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Core Content Lecture 1

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Pediatric Disaster Life Support Core Content Lecture 1 Fundamentals of Pediatric Disaster Medicine Andrew L. Garrett, MD The Need is Clear We have established that ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Core Content Lecture 1


1
Pediatric Disaster Life Support
  • Core Content Lecture 1
  • Fundamentals of Pediatric Disaster Medicine
  • Andrew L. Garrett, MD

2
The Need is Clear
  • We have established that disasters affect
    children at the same time as the rest of the
    community
  • We know that children have needs that are
    different than adults
  • What tools do we need to properly prepare to
    treat them?

3
An Approach to Taking Care of Children in
Disaster
  • Taking care of children is a complex process
  • Multiple factors must be considered
  • PDLS uses a bio-psycho-social approach

4
The Bio-Psycho-Social Model
5
The Bio-Psycho-Social Model
  • No one component is the most important
  • Excellent care of children requires that all
    three components be addressed

6
Biological
Care of the Child During Disaster
7
Biological Needs
  • Children have unique anatomy and physiology
  • This creates specific vulnerabilities during
    disasters

8
Anatomic Differences
  • The youngest children have relatively larger and
    heavier heads
  • Relatively larger and less protected abdomens
  • Penetrating injuries
  • Primary and secondary impact from objects or
    blast wave
  • Predisposition to more serious traumatic damage
    during disasters compared to adult for the same
    injury

9
Relative Body Proportions
10
Anatomic Differences
  • Smaller mass may cause children to be thrown
    further and faster, resulting in greater
    secondary injuries upon impact

11
Surface to Body Ratio
  • Higher surface area and thinner skin
  • Risk of exposure-related injuries
  • Burns
  • Hypothermia after decontamination
  • Toxic exposure to the skin
  • Dehydration

12
Higher Baseline Metabolism
  • Faster Respiratory Rate
  • Dehydration
  • Ingestion of toxins, smoke, dust
  • Lower Blood Volume
  • Shock from bleeding
  • Greater risk from dehydration
  • Greater relative metabolic needs
  • Higher risk for malnutrition sooner than adults

13
Behavior
  • Live Closer to the Floor
  • Risk of exposure to debris and water
  • Greater chance of exposure to chemical or
    radioactive residue
  • Example Infant contracts cutaneous anthrax on
    arm after visiting ABC television studios
    targeted during the 2001 attack

14
Behavior
  • Hand-to-Mouth Activity
  • Children routinely place hands and objects in
    mouth, increasing risk of exposure to chemicals,
    toxins
  • Increases risk of contracting vomiting and
    diarrheal illness during unsanitary conditions
    such as in a shelter or with exposure to
    contaminated water supply

15
Immune Systems
  • Young children do not have the same capacity as
    adults to respond to infectious disease
  • Biological agents
  • Routine infections during sheltering

16
How Children Decompensate
  • Differently than adults
  • Children rarely have primary cardiac event
  • Pathway is predictable
  • Focus is on respiratory problems and shock
  • To know it is to prevent decompensation
  • Recognize early signs and symptoms of respiratory
    distress and shock

17
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18
Care of the Child During Disaster
Psychological
19
Psychological Issues
  • PDLS will review general concepts, not
    age-specific details
  • The psychological impact of disasters on children
    as victims
  • Focus on what to expect and how to help

20
General Principles
  • Children are at a high risk of experiencing
    psychological consequences before, during, and
    after a disaster
  • Many factors that affect this
  • There is some controversy about these

21
What to Expect?
  • Everyone is affected by a disaster in some way

22
Expected Changes
  • Anxiety, Fears, and Worries about safety of self
    and others
  • Worries about re-occurrence or consequences such
    as war
  • Hyperactivity, decreased concentration,
    withdrawal, outbursts, absenteeism
  • Increased body complaints
  • Headache, Stomach-ache, Pains

www.apa.org
23
Expected Changes
  • Changes in school performance
  • Recreating Event through talk, play
  • Increased sensitivity to sounds
  • Sirens, thunder, aircraft
  • Questions about death and injury
  • Changes in sleep
  • Denial of impact
  • Hateful or angry statements

www.apa.org
24
Specific Symptoms Aggression
  • Seen across all age groups
  • Verbal and/or physical outbursts towards
    siblings, adults

25
Specific Symptoms Regressive Behavior
  • Seen across all age groups
  • Crying, clinginess, helplessness
  • Regression of toileting habits
  • Bedwetting
  • Diaper dependence

26
Specific Symptoms Post-traumatic stress
  • Post-traumatic stress symptoms include
  • Nightmares
  • Flashbacks
  • Emotional detachment or numbness
  • Insomnia
  • Hypervigilance
  • Irritability
  • Memory Loss

27
Common Symptoms Post-traumatic stress
  • The best studied psychological effect
  • Factors affecting development of PTSD
  • Age (older gt younger)
  • Gender (females gt males)
  • Race (black gt white)
  • Parental coping skills and capabilities
  • Childs perception of risk (media role?)
  • Duration of and distance to the danger

