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Children's hospital

A children's hospital (CH)[2] is a hospital that offers its services exclusively to infants, children, adolescents, and young adults from birth up to until age 18, and through age 21 and older in the United States.[3][4][5][6][7][8][9] In certain special cases, they may also treat adults.[10][11] The number of children's hospitals proliferated in the 20th century, as pediatric medical and surgical specialties separated from internal medicine and adult surgical specialties.

Young boy at the St. Louis Children's Hospital
Children's Castle (Lastenlinna), a former children's hospital, that preceded the current New Children's Hospital [fr],[1] in Helsinki, Finland
The front facade of Bristol-Myers Squibb Children's Hospital in New Brunswick, NJ.

Integration edit

Children's hospitals are characterized by greater attention to the psychosocial support of children and their families. Some children and young people have to spend relatively long periods in hospital, so having access to play and teaching staff can also be an important part of their care.[12] With local partnerships, this can include trips to local botanical gardens, zoos, and public libraries for instance.[13] Designs for the new Cambridge Children's Hospital, approved in 2022, plan to fully integrate mental and physical health provision for children and young people, bringing together services of three partners: Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust, and the University of Cambridge with physical and mental health services located alongside research activity. [14]

Staffing edit

In addition to psychosocial support, children's hospitals have the added benefit of being staffed by professionals who are trained in treating children. A medical doctor that undertakes vocational training in paediatrics must also be accepted for membership by a professional college before they can practice paediatrics. These include the Royal Australasian College of Physicians (RACP), Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health (RCPCH), and the American Board of Pediatrics. In New Zealand, the RACP offers vocational training in paediatrics. Once RACP training is completed the doctor is awarded the Fellowship of the RACP (FRACP) in paediatrics.[15] While many normal hospitals can treat children adequately, pediatric specialists may be a better choice when it comes to treating rare afflictions that may prove fatal or severely detrimental to young children, in some cases before birth. Also, many children's hospitals will continue to see children with rare illnesses into adulthood, allowing for a continuity of care.

History edit

Early Voluntary Care edit

Prior to 19th century hospital reforms, the well-being of the child was thought to be in the hands of the mother; therefore, there was little discussion of children's medicine, and as a result next to no widespread formal institutions which focused on healing children.

Dispensaries and foundling hospitals were the earliest forms of what would later become children's hospitals. Florence's Hospital of the Innocent (Ospedale degli Innocenti) was originally a charity based orphanage which opened in 1445; its aim was to nurse sick and abandoned infants back to health. Foundling hospitals such as the Foundling Hospital founded by Thomas Coram in 1741 were created to receive abandoned infants, nurse them back to health, teach them a trade or skill, and integrate them back into society.

Dispensaries funded by donations also provided medicine and medical attention to those who could not afford private care. The Scottish paediatrician George Armstrong, who established the first British dispensary, in 1769, was against in-patient care for sick children. Armstrong stated:

But a very little reflection will clearly convince any thinking person that such a Scheme as this can never be executed. If you take away a sick child for its Parents or Nurse, you break its heart immediately.[16]

Objections to admission were sometimes based on pragmatic reasons, e.g. reducing the threat of cross infection from children with diseases such as typhus, diphtheria and measles, that were a major cause of infant mortality. The voluntary nature of hospitals meant that such outbreaks were very costly.

19th-century models edit

In the mid-19th century western world, middle-class women and physicians became increasingly concerned about the well-being of children in poor living conditions. Although infant mortality had begun to decline, it still remained a prominent issue. Social reformers blamed the emergence of the industrial society and poor parents for not properly caring for their children. By the 1870s, the prevalent view among doctors and nurses was that children were better off by being removed to hospital, away from the often poor, unsanitary conditions at home.[17] In response, reformers and physicians founded children's hospitals.[18]

By the early 19th century, children's hospitals opened in major cities throughout Europe.[19] The first formally recognized paediatrics hospital was the Hôpital des Enfants Malades in Paris, which opened in 1802. Great Ormond Street Hospital was established in London in 1852, and was the first British children's hospital.[20] The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia in Pennsylvania was created in 1855.[21] The Royal Hospital for Sick Children, Edinburgh was the first children's hospital in Scotland and opened in 1860.[22] The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, Ontario was the first Canadian children's hospital and opened in 1875.[23] By the end of the 19th century, and the during the first two decades of the 20th century, the number of children's hospitals tripled in both Canada and the United States.[18] From the 1850s to around 1910, most cities in the UK had built children's hospitals, which included a large number of prestigious hospitals such as the Royal Hospital for Sick Children, Glasgow, Great Ormond Street Hospital and the Royal Manchester Children's Hospital.[24]

