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NICE Releases Child Sedation Guidelines

The guidelines ensure anxious young patients do not receive ineffective or unsafe sedation.

NICE released new guidelines to help ensure anxious young patients do not receive ineffective or unsafe sedation drugs ahead of any therapeutic or diagnostic procedure.

The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) has developed the first-ever national guideline to improve NHS care and safety standards within England and Wales for sedating infants, children and teenagers.

Dr. Fergus Macbeth, director of the Centre for Clinical Practice at NICE, said, in a press release: "We know that large numbers of children undergo single or repeated procedures which may require sedation. These can include diagnostic tests, like a biopsy or MRI scan, or therapeutic procedures such as correcting a dislocated joint or dental treatment. While the NHS uses numerous sedation techniques there is little guidance on which are most effective and what resources, including staff training, are needed to administer them safely. This guideline gives clear recommendations and promotes best practice on the use of sedation techniques to standardise the level of care children, young people and their families can expect from the NHS."

Around two million children and young people visit hospital A&E departments every year due to accidental injuries and many will need to undergo procedures where sedation is required. Sedation is also sometimes necessary when procedures are carried out in primary care settings (such as a dental practice or GP surgery) and it can also be useful in preventing the patient moving during diagnostic tests such as scans. Unlike adults, many youngsters may require sedation for these procedures as they may not understand the need to keep still, or could find them frightening, or the child may be too ill, in pain or have behavioral problems. However, standards of practice in delivering sedation vary greatly across the United Kingdom.

The guideline incorporates a series of recommendations for healthcare professionals including nurses, anesthetists, doctors, and dentists. Key recommendations include:

- Ensuring that trained healthcare professionals carry out pre-sedation assessments and document the results in the patient's healthcare record

- Offering the child or young person (and their parents) verbal and written information about the proposed sedation technique, the alternatives to sedation, and associated risks and benefits

- For moderate and deep sedation, continuously monitor the child or young person, ensuring that the data is clearly documented in the patient's healthcare record

- Healthcare professionals delivering sedation should have documented up-to-date evidence of competency and should ensure they update their knowledge and skills through programs designed for continuing professional development

Dr Michael Sury, consultant anaesthetist from Great Ormond Street Hospital in London and chair of the Guideline Development Group (GDG), said: "Sedation can play an important role in helping alleviate anxiety or pain, which is why it's vital that techniques are administered correctly. Training for healthcare professionals is particularly important because unsuccessful sedation can be very traumatic for the child and if the dosage of a drug is too great, it can lead to breathing difficulties which may result in brain injury or even death."

The guideline also focuses on the need to ensure those aged under 19 and their families are prepared psychologically for sedation and are given the necessary information in appropriate formats to give informed consent.

Dr. Christina Liossi, senior lecturer in Health Psychology at the University of Southampton and guideline developer, said: "Research shows that children who have been repeatedly exposed to anxiety-provoking painful medical events are more likely to avoid healthcare in the future and, in some cases, they can develop mental health problems like post-traumatic stress disorder as a result.

"This is why it is vitally important that the child or young person and their parents or carers fully understand what is happening and are able to make an informed decision about the method of sedation being proposed. This in itself, and in combination with age appropriate psychological preparation, is very beneficial in helping to reduce the anxiety levels of both the patient being sedated and their families who are watching them go through this procedure."

As well as general recommendations for healthcare professionals, specific sedatives for use in dental procedures are also addressed. Dr. Paul Averley, a dentist from Teesside and guideline developer, said: "Sadly in the UK, many children continue to need invasive dental treatment. For these children this dental treatment often brings anxiety. It is the responsibility of the dentist to control this anxiety. Sedation can be a crucial tool to allow dental treatment to be carried out safely, effectively and cost effectively. If sedation is delivered correctly within dental practice, anxious children will be less likely to be referred to hospital where their treatment would be carried out under a general anaesthetic. This valuable guideline will complement existing dentistry guidance on sedation and will provide a platform for dentists to build on and raise standards of care even further."

Farrah Pradhan, a mother from London, also helped to develop the guideline. She said: "It was very scary when my son needed to be sedated for some operations when he was younger. I didn't know what to expect and more importantly how he would cope with it. I became involved in this guideline because information for parents is so important to help guide us to know what should and will happen, and reassure our young children that sedation is a safe procedure."

To help healthcare professionals implement the recommendations within this guideline, NICE has produced a number of implementation tools including a slide-set and costing report to help inform staff.

Source: NICE

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How similar are the recommendations to those in the US? Would you add any to current US guidelines? Leave a comment.

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