could just see the tears coming down from her eyes as she said, ‘Mommy can you tell them to give me more medicine? I’m still hurting.’”

    Sickle cell disease is a painful inherited condition that causes red blood cells to clog small arteries to her bones, organs, brain and chest.

    When sickle cell crises flare, these children can require large amounts of strong IV pain medications to bring the pain down to a tolerable level. For this reason, Brooks and her daughter have had many ER visits for pain control, including the one just two weeks ago.

    “They gave her 4 milligrams of morphine, and you have to wait two hours before you can get the next dose,” Brooks explains. “She suffered for two hours. Maybe the protocol needs to be revamped, or maybe they need to up the dose. I don’t know.”

    Children’s pain has historically been undertreated in health care settings. In the ER in particular, a child’s pain may go unaddressed or inadequately treated for several reasons. Some of those identified include the comfort level of the doctor giving the medications, how busy the ER is that day, and difficulty in deciphering how much pain a child is in.

    A new report out today from the American Academy of Pediatrics instructs doctors, providers and EMTs on the best ways to treat children’s pain and anxiety in emergency settings -- sometimes, without medication.

    Videos, bubbles and more
    The report mentions tactics such as creating a calm, child-friendly environment, distraction using videos or bubble blowers, and numbing the skin before placing an IV or giving a needle. The report also encourages health providers not to fear the use of IV pain medications in children, when appropriate.

    While these efforts promptly decrease the child’s suffering, they can also positively affect how that child views the medical system moving forward, according to the report.

    “It can make such a huge difference in the experience of the child and the family,” says Dr. Audrey Paul, pediatric ER physician and an associate professor of emergency medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine. “It’s just about being educated and being aware [of the options].”

    Paul says she routinely teaches her resident physicians to become comfortable with treating children’s pain, even with strong medications like morphine. She adds that some less-comfortable physicians have an underlying fear of using such medications in children, because too much of it can affect a child’s breathing.

    “We always use an appropriate dose [based on the individual child’s weight], and we start with a lower dose first,” she says.

    Being able to remember positive ER experiences is even more important for children with chronic, painful illnesses. It’s almost a given that those patients, like Taylor, will see another ER in their future.

    Despite Taylor’s most recent experience and less-than-promising ER data, Brooks says she has had mostly positive experiences at her small, community children’s hospital in Chicago, and her daughter is better for it.

    “Pain meds are usually given within the first 45 minutes,” she says. “Most of the time we are able to get in and she is assessed in the first 20 to 30 minutes. She’s given pain meds shortly thereafter. A lot of hospitals don’t do that because they have a lot of kids coming into the ER.”

    Taylor says that the coloring books, television or being in the playroom also help.

    “Sometimes as much as the medicine,” she says.

    Helping parents learn to advocate
    A study last year in Academic Emergency Medicine had similar observations about busy ERs. Children in pain from arm or leg fractures in the ER were less likely to have their pain addressed during the busier times.

    "I think the biggest issue is that parents aren’t really taught to advocate for their kids,” Paul says. “Parents are scared for their kids. They feel powerless. They will defer to the physician, like ‘they know best.’”

    Brooks agrees. When she educates other parents of children with sickle cell disease in her role with the Sickle Cell Disease Association of Illinois, she instills in them the need to be advocates.

    “Nobody knows your child like you know your child. You’re the first line of defense,” she says. “You see them at their most vulnerable point, and you see them when they’re normal.”

    Advocating may sometimes be the only way to get heard, Paul says. “[Emergency departments] are so busy and overcrowded that their pain may not be on the forefront of the doctor’s or nurse’s consciousness,” she adds.

    Even though Taylor is a teenager, Brooks still stays with her in the hospital when she’s admitted for crises, “just to make sure that she’s getting what she needs, and to make sure her pain is under control.”

    The report supports the common, tried-and-true pain relievers -- ibuprofen and acetaminophen -- especially when children first arrive at the ER in pain.

    “There’s good evidence that says that Tylenol [also known as acetaminophen] and ibuprofen are very effective for pain in kids,” says Dr. Howard Mell, an emergency medicine physician.