Early western children's hospitals were independent institutions funded by voluntary donations, and from research.[19] Often, children could only be admitted if they were sponsored by a letter of recommendation from a hospital affiliate. The "undeserving poor" were sent to workhouse infirmaries, whilst middle class children were generally cared for, and indeed operated on, at home.[25] Hospitals set their own rules and had their own way of working, including regulating admissions. They often excluded children under the age of two on humanitarian and pragmatic grounds and were often hesitant to admit children who required long-term care in fear that those lives would be lost or that long-term care would block beds for those in immediate need.[19][26]

Early children's hospitals focused more on short-term care and treating mild illnesses rather than long-term intensive care. Treating serious diseases and illnesses in early children's hospitals could result in the disease spreading throughout the hospital which would drain already limited resources. A serious disease outbreak in a children's hospital would result in more deaths than lives saved and would therefore reinforce the previous notion that people often died while in the hospital.[18]

Professionalization of Children's Hospitals edit

In the 19th century, there was a societal shift in how children were viewed. This shift took away some of the parents' control and placed it in the hands of medical professionals.[27] By the early 20th century, a child's health became increasingly tied to physicians and hospitals.[28] This was a result of licensing acts, the formation of medical associations, and new fields of medicine being introduced across countries.[28] New areas of medicine offered physicians the chance to build their careers by "overseeing the medical needs of private patients, caring for and trying new therapies on the sick poor, and teaching medical students."[28] In order to raise their status further, physicians began organizing children's hospitals; by doing so, it also brought attention and importance to their speciality in the modern health care system.[18]

Voluntary or religiously associated female care was often replaced by care provided by professionally trained nurses.[29]

Critiques of children's hospital care edit

Historically, many children's hospitals limited the ability of children and parents to interact, such as by limiting visiting hours. This approach was criticised for decades before shifts in practice occurred.

Surgeon James Henderson Nicholl of the Glasgow Hospital for Sick Children, who pioneered day surgery procedures such as Hernia and cleft palate, stated in 1909 that: '[I]n children under 2 years of age, there a few operations indeed that cannot be as advantageously carried out in the out patient departments as in the wards.' Nicholl believed that hospitalisation wasn't necessary, and children were better cared from in their own home by their parents and by nurses making daily visits. Nicholl argued that "separation from mother is often harmful".[30]

During the interwar period, leading up to World War II, psychiatrists expressed concerns about children being away from parents, such as during hospitalisation. Harry Edelston, a Psychiatrist in Leeds, detailed that children were emotionally damaged by their stay in hospital.[31]

In the post-war era, critiques became more widespread and studies were conducted to examine potential harms. René Spitz, an Austrian-American psychoanalyst, published an article in 1945 in which he noted deleterious effects of hospitalisation, based on his research with institutionalised children.[32]

L.A. Perry wrote a 1947 Lancet article that protested the restrictions of parental visits on hospitalized children. However, Edelston wrote in 1948, that many of this colleagues still refused to believe in hospitalisation trauma[33] Bowlby studied 44 juvenile thieves and found that a significantly high number had experienced early and traumatic separation from their mother. In 1949, he used the data to write a report for the World Health Organization's on the mental health of homeless children in post-war Europe.[33]

With the introduction of penicillin into the majority of the medical community by the 1940s, the major objection by doctors and nurses, that visits by parents into hospital wards introduced cross infections had been removed. A major review in 1949, over an 11-month period, showed that children admitted to 26 wards in 14 hospitals showed no correlation between visits and cross infection from parents to children. By that time, the working practices of doctors and nurses, still posed the main objection to visiting.[34] A.D. Hunt reported that:

The hospitalised child was considered essentially a biological unit, far better off without his parents who, on weekly or bi-weekly visiting hours, were fundamentally toxic in their effect, causing noise, generally disorderly conduct, and rejection by hospital personnel.[35]

British Psychiatrist John Bowlby, who had previously criticised World War II evacuation schemes separating parents and children,[36] and his research assistant at the Tavistock Clinic, James Robertson, a Scottish social worker and psychoanalyst, researched the separation of young children from their parents during hospital stays and criticised the negative impacts on the children of policies of limited visiting.[37][38][39]

