Medical Care for Pediatric Patients: Special Considerations and Practices

Pediatric patients are children and adolescents who require medical care, treatment, and attention tailored to their age and developmental stage.
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Child Health | Adolescent Medicine | Pediatric Diseases | Pediatric Patients Care | Child Healthcare | Adolescent Medical Treatment
Prepared by Shruti Sahoo, reviewed by Dr. Eugene Smith

Pediatric Patients FAQ

What is a pediatric patient?

The pediatric patient represents a group in which the various techniques of sedation and general anesthesia are frequently required. However, pediatric patients cannot be treated as though they were simply small adults. Drug dosages usually must be altered to meet the specific needs of the child patient.

What does a pediatrician mean?

The word “paediatrics” means “healer of children”; they are derived from two Greek words: (pais = child) and (iatros = doctor or healer). Paediatrics is a relatively new medical specialty, developing only in the mid-19th century. Abraham Jacobi (1830–1919) is known as the father of paediatrics. What does a pediatrician do?

What is a pediatric doctor?

Pediatrics is the branch of medicine dealing with the health and medical care of infants, children, and adolescents from birth up to the age of 18. The word “paediatrics” means “healer of children”; they are derived from two Greek words: (pais = child) and (iatros = doctor or healer).

What is pediatric patient education?

Pediatric Patient Education is a comprehensive online library of patient handouts spanning from birth through young adulthood published by the American Academy of Pediatrics. PDF handouts: sample | full list E-mail: feedback | subscription information Sign up for e-alerts

Are pediatric patients engaged in health care?

Pediatric patients were most often asked to express their views on questions from daily clinical care and the individual interview was the most used method. In general, the extent to which pediatric patients are engaged in health care increases with age. This scoping review shows that there is an increasing interest in pediatric patient engagement.

How do hospitals provide pediatric inpatient and outpatient services?

Hospitals that provide pediatric inpatient or outpatient services need both a plan in place (whether internally or through transport agreements) and resources available to provide urgent and emergent transfer to a facility with a higher level of care to best meet a patient’s needs.

How do hospitals and physicians provide care for children?

Hospitals and/or physicians providing care for children need well-established networks for timely consultation by subspecialists with pediatric expertise and, when necessary, for transfer of a patient to a facility that offers more advanced levels of care.

Pediatric Patients References

If you want to know more about Pediatric Patients, consider exploring links below:

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