The Well Child Visit - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 73
About This Presentation
Title:

The Well Child Visit

Description:

... (iris hamartomas) A distinctive osseous lesion such as sphenoid dysplasia or tibial pseudarthrosis First degree relative (parent, sib, or offspring) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:157
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 74
Provided by: MaryTedes
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Well Child Visit


1
The Well Child Visit
  • Mary Tedesco-Schneck MSN, CPNP

2
Focus
  • Child adolescent friendly, safe office
    environment
  • Health screening anticipatory guidance
  • Immunizations
  • For select pediatric age groups
  • Focus areas
  • Identify normal variations on physical exam

3
Child-Adolescent Friendly Safe Office
Environment
  • Considerations in practices and policy

4
Friendly
  • Staff trained in normal growth and development of
    children and adolescents
  • Raising readers http//www.raisingreaders.net/
  • Toys/books/games for waiting area
  • Props to facilitate exam

5
Pediatric Equipment Supplies
  • Band aids, stickers etc.
  • Child size chairs/tables
  • Changing tables
  • Areas for breastfeeding
  • 100 juice
  • Pediolyte (drink pops)
  • Formula
  • Diapers/wipes

6
Safety
  • Time allocation for acute well child visits
  • Reference books
  • General Specialty pediatric reference books
  • Triage book for ancillary staff
  • Web resources (e.g. Up to Date)

7
Pediatric Equipment Supplies
  • Exam room considerations
  • Observation room
  • Outlet covers
  • Guards for sharp corners
  • Emergency equipment
  • Policies/procedures

8
Frush, K.S. Bordley, W.C. (2013).Preparing an
office practice for pediatric emergency. Up to
Date.
  • Office visits by children requiring emergency
    care are common.
  • Office-based self-assessment
  • Likely types of emergencies based on population
  • Office resources
  • EMS capability and response time to the practice
  • Closest facility for higher level of pediatric
    care

9
  • Development of an emergency response plan.
  • Recognition triage of pediatric emergency
  • Children already in the office
  • Telephone triage
  • Internal notification
  • EMS activation
  • Office resuscitation (emergency equipment and
    medications)
  • Patient transfer
  • Training (mock resuscitation)

10
Well Child
  • Resources
  • NAPNAP
  • http//www.napnap.org/index.aspx
  • AAP
  • http//www.aap.org/en-us/Pages/Default.aspx
  • Kids Health
  • http//kidshealth.org/
  • Bright Futures
  • http//brightfutures.org/

11
Minors Rights
  • http//maineaap.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/Min
    ors-Rights-to-Confidential-Health-Care-in-Maine-Po
    cket-Card.pdf

12
Immunizations
  • http//www.cdc.gov/vaccines/schedules/easy-to-read
    /child.html

13
Immunizations
  • General Recommendations on Immunization
  • Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on
    Immunization Practices (ACIP)
  • http//www.cdc.gov/mmwr/pdf/rr/rr6002.pdf

14
Contraindications
  • A contraindication is a condition in a recipient
    that increases the risk for a serious adverse
    reaction (Centers for Disease Control, 2011, p.
    10).
  • The only contraindication applicable to all
    vaccines is a history of a severe allergic
    reaction (i.e., anaphylaxis) after a previous
    dose of vaccine or to a vaccine component (unless
    the recipient has been desensitized see Special
    Situations section) (Centers for Disease
    Control, 2011, p. 11).

15
Precautions
  • A precaution is a condition in a recipient that
    might increase the risk for a serious adverse
    reaction or that might compromise the ability of
    the vaccine to produce immunity (e.g.
    administering influenza vaccine to someone with a
    history of Guillain-Barré syndrome within 6 weeks
    of a previous influenza vaccination) (Centers
    for Disease Control, 2011, p. 11).
  • The presence of a moderate or severe acute
    illness with or without a fever is a precaution
    to administration of all vaccines (Centers for
    Disease Control, 2011, p. 11).

16
Pain Management
17
Baulch I (2010) Assessment and management of pain
in the paediatric patient. Nursing Standard,
25(10,)35-40.
  • Newborns localize pain poorly
  • pain fibers are not myelinated at birth
  • uncontrolled pain can effect this processing for
    a lifetime

18
Prostaglandins
  • Prostaglandins initially found in seminal fluid
    of the prostrate.
  • Not hormones but unsaturated carboxylic acids.
  • Hypothalamus influences their release.

19
Pain Medication
  • Acetaminophen (10-15 mg/kg/dose) inhibits
    prostaglandin synthesis from the CNS
  • Ibuprofen (10 mg/kg/dose) blocks activity of
    cycooxygenase an enzymes necessary for
    prostaglandin synthesis which mediates the
    inflammatory response.
  • Codeine phosphate for moderate pain (10 of the
    population lacks enzyme cytochrome p450 that
    converts codeine to morphine therefore no the
    analgesic effect).

