Read Pediatric Primary Care Case Studies Online
Authors: Catherine E. Burns,Beth Richardson,Cpnp Rn Dns Beth Richardson,Margaret Brady
Tags: #Medical, #Health Care Delivery, #Nursing, #Pediatric & Neonatal, #Pediatrics
Chapter 31
The Teen Boy with Acne
Catherine E. Burns
Danielle J. Poulin
Chapter 32
The Limping Child
Jan Bazner-Chandler
Chapter 33
The Late-Preterm Baby Beginning Well-Child Care
Lori J. Silao
Chapter 34
A Child with Short Stature
George Anadiotis
Index
Preface
Pediatric Primary Care Case Studies
was written by nurse practitioner, physician, and physician assistant clinicians and educators who believe that health care for children in primary care settings should be excellent, whatever the discipline of the provider. This book is designed to exemplify the critical thinking process and diagnostic reasoning skills that clinicians should use to assess and manage treatment of the infants, young children, and adolescents who present with common signs and symptoms of childhood illnesses or behavioral problems in providers’ practice settings.
These cases were developed to reflect common pediatric healthcare problems such as depression, obesity, autism, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, and environmental health concerns among many others. The chapter authors address key elements in the reasoning process that should be employed as the provider gathers data about a case from the initial presentation through the diagnostic decision and highlight the standards of treatment for the selected diagnosis. Additionally, the cases discuss concerns surrounding children from a variety of socioeconomic, cultural, familial, and developmental backgrounds.
We hope this book helps fill in gaps in the clinical knowledge of students who have completed didactic courses and guides their preparation for clinical work by taking an organized approach to symptom-driven presentations.
Organization of the Book
This book is divided into three sections, which follow an introductory chapter reviewing essential features of the diagnostic approach to pediatric primary care. Unit I covers developmental problems in children from infancy through adolescence—motor delays, language delays, learning problems in school, and sleeping too much. The cases in Unit II involve functional health problems, beginning with a case study illustrating principles of health maintenance. Subsequent cases include an obese child with unhealthy nutritional practices, a breastfeeding infant who is not gaining weight, a constipated child, a child needing a preparticipation sports examination, an infant not sleeping through the night, a child with attention and hyperactivity issues, a child who is abused, a child with possible depression, and a teen who thinks she might be gay. Finally, Unit III surveys common medical symptoms and related conditions which the provider will see and should not miss—wheezing, type 2 diabetes, anemia, headache, a red eye, recurrent ear infections, a heart murmur, cough, vomiting and diarrhea, dental trauma, urinary tract infection, a birth control request, sexually transmitted infection, an itchy rash, acne, a limp, preterm infant care, and a possible genetic syndrome.
This book was designed to demonstrate how a healthcare provider should incorporate the concepts of critical thinking into a practical model of diagnostic reasoning that he or she would use daily. Scenarios are presented with information emerging chronologically. The author for each case becomes the expert guiding the reader in the decision-making process, thinking through the case as it progresses. Additional elements such as familial, developmental, and cultural issues are intertwined in the case presentations to illustrate how they are factored into the assessment and decision-making process.
Generally, as in real practice, the child and family member(s) present with a “chief complaint.” From there the experts begin to reason their way through the assessment process, considering some diagnoses and reflecting as they go along on the data they have collected and what they know about the etiology and pathophysiology associated with various symptoms. A Making the Diagnosis section follows some discussion of various diagnoses already considered and discarded during the assessment process. The Management section sometimes involves several visits, with additional information coming in at each visit related to confirmation of the diagnosis, initial management, long-term management, and confirmation of problem resolution. The references used reflect the “best practice” information the expert is using for decisionmaking, but are by no means an exhaustive review of the literature. Tables are sometimes used to display information in an easily viewed style.
Cases are initially described in terms of the symptom because that is where the clinician must begin. A symptom analysis occurs early in the presentation of each case. From there, various diagnoses are considered and either supported or refuted with further data. Of course, some diagnoses, such as acne, are predominantly self-evident whereas others, such as a syncope episode, require greater analysis before a diagnosis can be determined.
About the Authors and Contributors
The contributors for this text were selected for their expertise and experience in caring for infants, children, and adolescents. They represent a variety of specialties and are from all parts of the United States and Canada. Each of the lead authors has more than 20 years of experience practicing and teaching pediatric primary care to a variety of students in nurse practitioner and medical fields. Dr. Richardson has authored a text on pediatric physical assessment that is widely used, as well as a book of pediatric practice guidelines. The idea for this book is hers and she should be credited with its creation. Drs. Burns and Brady are coauthors on the widely used
Pediatric Primary Care
text (Elsevier, 2009), which is now in its fourth edition and used by many pediatric and family nurse practitioner programs.
We hope this book will meet a current educational need of all pediatric primary care provider students and their educators and preceptors as well as less experienced clinicians in practice.
