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Songs of guidelines and experience
Doctors can rely on their own
know-how rather than guidelines when it comes to fever
in kids, according to a US think tank
By Tony Craig
It's not often you hear a government
health agency telling doctors to ignore clinical guidelines,
but that's the message the US Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality (AHRQ) is sending American pediatricians
on the treatment of fever in young infants.
Diagnosing the underlying causes
of fever in young children is notoriously difficult,
and over the years diagnostic guidelines have grown
more and more complicated and expensive to implement.
At the same time, the possibility of serious bacterial
infection has led some guidelines to suggest taking
no chances and using intravenous antibiotics in uncertain
cases.
The result has been a steady trend
toward more lab tests, more drugs, and more hospitalizations,
all of which can carry risks and don't come cheap. American
clinical practice guidelines for treating infants with
fevers recommend hospitalization and treatment with
antibiotics for all infants under one month of age.
Laboratory tests are routinely performed on all feverish
infants younger than three months.
But fewer than 3% of infants with
fevers actually have bacterial meningitis or bacterial
blood infections. For the rest, overtreatment simply
increases the cost, the spread of antibiotic resistance
� and the danger of nosocomial infection, an infection
that can occur during hospitalization.
A new study sponsored by the AHRQ
and published in the March 10 issue of the Journal
of the American Medical Association asked a question
that might seem rather bold in this age of litigation:
what would happen if experienced pediatricians were
simply allowed to get on with treating children based
on their own clinical judgement, regardless of clinical
guidelines?
Researchers worked with more than
573 doctors' offices in 44 states from 1995 to 1998.
The infants in the study, who numbered more than 3,000,
were aged three months or younger and had no health
problems other than a fever of at least 38°C.
The researchers found that 42%
of the time, clinicians followed clinical practice guidelines
to treat infants with fevers. Those clinicians performed
lab tests in 75% of the infants and treated 57% with
antibiotics. But in the first month of life, 40% fewer
infants were hospitalized when clinicians did not follow
guidelines.
Overall, 63 of the infants (2.3%)
were found to have bacteremia or bacterial meningitis.
No fewer than 61 of these had been treated with antibiotics
on their first visit to the doctor, even though the
doctors gave antibiotics to slightly more than half
of all the infants in the study.
Instead of admitting them to hospital,
these clinicians saw many infants in repeated office
visits and had frequent telephone follow-up. It turned
out that the infants who were treated in the office
and with follow-up visits were no more likely to suffer
adverse outcomes than those treated following the guidelines.
"While clinical guidelines are
an important part of everyday practice, they are only
one element of the foundation of evidence available
to clinicians," said AHRQ Director Dr Carolyn Clancy.
"Clinicians should rely on their training and judgement
and work closely with parents to tailor evidence-based
recommendations to patients' needs."
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