Home
HomeSite Index Maps & Directions Contact Us
Find a Doctor
Consumer Health Information
About University Health Systems
Patient and Visitor Information
Jobs
Graduate Medical Education
Our Hospitals
Pitt County Memorial Hospital
Bertie Memorial Hospital
Chowan Hospital
Heritage Hospital
The Outer Banks Hospital
Roanoke-Chowan Hospital
Cardiovascular Center
Children's Hospital
Leo Jenkins Cancer Center
Regional Rehabilitation Center
Trauma and Critical Care
Women's Services
Surgical Services
Outpatient Services
ViQuest
All Services
Quick Links








MD’s judgment, experience often best ways to treat a baby’s fever
Health News Feature

Health News Feature
Weekly news feature articles on current health topics that affect you and your family.

MD’s judgment, experience often best ways to treat a baby’s fever

(HealthDay News) – Experience is not only often the best teacher, it also can be the best basis for making decisions.

That seems to be the case when it comes to prescribing treatment for infants who have a fever. A recent study concluded that a physician's experience in diagnosing serious illness plays an important role in deciding how to treat infant fever, even if clinical guidelines are followed to the letter.

The dilemma of how to treat a young infant with fever has existed for decades, with several sets of guidelines developed over the years, leaning toward the recommendation of hospitalization and many lab and blood tests, sometimes even including a spinal tap. The fear has been that doctors who do less might miss a case of serious illness such as bacteria in the blood or bacterial meningitis, a potentially fatal infection of the membranes of the brain and spinal cord.

But the study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, concludes experienced doctors in private practices and health maintenance organizations can rely on their know-how and choose not to follow the guidelines to the letter, without compromising their little patients' health.

"If you are an experienced clinician, you can rely on your clinical judgment," says study author Dr. Robert H. Pantell, a professor of pediatrics at the University of California at San Francisco .

Pantell and his colleagues evaluated data from 3,066 infants aged 3 months or younger seen by 573 practitioners from 44 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico . All had body temperatures of at least 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit. The researchers tracked what tests were ordered and whether the children were hospitalized.

"Had they followed the clinical guidelines they would not have done better in diagnosing the problem," Pantell says. "However, they would have hospitalized 40 percent more infants under [age] 30 days." Those hospitalizations would have cost much more, of course, than following the infants via regular office visits, Pantell says, not to mention the boost in stress for parents.

The physicians followed the current guidelines about hospitalization and testing 42 percent of the time, Pantell found. "Of the 3,066, 14 had bacterial meningitis diagnosed," Pantell says. "Of those, five also had bacteria in the blood and another 49 had bacteria, E. coli or group B strep in the blood. There were two cases they -- quote -- missed. But they were treated the next day and were fine."

Overall, the doctors hospitalized 36 percent of the infants, performed lab testing in 75 percent, and initially treated 57 percent with antibiotics. Most, 64 percent, were treated without hospitalizations.

The study results make sense to Dr. Kenneth B. Roberts, director of the pediatric teaching program at Moses Cone Healthy System in Greensboro , N.C. , who wrote an editorial to accompany the report. Some of the previous guidelines, he says, were generated in inner-city emergency departments.

In those settings, he says, there is often no follow-up and the doctor who sees the patients does not see him or her regularly. In these cases, he adds, following the guidelines might make more sense. In the study reported by Pantell, however, the pediatricians were strong on follow-up. "Only in 4 percent [of cases] was it a one-time visit and that was the end of it," Roberts says.

Often, Roberts says, the situation and the setting of care have much to do with whether a doctor is wise to follow guidelines or to rely more on clinical judgment. "I had hoped to convey in the editorial that it's not that the data from one [set of guidelines] are wrong or that the way people are acting in one place [is] wrong. It's just that they are quite different settings," he says.

Parents should "recognize that fever in the first month of two or life is something they should bring to the attention of their physicians." Fever is defined, he adds, as a temperature of 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit or higher.

On the Web

For more information on children and fever, visit the American Academy of Family PhysiciansWeb site.

SOURCES: Robert H. Pantell, M.D., professor, pediatrics, University of California, San Francisco; Kenneth B. Roberts, M.D., Professor of Pediatrics and Director, Pediatric Teaching Program, Moses Cone Memorial Hospital, University of North Carolina, Greensboro, N.C.; March 10, 2004, Journal of the American Medical Association
Author: Kathleen Doheny, HealthDay Reporter
Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC . All rights reserved.

 



Powered by Healthvision
Disclaimer Information Calendar of Events Privacy Practices Copyright 2005