Febrile Infant Clinical Pathway — Emergency Department and Inpatient
Febrile Infant Clinical Pathway — Emergency Department and Inpatient
Evidence
- Evaluation and Management of Well-Appearing Febrile Infants 8 to 60 Days Old
- Use of Procalcitonin Assays to Predict Serious Bacterial Infection in Young Febrile Infants
- Time to Pathogen Detection for Non-ill Versus Ill-Appearing Infants ≤60 Days Old With Bacteremia and Meningitis
- Prevalence of Bacterial Meningitis Among Febrile Infants Aged 29-60 Days With Positive Urinalysis Results: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
- Serious Bacterial Infections in Young Febrile Infants with Positive
Urinalysis Results - Validation of the “Step-by-Step” Approach in the Management of Young Febrile Infants
- A Clinical Prediction Rule to Identify Febrile Infants 60 Days and Younger at Low Risk for Serious Bacterial Infections
- Concomitant Bacterial Meningitis in Infants With Urinary Tract Infection
- Lumbar Puncture for All Febrile Infants 29-56 Days Old: A Retrospective Cohort Reassessment Study
- Unpredictability of Serious Bacterial Illness in Febrile Infants From Birth to 1 Month of Age
- Performance of Low-risk Criteria in the Evaluation of Young Infants with Fever: Review of the Literature
- Costs and Infant Outcomes After Implementation of a Care Process Model for Febrile Infants
- Assessment of Blood Enterovirus PCR Testing in Paediatric Populations with Fever without Source, Sepsis-like Disease, or Suspected Meningitis: a Prospective, Multicentre, Observational Cohort Study
- Cerebrospinal Fluid Enterovirus Testing in Infants 56 Days or Younger
- Leukopenia, Neutropenia, and Procalcitonin Levels in Young Febrile Infants with Invasive Bacterial Infections
- Outcomes and Infectious Etiologies of Febrile Neutropenia in Non-Immunocompromised Children Who Present in an Emergency Department