Recent trends in hospital use by children in England
Open Access
- 1 September 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Archives of Disease in Childhood
- Vol. 85 (3) , 203-207
- https://doi.org/10.1136/adc.85.3.203
Abstract
BACKGROUND Routine hospital statistics for England appear to overestimate use of children's wards and include numbers of well newborn babies staying with their mothers after delivery (“well babies”). AIM To review trends in use of children's wards excluding data on newborn babies. METHODS We reviewed routine, published, and age stratified data requested from the Department of Health to identify separately “well babies” and babies receiving neonatal specialist care from admissions (surgical and paediatric) to children's wards. RESULTS Routine reports for paediatric activity contain large numbers of “well babies”, (almost half the total) as well as babies receiving specialist neonatal care. After excluding these, paediatric admissions represent 9.9% of the child population aged under 5 years each year (an additional 2.5% are admitted for surgical care). Between 1989 and 1997 paediatric admissions rose by 19% and surgical admissions fell by 25% with a plateau reached in overall child admissions. There are now fewer beds in which children stay for a shorter time and there is more day case surgery. Neonatal specialist care work has risen despite a fall in births. CONCLUSION Categories should be established for reporting paediatric episodes on children's wards separately from those on neonatal units, with better identification of “well babies”. When monitoring use of children's inpatient facilities or planning new units, care must be taken to separate paediatric data on neonatal units from work on children's wards. Children's surgical episodes should also be taken into account.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Deprivation and hospital admission for infectious intestinal diseasesThe Lancet, 1999
- Use of health services by children and young people according to ethnicity and social class: secondary analysis of a national surveyBMJ, 1998
- Appropriateness of paediatric admission.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1994
- Paediatric inpatient utilisation in a district general hospital.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1994
- Major problems with paediatric bed usage statistics?Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1991