Febrile convulsions are a very frightening and life threatening condition occuring in children under 5 years of age. However, less than 1% of children go on to develop full blown epilepsy. prolonged fits lasting over 15 minutes can have an adverse prognostic significance. Therefore timely management and investigation of underlying causes is paramount.
Are febrile convulsions managed appropriately according to best practice guidelines?
Retrospective audit
Sample: 30-50 Emergency Department patient records
Criteria
Inclusions: All patients aged 6 months to 5 years (inclusive) with a primary diagnosis of febrile convulsion
Exclusions: All patients aged under 6 months or over 5 years, or presenting with another medical condition
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1st December 2012
Date | Patients | Measured | Results | Standard | Regional avg. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
01st December 2012 | Patients aged 6 months to 5 years attending the ED with febrile convulsions | Management according to criteria | Documented examination for signs of meningitis | 100 % | - |
Patient information given and documented if discharged from the ED | 100 % | - | |||
Antipyretic given within 10 mins unless already given | 100 % | - | |||
BM measured within 5 mins of arrival | 100 % | - | |||
Temp measured within 5 mins of arrival | 100 % | - | |||
All children admitted after first episode of convulsions | 100 % | - | |||
Triaged as Orange if temp >38.5 deg C. | 100 % | - |
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