Emergency Department and Inpatient Clinical Pathway for Evaluation/Treatment of the Child with a Burn Injury and/or Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
- Related Pathways
Evaluation/Treatment of the Child with a Burn Injury and/or Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
Team Assessment
- Initial Management
- ABCDE, O2 as indicated
- Signs of inhalation injury
- IV, labs, fluids as indicated
- Analgesia, Tetanus Prophylaxis
- Temperature regulation
- CO poisoning, cyanide poisoning
- History and Physical
- Determine severity Minor, Moderate, Major
- Burn mechanism
- Depth, locations
- Body surface area
- Assess for other injuries
- Wound Care
- SW consult as indicated
- Consider Trauma consult
- Wound Care
- Transfer, SW consult as indicated
- TBSA criteria met
- Concern for inhalation injury
- Altered mental status or LOC at scene or in ED
- Chest pain or arrhythmias
- Initial management
- Trauma consult
- CO, cyanide poisoning
- Hyperbaric consult via Transport
- Center as indicated
Discharge
- Moderate burns
- Trauma Clinic referral
- Minor burns
- PCP as needed
Admit Trauma Service
- Review ED Care
- Analgesia
- Fluid management, nutrition
- Wound Care
- Physical Care
- Injuries Suggestive of Abuse
- Consults as indicated
- Discharge Planning
Transfer to Burn Center
Trauma service coordinates transfer
Admit PICU
- Admit PICU, Trauma Service
- Inhalation injury
- CO poisoning
- Other associated injuries
- BSA > 15%, delayed transfer
- Physical Care
Evidence
- Delayed Healing Associated with Silver Sulfadiazine Use for Partial Thickness Scald Burns in Children
- Silver in Wound Care—Friend or Foe?
- Update in Pediatric Burn Care
- Cross-Sectional Study on the Management of Nonoperative Burns at American Burn Association-Verified Burn Centers
- The Burn Wound