20
Reducing vaccine injection pain
  • Administering brands of vaccines that are less
    painful
  • Positioning children upright (and holding
    infants)
  • Stroking the skin close to the injection site
    before and during injection
  • Administering the least painful vaccine first
  • Performing intramuscular injections rapidly,
    without aspiration (Taddio, A., lIersich, A.,
    Ipp, M., Kikuta, A., Shah, V., 2009, p. S69).

21
  • Sucrose and glucose of various doses and
    concentrations moderately reduces crying
    incidence, crying duration and pain scores during
    or following immunization, beyond the neonatal
    period up to 12 months of age (Harrison, D.,
    Stevens, B., Yamada, J., Adams-Webber, T.,
    Beyene, J., Ohlsson, A., 2010, p. 412).

22
Family Newborn Health
23
Family Health
  • Screening
  • Postpartum depression
  • Social barriers (e.g. substance abuse, poverty)
  • Feeding (Breast or Bottle)
  • Parents Sleep
  • Support
  • Family Friends
  • Adjustment to new baby
  • Partners
  • Siblings
  • Pets
  • Daycare plans/Back to Work

24
Resources
  • http//brightfutures.aap.org/tool_and_resource_kit
    .html
  • http//www.childcarechoices.me/ccchoices/Home.aspx

25
Well Child Forms
  • http//www.maine.gov/dhhs/oms/provider/well_child_
    visits.html
  • Maine The Bright Futures guidelines have been
    applied as the states standard of care for
    physicians. The guidelines also were used to
    revise state nursing standards. MaineCare, the
    States public health insurance program, has
    developed new clinical forms based on Bright
    Futures to be used for all recommended well-child
    visits. Providers who complete the forms are
    reimbursed at an enhanced rate.

26
Dental Health
  • http//www2.aap.org/oralhealth/docs/RiskAssessment
    Tool.pdf

27
Kids Health
  • http//kidshealth.org/parent/pregnancy_center/chil
    dbirth/newborn_variations.html
  • Tells it like it is .

28
Discipline
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vtbm1XFNY7sM

29
Newborn Care
  • http//kidshealth.org/parent/pregnancy_center/newb
    orn_care/guide_parents.html
  • Videos
  • http//brightfutures.aap.org/video_families.html

30
Newborn
  • 0 to 28 Days

31
Newborn Skin
32
Milia
  • Papules lt 2 mm primarily on face scalp
  • Contain keratinized stratum corneum
  • Present at birth or may appear later in infancy

33
Salmon patch (nevus simplex)AKA stork bite,
angel kisses
  • Present at birth
  • Pink to red macule commonly on nap of the neck,
    eyelids, glabella (smooth area between
    eyebrows)
  • Most fade by 1-2 years of age

34
Mongolian spot (Dermal Melanosis)
  • Slate blue, gray or black
  • Lower back sacrum
  • More frequently darker skinned individuals

35
Jaundice
  • Results from transient elevation of serum
    bilirubin (5 7 mg/dl)
  • Apparent in the 3rd to 4th day of life

36
Erythema Toxicum
  • 50 - 72 of all newborns
  • Etiology is unknown
  • Onset 24-48 hours of life can appear as late as
    10 days of age
  • Lesions wax and wane and are filled with
    eosinophils
  • 1-3 mm yellowish papules or pustules

37
Epsteins pearls
  • 1-2 mm yellow to gray-white papules on the medial
    palate
  • Microkeratocytes

38
Hemangioma
  • Most common pediatric vascular tumors 5 of
    infants in the United States
  • Increase incidence
  • Prematurity
  • Twins
  • Family history

39
Hemangioma
  • Proliferation out of proportion to growth of
    the infant up to 9 months of age
  • Involution
  • 30 by 3 years
  • 50 at 5 years
  • 70 at 7 years
  • 90 by 10-12 years

40
Treatment if
  • Permanent disfigurement
  • Ulceration
  • Bleeding
  • Visual compromise
  • Airway obstruction

41
Treatment for hemangioma
  • Collaborative
  • Dermatologist for on-going treatment
  • Cardiologist initial evaluation prn
  • PCP on-going monitoring

42
Involution of Hemangioma
43
Dysmorphic Features
44
Polydactyl Syndactyl
45
SimianCrease
46
Retinoblastoma
47
Check Nose for Patency
  • Choanal Atresia
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vigiLag2zfHM

48
Spinal Dysraphism
  • Incomplete closure of the vertebrae
  • Lumbosacral lipoma
  • Lumbosacral hemangioma or PWS
  • Lumbosacral tail
  • Lumbosacral dermal sinus
  • Lumbosacral aplastic cutis congenita

49
Hip Dislocation
50
Ortalani Barlow Maneuvers
  • https//www.youtube.com/watch?vqgAHQI74BfU
  • https//www.youtube.com/watch?vV7_8yaggwxoorefh
    ttps3A2F2Fwww.youtube.com2Fwatch3Fv3DV7_8yag
    gwxohas_verified1

