Feature

Pediatric emergencies associated with unnecessary testing: AAP


 

The American Academy of Pediatrics is cautioning physicians and parents to be on the lookout for unnecessary diagnostic testing associated with several common pediatric conditions.

Children seen for these conditions in emergency settings and even in primary care offices could experience avoidable pain, exposure to harmful radiation, and other harms, according to the group.

“The emergency department has the ability to rapidly perform myriad diagnostic tests and receive results quickly,” said Paul Mullan, MD, MPH, chair of the AAP’s Section of Emergency Medicine’s Choosing Wisely task force. “However, this comes with the danger of diagnostic overtesting.”

The five recommendations are as follows:

  • Radiographs should not be obtained for children with bronchiolitis, croup, asthma, or first-time wheezing.
  • Laboratory tests for screening should not be undertaken in the medical clearance process of children who require inpatient psychiatric admission unless clinically indicated.
  • Laboratory testing or a CT scan of the head should not be ordered for a child with an unprovoked, generalized seizure or a simple febrile seizure whose mental status has returned to baseline.
  • Abdominal radiographs should not be obtained for suspected constipation.
  • Comprehensive viral panel testing should not be undertaken for children who are suspected of having respiratory viral illnesses.

The AAP task force partnered with Choosing Wisely Canada to create the recommendations. The list is the first of its kind to be published jointly by two countries, according to the release.

“We hope this Choosing Wisely list will encourage clinicians to rely on their clinical skills and avoid unnecessary tests,” said Dr. Mullan, who is also a physician at Children’s Hospital of the King’s Daughters and professor of pediatrics at Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Recommended Reading

Skinny-label biosimilars provide substantial savings to Medicare
MDedge Family Medicine
Highly processed foods ‘as addictive’ as tobacco
MDedge Family Medicine
Don’t call me ‘Dr.,’ say some physicians – but most prefer the title
MDedge Family Medicine
More work needed to optimize STI screening in primary care settings
MDedge Family Medicine
A new use for dating apps: Chasing STDs
MDedge Family Medicine
U.S. biosimilar competition, use, and availability still lags behind European countries
MDedge Family Medicine
Analysis of doctors’ EHR email finds infrequent but notable hostility
MDedge Family Medicine
How blunt is too blunt for informed consent?
MDedge Family Medicine
Women docs: How your next job contract can reflect your real goals
MDedge Family Medicine
Deductibles a threat to more imaging after abnormal mammogram
MDedge Family Medicine