By the 1950s, British politicians were concerned enough about the impact of children's hospital policy to create a committee to research the welfare of sick children in hospital. This committee produced the Platt Report of 1959, recommending that children should have more access to their parents while ill. The Report had effects on hospital care of children in the UK and New Zealand, Australia, Canada and the United States.[40]

Utilization in the United States edit

Using hospital discharge data from 2003 to 2011, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) studied trends in aggregate hospital costs, average hospital costs, and hospital utilization. The Agency found that for children aged 0–17, aggregate costs rose rapidly for the surgical hospitalizations and decreased for injury hospitalizations. Further, average hospital costs, or cost per discharge, increased at least 2% for all hospitalizations and were expected to grow by at least 4% through 2013. The exception to this was mental health hospitalizations, which saw a lower percentage increase of 1.2%, and was projected to increase only 0.9% through 2013. Despite the rising aggregate costs and costs per discharge, hospitalizations (except for mental health hospitalizations) for children aged 0–17 decreased over the same time, and were projected to continue decreasing.[41]

In 2006–2011, the rate of emergency department (ED) use in the United States was highest for patients aged under one year, but lowest for patients aged 1–17 years. The rate of ED use for patients aged under one year declined over the same time period; this was the only age group to see a decline.[42]

Between 2008 and 2012, growth in mean hospital costs per stay in the United States was highest for patients aged 17 and younger.[43] In 2012 there were nearly 5.9 million hospital stays for children in the United States, of which 3.9 million were neonatal stays and 104,700 were maternal stays for pregnant teens.[44]

