Arizona's Emergency Medical Services for Children Pediatric Designation System for Emergency Departments.

TitleArizona's Emergency Medical Services for Children Pediatric Designation System for Emergency Departments.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsSmith N, St Mars T, Woolridge D
JournalJ Emerg Med
Date Published2016 May 31
ISSN Number0736-4679
Abstract

<p><b>BACKGROUND: </b>In 2012, a voluntary certification program called Pediatric Prepared Emergency Care (PPEC) was established in Arizona as a system for pediatric emergency preparedness. Emergency medicine and pediatric specialists generated basic, intermediate, and advanced designation criteria. Dedicated medical management by a pediatric emergency specialist is required for advanced centers. Designation follows a site visit, review, and approval by the subcommittee and the Arizona Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics.</p><p><b>DISCUSSION: </b>Arizona has 5 designated pediatric emergency departments, all of which are in the southeast part of the state. Therefore, a designation system was implemented so that all emergency departments statewide can receive more training, support, and supervision of pediatric care. The goal was to create a self-sustaining network with active participation from member institutions while fostering the pediatric commitment. Since its inception, 39 hospitals and 5 tribal facilities have joined PPEC, equating to 51% of Arizona&#39;s emergency facilities. Of the hospitals, 7 are advanced, 6 are intermediate, and 17 are basic centers. In 2015, all of the 9 sites due for recertification were recertified. The multiple tiers allow for mutual accountability, sharing of resources, and improved quality of care for pediatrics in emergency departments statewide.</p><p><b>CONCLUSION: </b>PPEC enhances the quality of pediatric emergency preparedness by means of voluntary certification. The primary limitations are sustainability and funding, because an Emergency Medical Services for Children grant has offset the cost until now. The number of member facilities in this designation system is continually growing, and universal recertification shows sustainability.</p>

DOI10.1016/j.jemermed.2016.03.034
Alternate JournalJ Emerg Med
PubMed ID27260692
Faculty Reference: 
Dale Woolridge, MD, PhD, FACEP
Weight: 
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