    In fact, a small 2007 study showed that after one hour, ibuprofen alone had appropriately decreased pain in half of the children with musculoskeletal injuries -- more than acetaminophen or codeine, a prescription painkiller.

    Mell is the EMS medical director for Lake Health EMS, a large system in suburban Cleveland with 1,800 EMT providers. His protocols encourage administering acetaminophen as needed when transporting a child to the ER for pain.

    “We also give a combination of morphine and [nausea medication] for anything that’s obviously major pain,” he adds.

    Start pain control in the ambulance
    The report’s authors actually agree with this approach and feel that pain control for children can and should be started with EMT providers in the ambulance.

    “I think that the more progressive EMS systems have been doing that for a long time,” says Mell. “For us, it’s been in place for years.”

    When asked about any concerns with EMT providers, not doctors, giving strong IV pain medications, he said: “EMS providers are very acutely aware of the risks and able to handle them.”

    He also applauds the authors for their recommendations.

    “I’ve always held the mantra to treat every patient like they’re a member of your family,” he says. “And I certainly wouldn’t want my kid left in pain.”

    Paul says that the guidelines will be most helpful in smaller ERs or in rural ERs that don’t see a lot of children, and don’t have such policies already in place.

    A doctor's tips on advocating for your child in the ER:

    • Stay calm, but be firm. As Paul mentioned, sometimes when the ER is busy, you may have to advocate more firmly. Stay calm, but remind them of your child’s unaddressed pain.
    • Be informed. When possible, know and learn about your child’s illness. Have old records and know the most recent results of X-rays or labs. Share what types of pain medication have worked for your child in the past.
    • Try it yourself. Attempt to treat minor pains (like ear or throat pain) at home with over-the-counter pain relievers before bringing the child in. If the child is still with pain when you arrive, you can make your case that it’s more urgent.
    • Listen before reacting. Sometimes there are medical reasons why your child’s pain can’t be treated immediately. Be willing to hear what the doctors and nurses have to say about it.
    • Ask for alternatives. See what options your ER has to distract or treat the pain without medication.

    Dr. Tyeese Gaines is a physician-journalist with over 10 years of print and broadcast experience, now serving as health editor for theGrio.com (NBC News). Dr. Ty is also a practicing emergency medicine physician in New Jersey. Follow her on twitter at @doctorty or on Facebook.

    Related stories:

    Black children in the ER less likely to get pain meds, CDC survey reveals

    How to calm a child's fears about shots

     

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    Explore related topics: er, pediatric-patients, dr-tyeese-gaines, childrens-pain
  • 19
    Jun
    2012
    8:18am, EDT

    The doctor is in: your questions on food allergies, pertussis, migraines and more

     

    By Dr. Tyeese Gaines

    Dr. Tyeese Gaines, an emergency medicine physician and health editor for theGrio.com, answers your questions about everything from shingles to concussions. Got a question you'd like her to answer in an upcoming column? Send it to askdoctorty@gmail.com.

    Q: Is it normal for a child to develop a food allergy all of a sudden (in this case, shellfish)?
    - Elizabeth C.
    A: Yes. Allergies can develop at any time. They’re more likely to start in childhood, but anyone -- even adults -- can become allergic to foods that that person has eaten his or her entire life.

    Q: I’m pregnant with our second child and due in August. Both my obstetrician and my son’s pediatrician recommend that my husband and I get a pertussis booster shot (for whooping cough).  My husband was in the ER and given a tetanus shot. Do all tetanus shots come with pertussis in them?
    - Sarah D. J.
    A: No. There are vaccines with tetanus alone, and others with both tetanus and pertussis. We get excited about pertussis vaccination because pertussis -- the bacteria that causes whooping cough -- is highly contagious and dangerous to infants. The current recommendation is to give pertussis when adults get tetanus vaccines because it decreases the chances of adults passing pertussis onto the children.