Ranking edit

Every year U.S. News & World Report ranks the top children's hospitals and pediatric specialties in the United States. For the year 2010–2011, eight hospitals ranked in all 10 pediatric specialties. The ranking system used by U.S. News & World Report depends on a variety of factors. In past years (2007 was the 18th year of Pediatric Ranking), ranking of hospitals has been done solely on the basis of reputation, gauged by random sampling and surveying of pediatricians and pediatric specialists throughout the country. The ranking system used is currently under review.[45]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "YLE: New Children's Hospital celebrates official opening". 7 September 2018. from the original on 2020-07-02. Retrieved 2020-06-30.
  2. ^ Steiner MJ, Hall M, Sutton AG, Stephens JR, Leyenaar JK, Chase L, McDaniel CE (October 30, 2023). "Pediatric Hospitalization Trends at Children's and General Hospitals, 2000-2019". JAMA. 330 (19): 1906–1908. doi:10.1001/jama.2023.19268. PMC 10616761. PMID 37902774.
  3. ^ "C.S. Mott Children's Hospital to provide care for all patients through 21st birthday | CS Mott Children's Hospital | Michigan Medicine". www.mottchildren.org. from the original on 2020-03-23. Retrieved 2020-01-24.
  4. ^ "I'm Not a Kid. Why am I Being Treated at a Children's Hospital?". CHOC Children's Blog. 2018-09-11. from the original on 2020-02-13. Retrieved 2020-01-24.
  5. ^ "Approval for Overage Le Bonheur Patients". www.lebonheur.org. from the original on 2021-08-15. Retrieved 2020-01-24.
  6. ^ "Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine". CHLA. 2015-06-05. from the original on 2020-02-01. Retrieved 2020-01-24.
  7. ^ Philadelphia, The Children's Hospital of (2016-07-18). "Transition to Adult Care Policy". www.chop.edu. from the original on 2020-09-26. Retrieved 2020-01-24.
  8. ^ Hardin, Amy Peykoff; Hackell, Jesse M.; Medicine, Committee on Practice and Ambulatory (2017-09-01). "Age Limit of Pediatrics". Pediatrics. 140 (3). doi:10.1542/peds.2017-2151. ISSN 0031-4005. PMID 28827380. from the original on 2020-02-13. Retrieved 2020-01-24.
  9. ^ "Adolescent Unit (CAD2) | BMSCH Nursing Unit". RWJBarnabas Health. from the original on 2020-06-22. Retrieved 2020-01-24.
  10. ^ "Nationwide Children's Hospital Adult Admission Policy".[permanent dead link]
  11. ^ "Adult Congenital Heart Disease Program | Texas Children's Hospital". www.texaschildrens.org. from the original on 2020-10-06. Retrieved 2020-05-21.
  12. ^ . 2016-08-21. Archived from the original on 2016-08-21. Retrieved 2018-10-19.
  13. ^ "The 50 Most Amazing Children's Hospitals in the World – Healthcare Administration Degree Programs". www.healthcare-administration-degree.net. from the original on 19 December 2017. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
  14. ^ "Special report: Designing a new model for children's hospitals". Building Better Healthcare. 21 July 2022. from the original on 28 September 2022. Retrieved 28 September 2022.
  15. ^ "Paediatrics". www.mcnz.org.nz. from the original on 13 April 2018. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
  16. ^ H. Beukers; John Michael Henderson Moll (1989). Clinical Teaching, Past and Present. Rodopi. p. 27. ISBN 978-90-5183-082-8. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
  17. ^ Davies, Ruth (5 January 2010). "Marking the 50th anniversary of the Platt Report: from exclusion, to toleration and parental participation in the care of the hospitalized child". Journal of Child Health Care. 14 (1): 6–23. doi:10.1177/1367493509347058. PMID 20051502. S2CID 206719396.
  18. ^ a b c d Sloane, David (October 2005). "Not Designed Merely to Heal: Women Reformers and the Emergence of Children's Hospitals". The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. 4 (4): 331–354. doi:10.1017/S1537781400002747. S2CID 162917903.
  19. ^ a b c Abreu, Laurinda (2013). Hospital Life : Theory and Practice From the Medieval to the Modern. Pieterien: Peter Lang AG. pp. 209, 210, 213, 214, 220, 222.
  20. ^ "Great Osmond Street Hospital Charity". from the original on 2016-03-23. Retrieved 2016-04-08.
  21. ^ "About the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia". The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. from the original on 2010-06-29. Retrieved 2016-04-08.
  22. ^ Young, D.G. (August 1999). . Journal of the Royal College of Surgeons Edinburgh. 44: 211–15. Archived from the original on 2014-07-14.
  23. ^ "History and milestones". from the original on 2009-03-01. Retrieved 2016-04-08.
  24. ^ Davies, Ruth (5 January 2010). "Marking the 50th anniversary of the Platt Report: from exclusion, to toleration and parental participation in the care of the hospitalized child". Journal of Child Health Care. 14 (1): 6–23. doi:10.1177/1367493509347058. PMID 20051502. S2CID 206719396.
  25. ^ Professor Margaret Stacey (2 September 2003). The Sociology of Health and Healing: A Textbook. Routledge. pp. 63–66. ISBN 978-1-134-89793-3. Retrieved 25 September 2018.
  26. ^ Davies, Ruth (5 January 2010). "Marking the 50th anniversary of the Platt Report: from exclusion, to toleration and parental participation in the care of the hospitalized child". Journal of Child Health Care. 14 (1): 6–23. doi:10.1177/1367493509347058. PMID 20051502. S2CID 206719396.
  27. ^ Duffin, Jacalyn (2010). History of Medicine: A Scandalously Short Introduction. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 341. ISBN 978-0-8020-9556-5.
  28. ^ a b c Connolly, Cindy. "Growth and Development Of a Specialty: The Professionalization of Child Health Care." Pediatric Nursing 31, no. 3 (May 2005): 211-215. Academic Search Premier, EBSCOhost.
  29. ^ Fass, Paula. Encyclopedia of Children and Childhood: In History and Society. Macmillan Reference USA. p. 176.
  30. ^ Nicoll, James H. (18 September 1909). "The Surgery of Infancy" (PDF). British Medical Journal: 753–754. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
  31. ^ Robert Karen (1994). Becoming Attached: First Relationships and how They Shape Our Capacity to Love. Oxford University Press. p. 68. ISBN 978-0-19-511501-7. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  32. ^ Spitz, Rene A. (13 February 2017). "Hospitalism An Inquiry into the Genesis of Psychiatric Conditions in Early Childhood". The Psychoanalytic Study of the Child. 1 (1): 53–74. doi:10.1080/00797308.1945.11823126. PMID 21004303.
  33. ^ a b Robert Karen (1994). Becoming Attached: First Relationships and how They Shape Our Capacity to Love. Oxford University Press. p. 68. ISBN 978-0-19-511501-7. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  34. ^ Watkins, A. G.; Lewis-Faning, E. (17 September 1949). "Incidence of Cross-infection in Children's Wards". BMJ. 2 (4628): 616–619. doi:10.1136/bmj.2.4628.616. PMC 2051037. PMID 18140555.
  35. ^ Hunt, A.D. (November 1974). "On the Hospitalisation of Children: An Historical Approach". Pediatrics. 54 (5): 542–546. doi:10.1542/peds.54.5.542. PMID 4616215. S2CID 39091723.
  36. ^ Winnicott, Donald W.; Bowlby, John; Miller, Emanuel (2016). Letter to the British Medical Journal: Evacuation of Small Children. Vol. 1. p. 47. doi:10.1093/med:psych/9780190271343.001.0001. ISBN 9780190271343. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  37. ^ Jools, Page (October 2015). "Chapter 9 - The Legacy of John Bowlby's Attachment Theory" (PDF). The Routledge International Handbook of Philosophies and Theories of Early Childhood Education and Care. University of Brighton Repository: Routledge. pp. 80–90. ISBN 9781138022812. Retrieved 23 May 2018.
  38. ^ Alsop‐Shields, Linda; Mohay, Heather (20 December 2001). "John Bowlby and James Robertson: theorists, scientists and crusaders for improvements in the care of children in hospital". Journal of Advanced Nursing. 35 (1): 50–58. doi:10.1046/j.1365-2648.2001.01821.x. PMID 11442682.
  39. ^ Robertson, James (10 December 1958). "Going to Hospital with Mother". Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine. 52 (381): 381–3, discussion 383–4. doi:10.1177/003591575905200518. PMC 1869195. PMID 13658166.
  40. ^ Dr Jim Richardson; Edward Alan Glasper (19 May 2010). A Textbook of Children's and Young People's Nursing E-Book. Elsevier Health Sciences. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-7020-4440-3. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
  41. ^ Weiss AJ, Barrett ML, Andrews RM (July 2014). "Trends and Projections of U.S. Hospital Costs by Payer, 2003-2013". HCUP Statistical Brief #176. Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. from the original on 2022-03-11. Retrieved 2014-08-15.
  42. ^ Skiner HG, Blanchard J, Elixhauser A (September 2014). "Trends in Emergency Department Visits, 2006-2011". HCUP Statistical Brief #179. Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. from the original on 2014-12-24. Retrieved 2014-10-20.
  43. ^ Moore B, Levit K, Elixhauser A (October 2014). "Costs for Hospital Stays in the United States, 2012". HCUP Statistical Brief #181. Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. from the original on 2014-11-29. Retrieved 2014-11-26.
  44. ^ Witt WP, Wiess AJ, Elixhauser A (December 2014). "Overview of Hospital Stays for Children in the United States, 2012". HCUP Statistical Brief #186. Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. from the original on 2018-09-24. Retrieved 2015-04-06.
  45. ^ "Birth of a New Methodology" October 10, 2007, at the Wayback Machine Avery Comarow. U.S. News & World Report, August 26, 2007. Accessed October 10, 2007.