28
Examples
  • Buffalo Creek Dam Collapse (1972)
  • 179 children screened 2 years after
  • 37 given probable diagnosis PTSD

29
Examples
  • Flooding in Bangladesh (1993)
  • 162 children screened 2 years later
  • Aggressive behavior went from 0 to 10
  • 34 new onset of enuresis in previously
    toilet-trained children

30
Examples
  • Wildfires in Australia
  • 808 children screened
  • 2, 4, 26 months after surviving
  • Prevalence of post-disaster PTSD did not change
  • Prevalence is present in population tested
  • Predicting factors
  • Mothers response to disaster more predictive
    compared to patients direct exposure

31
Examples
  • Reactions studied in preschoolers exposed to a
    severe hurricane
  • After 14 months, when compared to unexposed
    children
  • Higher levels of anxiety and withdrawal
  • Other behavioral issues resolved slowly over 6
    months post-disaster
  • Again, mothers response predictive of resilience
    in child

32
Examples
  • 9/11 terrorist attacks
  • National sample 3-5 days after attacks
  • 35 parents reported one child or more with
    anxiety-related symptoms
  • Half of children worried about their safety
  • Factors
  • Parental response
  • Amount of media viewed on the attacks

33
Suicide?
  • Development of PTSD symptoms a link to suicidal
    behavior
  • In cross-population study of multiple federally
    declared disasters
  • 25 increase in suicide in age group 10-29 years
    old
  • Hurricanes, floods, and earthquakes highest risk
  • Data suggest young men at highest risk

34
How to Help
  • Understand the high rates at which these
    psychiatric disorders appear in children after
    disaster
  • Understand the time frame
  • Many behavioral problems will resolve over weeks
    to months
  • Anxiety/PTSD symptoms may persist over years

35
Planning
  • Incorporate Psychologic First Aid information and
    providers in your planning at all levels
  • Utilize the expertise and advice of mental health
    professionals before, during, and after
  • Preparation and pre-positioning resources
  • Expertise in screening, therapy

36
Care of the Child During Disaster
  • Social

37
Overview
  • Children need to be viewed as an integral part of
    the population, not a special circumstance to
    be dealt with separately
  • What happens to adults happens to children
  • Planning, Response, and Recovery must acknowledge
    this principle to be effective

38
Influences
  • It is established that outside factors greatly
    affect a childs post-disaster psychiatric
    recovery, especially
  • How parents (especially mother) reacts in the
    post-disaster environment
  • Media

39
Influences
  • Exploring the parent-child relationship a little
    bit more
  • Child Abuse
  • Substance Abuse
  • In general, parental stress and a lack of social
    services are linked to an increase in child abuse
    reports
  • Is this true after a disaster too?

40
Examples
  • Loma Prieta Earthquke (1989)
  • Hurricane Hugo (1989)
  • Hurricane Andrew (1992)
  • Data suggest that child abuse rates increased in
    the 3 and 6 month period after these disasters

41
Examples
  • Hurricane Floyd (1999) in North Carolina
  • Inflicted traumatic brain injury increased in the
    6 months following the hurricane in the most
    affected counties
  • After 6 months rates of inflicted injury returned
    to baseline
  • Accidental injury rates remained the same

42
Examples
  • A 2001 café fire in the Netherlands wounded 250
    adolescents, and killed 14
  • Compared to a control group
  • Increased rates of anxiety, depression, and
    alcohol use
  • Marijuana, Ecstasy, and sedative use did not
    increase

43
Expectations
  • Disasters are stressful events to all members of
    the community
  • Anticipate problems such as
  • Increased child abuse
  • Increased substance abuse

44
Media and Society
  • What has been the role of media in recent
    disasters?
  • Hurricane Katrina
  • Indian Ocean Tsunami
  • 9/11 Terrorist Attacks
  • How did children respond to this information,
    based on what we have already discussed?

45
Media and Society
  • Many children feared for their own safety, and
    that of their parents
  • Media viewing of disturbing images may exacerbate
    anxiety, aggression, regression, PTSD
  • What is the responsibility of the media?
  • What is the responsibility of parents?

46
Suggestions
  • Acknowledge that children do not benefit from the
    repeated viewing of frightening images

Photo National Geographic Channel
47
Suggestions
  • Helping parents in need?

48
School
  • The re-establishment of routine may prevent the
    worsening of symptoms in children and speed the
    recovery
  • The ability to recover after a disaster and
    return to normal is termed resiliency

49
School
  • School provides much of what is taken away during
    a disaster and may be an important part of
    resiliency
  • Order
  • Rules
  • Consistency
  • Friends
  • Role Models and Teachers

50
Coping Techniques at Home and School
  • Reinforce the idea of safety and security through
    self-realization
  • Maintain a routine schedule
  • Listen to childrens discussions of the events
  • Discuss how media may be affecting their feelings

www.apa.org
51
Coping Techniques at Home and School
  • Validate feelings of anger but discuss how
    developing hatred towards groups of people does
    not help
  • Encourage children to talk about how they have
    been affected, and explain how these reactions
    are normal

www.apa.org
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