    Q: Why is it that when I go to the emergency room for a mega migraine everyone assumes I am a pill popper or drug addict? If I wasn’t in such unbearable pain and vomiting, I wouldn’t go.
    - Aron B.
    A: Unfortunately, there are people looking for prescription pain medication for the wrong reasons -- not because they have pain, but because they either want to get a euphoric high or sell the pills illegally. The problem is, it can be difficult to tell the difference. If you have two patients writhing in pain, but one is being deceptive, how do you know? And, in your case, patients who come in frequently do tend to raise flags. The best thing to do is get a good primary physician who knows you well. Either he or she can prescribe you pain medication and help you avoid the emergency room altogether or that physician can call the ER and “vouch” for you and the fact that you’re not drug-seeking. 

    Q: Black spots keep coming up on my face, and my neck is darker than the rest of my body, what can I do to clear it up?
    - Nic-nak J.
    A: The neck can be darker than the rest of the body, especially in the folds, in a condition called acanthosis nigricans. Sometimes, it is benign, other times it means there is an underlying health problem. Acanthosis nigricans affects people of African descent more often, and tends to run in families. Obesity and other hormonal problems can lead to this discoloration. And, it is often seen in obesity-related diabetes -- sometimes as a warning sign long before the patient develops diabetes.  The darker discoloration can spread to the armpits, groin and finger joints. It fades once the underlying cause is treated.

    The spots that appear on the skin with age are usually signs of long-term sun damage. It also appears to be related to genetics. Visit your physician or a dermatologist to figure out whether those are aging spots or discoloration to be concerned about.

    Q: I am not a drinker. I may have a drink once or twice a month. Sometimes, when I drink, I get the “blood pressure headache.” Is it safe to pop another pill prior to having a drink in order to control my blood pressure?
    - Lynn E. P.
    A: This concept of people developing a headache when their blood pressure is high is often debated. The problem is, pain can increase a person’s blood pressure, so simply having a headache can make one’s blood pressure go up. If the blood pressure is taken at that point, who knows which caused which?

    With respect to your headache, some people do develop headaches when drinking alcohol. Some are very sensitive to the dehydration that comes with even a small amount of alcohol intake. Others are affected by the chemicals in certain types of alcohol, such as red wine -- a well-known trigger in migraine sufferers.

    Talk to your doctor and don’t assume that taking an extra blood pressure pill will prevent the headache. It may not be caused by your blood pressure at all.

    Q: If it’s late at night, or on a weekend, can you help parents decide if they should take their child to the ER as opposed to calling their on-call pediatrician or waiting until office hours?
    - Michelle V. S.
    A: If the child is having difficulty breathing, or some other life-threatening condition, call 911 immediately. Otherwise, call the pediatrician. There is always someone on call for their patients. The truth is, many pediatric ER visits can wait until the morning when the pediatrician’s office is open. Allow the doctor to help with that decision. He or she may even call in the prescriptions you need to the pharmacy without you having to come in.

    Dr. Tyeese Gaines is a physician-journalist with over 10 years of print and broadcast experience, now serving as health editor for theGrio.com. Dr. Ty is also a practicing emergency medicine physician in New Jersey. Follow her on twitter at @doctorty.

    Note: The information included in this post is for educational purposes only. It is not intended nor implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice. The reader should always consult his or her healthcare provider with questions. Reading the information on this website does not create a physician-patient relationship.

    More from Dr. Tyeese Gaines:

    The doctor is in: Shingles, teen concussion and an itchy breast

    1 comment

    Show more
    Explore related topics: blood, medical, pressure, emergency, er, high, allergies, headaches, pertussis
  • 23
    May
    2012
    3:10pm, EDT

    The doctor is in: Your questions answered

    By Dr. Tyeese Gaines

    Dr. Tyeese Gaines, an emergency medicine physician and health editor for theGrio.com, answers your questions about everything from shingles to concussions. Got a question you'd like her to answer in an upcoming column? Send it to askdoctorty@gmail.com.

    Q: I am African-American and 52 years old. I have noticed my skin burning more than usual. Is this because of age, and what type of sunscreen should I look for?
    - Cheryl B. 

