Ana Jove Blanco

and 5 more

Background: Inhaler technique (IT) knowledge among healthcare providers is poor. The aim was to improve PED healthcare providers’ IT technique by carrying out an education intervention, and sustain it for 6 months. Methods: open-label, quasi-experimental, prospective and unicentric study. Healthcare professionals working at the Pediatric Emergency Department (PED) were enrolled. The study was developed in three phases: baseline evaluation and education intervention (P1) and reevaluation 1 month (P2) and 6 months (P3) after the education intervention. Participants fulfilled an eight-question theoretical test. Practical skills were evaluated by demonstrating IT in all three phases. The education intervention consisted in a verbal explanation of IT followed by a demonstration of IT with metered-dose inhaler using a mannequin. Results: 84 healthcare providers (medical residents, nurses and nursing assistants) were involved. In the theoretical questionnaire, the mean score at baseline was 4.4/8 (SD 1.7) improving to 6.3/8 (SD 1.2) in P2 and 6.47/8 (SD 1.1) in P3. In the IT evaluation for children <7 years old, the score improved from 5.7/7 (SD1.3) to 6.5/7 in P2 and 6.7/7 in P3 (p<0.001). For children >7 years old, the mean score of IT at baseline was 3.1/10 (SD 4), which improved to 7.4/10 (SD3) and 8.2/10 in P2 and P3 respectively (p<0.001). Only laboral category influenced results at baseline. Conclusion: Healthcare providers’ theoretical knowledge and practical skills on IT are low. The education intervention performed is a useful strategy to ameliorate IT among healthcare providers.

Elena Rincon-Lopez

and 11 more

Introduction Etiological diagnosis of fever in sickle cell disease (SCD) children is often challenging. Objective: to analyze the pattern of inflammatory biomarkers in SCD febrile children and controls, in order to determine predictors of severe bacterial infection (SBI). Methods Prospective, case-control study of febrile and steady-state SCD children carried out during 3 years. Clinical characteristics and laboratory parameters, including 10 serum proinflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, IL-2, IL-4, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, IL-12p70, IL-17a, IFN-γ and TNF-α) and comparisons among study subgroups were analyzed. Results A total of 137 patients (78 cases and 59 controls) were included in the study; 78.5% males, median age 4.1 (1.7-7.5) years. Four cases were diagnosed with SBI, 41 viral infection (VI) and 33 no proven infection (NPI). IL-6 was significantly higher in patients with SBI than in patients with VI or NPI (163 vs 0.7 vs 0.7 pg/ml, p < 0.001), and undetectable in all controls. The rest of the cytokines analyzed did not show any significant difference. The optimal cut-off value of IL-6 for the diagnosis of SBI was 125 pg/mL, with high PPV and NPV (PPV of 100% for a prevalence of 5, 10 and 15% and NPV of 98.7%, 97.3% and 95.8% for those prevalences, respectively). Conclusion We found that IL-6 (optimal cut-off value of 125 pg/ml) was a very good marker for SBI in this cohort of febrile SCD children, with high PPV and NPV. Therefore, IL-6 may be useful, alone or combined with other biomarkers, to guide the management of these patients.