Contributors
George Anadiotis, DO
Pediatric Development & Rehabilitation Services
Legacy Emanuel Hospital for Children
Portland, Oregon
Jan Bazner-Chandler, MSN, CNS, CPNP
Assistant Professor
Azusa Pacific University
Azusa, California
Catherine G. Blosser, MPA-HA, PNP-BC, RN
Pediatric Nurse Practitioner (Retired)
Multnomah County Health Department
Oak Grove, Oregon
Deborah A. Bohan, MEd, PA-C
Physician Assistant
Department of Pediatrics
Allegheny General Hospital
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Kathleen M. Boyd, MD
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics
Indiana University School of Medicine
Indianapolis, Indiana
Ardys M. Dunn, PhD, PNP, RN
Associate Professor Emeritus
School of Nursing
University of Portland
Portland, Oregon
Professor (Retired)
Samuel Merritt College School of Nursing
Oakland, California
Prashant Gagneja, DDS, MS
Chairman, Pediatric Dentistry
School of Dentistry
Oregon Health & Science University
Portland, Oregon
Dawn Lee Garzon, PhD, CPNP
Assistant Professor
University of Missouri–St. Louis
St. Louis, Missouri
Teral Gerlt, MS, PNP, RN-C, WHCNP
Instructor
School of Nursing
Oregon Health and Sciences University
Portland, Oregon
Ann M. Guthery, PhD(c), PMHNP, RN
Clinical Assistant Professor
College of Nursing
Arizona State University
Phoenix, Arizona
Anna Marie Hefner, MSN, MAEd, RN, CPNP
Associate Professor
School of Nursing
Azusa Pacific University
Azusa, California
Pamela J. Hellings, PhD, RN, CPNP-R
Professor Emeritus
Oregon Health and Science University
Portland, Oregon
Lynne Henry, MSN, RN, CPNP
St. Vincent Health Network
North Vernon, Indiana
Ritamarie John, DNP, CPNP-PC
Program Director
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics
Columbia University
School of Nursing
New York, New York
Elissa Jones-Hua, MSN, RN, CPNP
Nurse Practitioner
Developmental Pediatrics
Riley Hospital for Children
Indiana University
Indianapolis, Indiana
Veronica Kane, PhD, CPNP
Pediatric Specialty Coordinator
Clinical Assistant Professor
MGH Institute of Health Professions
Boston, Massachusetts
Tamra D. Kehoe, MSN, RN, CPNP
Pediatric Nurse Practitioner
Multnomah County Health Department
Portland, Oregon
Donald W. Kennerly, MD, CCFP
Belleville General Hospital
Belleville, Ontario, Canada
Patrick E. Killeen, MS, PA-C
Department of Pediatrics
Danbury Hospital
Danbury, Connecticut
Shelly J. King, MSN, RN, CPNP
Director Children’s Continence Center
Pediatric Urology, Riley Hospital for Children
Indiana University
Indianapolis, Indiana
Larry W. Lynn, MD
Assistant Professor
Physician Assistant Program
Butler University
Indianapolis, Indiana
Brian T. Maurer, MS, PA-C
Pediatric Physician Assistant
Enfield Pediatric Associates
Enfield, Connecticut
Ann Marie McCarthy, PhD, RN, FAAN
College of Nursing
University of Iowa
Iowa City, Iowa
Beth Moore, MSN, RN
Long Beach Memorial Medical Center
Miller Children’s Hospital
Long Beach, California
Jennifer Newcombe, MSN, CNS, CPNP
Loma Linda Children’s Hospital
Loma Linda, California
John Peterson, DDS
Professor (Part time)
Pediatric Dentistry
School of Dentistry
Oregon Health and Science University
Portland, Oregon
Danielle J. Poulin, MSN, PNP, RNC
Pediatric Nurse Practitioner
Western Medical Center–Santa Ana
Santa Ana, California
Michele Saysana, MD, FAAP
Clinical Assistant Professor of Pediatrics
Indiana University School of Medicine
Indianapolis, Indiana
Lori J. Silao, MN, RN, CNNP
Adjunct Faculty
Azusa Pacific University
Azusa, California
Sheran M. Simo, MSN, FNP-BC
Nurse Practitioner
St. Vincent Primary Care Network
Indianapolis, Indiana
Arlene Smaldone, DNSc, CPNP, CDE
Assistant Professor
Columbia University
School of Nursing
New York, New York
Deborah Stiffler, PhD, RN, CNM
Assistant Professor
Coordinator, Women’s Health Nurse Practitioner Major
Indiana University
School of Nursing
Indianapolis, Indiana
Victoria Winter, MSN, PNP, RN
Adjunct Professor
Azusa Pacific University
Pediatric Nurse Practitioner Program
Azusa, California
Cardiothoracic Intensive Care
Children’s Hospital Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California
Sharon Yearous, PhD, RN, CPNP, NCSN
Executive Director
Iowa School Nurse Association
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Chapter 1
Diagnostic Reasoning:
A Complex Issue for
Pediatric Primary Care
Catherine E. Burns
Pediatric primary care providers use a critical thinking skill set to help them arrive at a diagnosis and to provide efficient, cost-effective care to their patients. Evidence-based practice has become a guiding principle that is consistent with the diagnostic reasoning process: using the best information available as one thinks through the pros and cons of various pathways that emerge along the road from diagnosis to management and problem resolution.
The clinician is typically taught to move from assessment to diagnosis to intervention and, finally, to evaluation in a linear fashion; however, in reality, the practicing clinician considers various diagnoses while conducting the assessment so that data will confirm or refute various possible diagnoses. Sometimes, management strategies also have diagnostic elements—if the plan doesn’t work, then perhaps the diagnosis was wrong. For example, if iron supplementation does not result in raising a low hemoglobin level and further tests were not done initially, then perhaps the problem was not iron-deficiency anemia. Therefore, additional tests must be done to identify another diagnosis. Thus, the use of iron supplementation had diagnostic elements. The problem-solving or diagnostic reasoning process may be linear (i.e., diagnosis generally comes before intervention), but during a given episode the process generally is more convoluted than linear. The clinician also must think on his or her feet with only minimal time for reflection. Delivering primary care to pediatric patients often presents unique diagnostic challenges for healthcare providers.