    A: Yes, skin becomes thinner as we age. However, much of what we attribute to age, such as wrinkles and spots, are actually due to sun damage accumulated over the years. It's never too late to prevent additional damage or further thinning. The American Academy of Dermatology recommends selecting a sunscreen that protects against both UVA and UVB rays with an SPF of 30 or higher. It should be used every day, even on cloudy days. But, it's important to know that sunscreens with a high SPF may not always prevent sunburn.

    Q: I keep hearing this ad that people who have chickenpox will end up with shingles. What's shingles? What does it look like?

    Dr. Tyeese Gaines, an emergency medicine physician at Raritan Bay Medical Center in New Jersey and health editor for theGrio.com, answers your questions.

    - Lori S.

     A: Once a person gets over a bout of chickenpox, the virus remains dormant -- or "asleep" -- in certain nerves, sometimes for years. Shingles occurs when that "sleeping" virus awakens and creates a painful, chickenpox-like rash along that nerve. Shingles first looks like fluid-filled bumps in a cluster or a straight line, after which they will crust over and scab. 

    Without having had chickenpox or receiving the vaccine, you cannot develop shingles. The virus has to already exist in the body. For this reason, you cannot pass shingles from one person to another. But, someone who has never had chickenpox or the vaccine can contract chickenpox from someone with shingles.

    Regarding that ad, not everyone who has had chickenpox will develop shingles. But, the reason why some people develop it and others do not is unknown. We do know that shingles is more likely in people older than 60 and those with weak immune systems. So, that population is urged to get the shingles vaccine.

    Q: My 13-year-old son recently suffered a concussion playing basketball but has been medically cleared to return to sports. Once a child experiences a concussion, are they more susceptible to getting another one? And, how do you know when a headache is just a headache or a concussion headache?

    - Terri M.C.

    A: Yes, once someone suffers a concussion they are three to four times more likely to develop another one. 

    Let's first discuss what a concussion is. A concussion is, simply put, when a person sustains either a head injury or a force that shakes the brain around and develops symptoms as a result. Those symptoms can include headaches, nausea or vomiting, feeling groggy, sleeping more than usual, vision changes or amnesia. A diagnosis of concussion is made from this clinical criteria. No test, X-ray or CAT scan can determine a concussion. Scans are primarily done to look for skull fractures, bleeding or bruising of the brain -- all of which are different than concussions, and potentially life-threatening.

    In order to be cleared to return to sports after a concussion, consensus guidelines recommend that the person be symptom-free and can ease into full participation without return of symptoms. If symptoms do recur, the person should wait at least 24 hours before returning to the activity. Some experts suggest that continuing to exercise while still having concussion symptoms can prolong recovery time.

    So, if your son has a headache shortly after his concussion, whether it's related or not, still use caution and consider having him sit on the sidelines and give the brain more time to heal.

    Q: I have an intense itch most of the time under my right breast situated over my liver. My doctor gave me a fungal cream and it temporarily got rid of it, but it still comes and goes. Do you think it's anything more?

    - Jane V.K.

    A: It's feasible that what you're experiencing is a recurrent fungal infection. Thus, it makes sense that your itching went away with the cream. Fungi like warm, dark, moist places. So if the area under your breast remains warm, dark and moist then it will likely happen again. Some people have better luck with fungal powders instead of creams to keep the area dry. Athlete's foot, jock itch, ringworm and diaper rash are examples of other fungal infections found on the body.

    Liver disease can sometimes cause itching, but usually the whole body itches -- not just over the right upper abdomen where the liver is.

    Dr. Tyeese Gaines is a physician-journalist with over 10 years of print and broadcast experience, now serving as health editor for theGrio.com (NBC News). Dr. Ty is also a practicing emergency medicine physician in New Jersey. Follow her on twitter at @doctorty.

    More from theGrio:

    Art Monk sues NFL over concussions 

    Junior Seau suicide leads to NFL soul searching on football violence

    'Black don't crack' but what does it lack?

    The information included in this post is for educational purposes only. It is not intended nor implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice. The reader should always consult his or her healthcare provider with questions. Reading the information on this website does not create a physician-patient relationship.

    Comment

    Show more
    Explore related topics: er, concussion, shingles, emergency-medicine, chickenpox, head-injury, dr-tyeese-gaines

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