51
Cardiac Defects
ASD VSD PDA Coarctation
Mid-systolic murmur ULSB with wide split of second heart sound Holosystolic murmur LLSB Continuous murmur under left clavicle, referred to the back Systolic ejection murmur in left intraclavicular region with transmission Diminished femoral pulses
52
Car Seats
  • http//www.maine.gov/dps/bhs/restraints/child-seat
    s/styles.html

53
Infancy
54
Otitis Media
  • Infection of the middle ear
  • Most common organisms
  • S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, M. catarrhalis
  • Diagnosis based on middle ear effusion and
    inflammation

55
Potential Complications
  • Cholesteatoma (Hx. Chronic OM foul smelling
    d/c vertigo hearing loss)
  • Inflammation
  • Perforation of the TM
  • Mastoiditis (suppurative infection of mastoid
    cells)
  • Hearing loss

56
Dacryostenosis http//www.youtube.com/watch?v4000
uJDRags
57
Strabismus vs. Pseudo-Strabismus
  • By 3 to 4 months there should be no deviation of
    the eyes
  • Assessment
  • Cover/uncover
  • Hirschbergs test

58
  • Diastasis recti
  • Umbilical hernia

59
NIH diagnostic criteria for NF1
  • Two or more of the following features
  • Pre-pubertal
  • gt 6 CAM gt 5 mm in greatest diameter
  • Post-pubertal
  • gt 6 CAM gt 15 mm in greatest diameter
  • Two or more neurofibromas or one plexiform
    neurofibroma
  • Freckling in the axillary or inguinal regions
  • Optic glioma
  • Two or more Lisch nodules (iris hamartomas)
  • A distinctive osseous lesion such as sphenoid
    dysplasia or tibial pseudarthrosis
  • First degree relative (parent, sib, or offspring)
    with NF1 as defined by the above criteria

60
Innocent Murmurs
Stills (Head Start Murmur) Pulmonary Flow Murmur of Childhood Pulmonary Flow Murmur of Infancy Venous Hum
Most common between 2-6 years Most common between 8-14 years ?standing or sitting ? supine Infancy Any age
Midpoint, left mid-sternal border to apex Pulmonary outflow area Short, mid-systolic Constant swishing disappears head turning, or supine position varies respirations
Short, vibratory, musical Soft, blowing with split S2, no thrill Soft with middle to high pitch Soft, high pitch does not radiate
61
Skeletal Findings
  • Tibial torsion
  • Genu Valgum
  • Genu Valgus
  • Pes Planus
  • Metatarus Adductus
  • Scoliosis

62
Tibial Torsion vs. Tibial Version
  • Version normal variation in tibial rotation
  • Gradually resolves by 8 years of age

63
(No Transcript)
64
Genu Valgum (Knock Knees)
  • More common in girls
  • Apparent at 2 to 4 years of age disappears by 7
    to 8 years
  • Orthopedic evaluation
  • Angle gt 15 degrees
  • Unilateral
  • Associated with short stature
  • Inter-malleolar distance gt 4-5 inches

65
Genu Valgus (Bow Legs)
  • Common up to 2-3 years of age
  • Angle between the tibia femur pronounced up to
    15 degrees before 1 year of age neutral by 18
    months
  • Orthopedic evaluation
  • Tibia-femoral angle gt 15 degrees
  • Unilateral
  • Progressive
  • Associated with short stature

66
Flexible Pes Planus
  • Often seen in neonates to toddlers
  • Soft tissue laxity
  • Familial
  • Arch is seen when foot is dangling
  • Resolves by 2-3 years of age but rarely persists
    in adulthood

67
Flexible Metatarsus Adductus
  • Hind foot straight and forefoot adducted
  • Often bilateral
  • From intrauterine position
  • 1/1000 births
  • Stretching with diaper change/baths

68
Radiologic Evalaution
  • Cobbs Angle
  • Risser sign

69
Risk of Scoliosis Progression
70
Scoliosis Screening
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vs-9A0OuEr14

71
(No Transcript)
72
References
  • Baulch I. (2010) Assessment and management of
    pain in the paediatric patient. Nursing Standard,
    25 (10),35-40.
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    (2011). General recommendations on immunization
    Recommendations of the advisory committee on
    immunization practices (ACIP). MMWR, 60(2),
    1-64.
  • Harrison, D., Stevens, B., Yamada, J.,
    Adams-Webber, T., Beyene, J., Ohlsson, A.
    (2010). Efficacy of sweet solutions for
    analgesia in infants between 1 and 12 months of
    age A systematic review. Archives of Disease in
    Children, 95,406413.

73
  • Taddio, A., lIersich, A., Ipp, M., Kikuta, A.,
    Shah, V. (2009). Physical interventions and
    injection techniques for reducing injection pain
    during routine childhood immunizations
    Systematic review of randomized controlled trials
    and quasi-randomized controlled trials. Clinical
    Therapeutics, 31(B), S48-S76.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com