children, hospital, other, uses, disambiguation, childrens, hospital, redirects, here, series, childrens, hospital, children, hospital, hospital, that, offers, services, exclusively, infants, children, adolescents, young, adults, from, birth, until, through, o. For other uses see Children s hospital disambiguation Childrens hospital redirects here For the TV series see Childrens Hospital A children s hospital CH 2 is a hospital that offers its services exclusively to infants children adolescents and young adults from birth up to until age 18 and through age 21 and older in the United States 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 In certain special cases they may also treat adults 10 11 The number of children s hospitals proliferated in the 20th century as pediatric medical and surgical specialties separated from internal medicine and adult surgical specialties Young boy at the St Louis Children s HospitalChildren s Castle Lastenlinna a former children s hospital that preceded the current New Children s Hospital fr 1 in Helsinki FinlandThe front facade of Bristol Myers Squibb Children s Hospital in New Brunswick NJ Contents 1 Integration 2 Staffing 3 History 3 1 Early Voluntary Care 3 2 19th century models 3 3 Professionalization of Children s Hospitals 4 Critiques of children s hospital care 5 Utilization in the United States 6 Ranking 7 See also 8 ReferencesIntegration editChildren s hospitals are characterized by greater attention to the psychosocial support of children and their families Some children and young people have to spend relatively long periods in hospital so having access to play and teaching staff can also be an important part of their care 12 With local partnerships this can include trips to local botanical gardens zoos and public libraries for instance 13 Designs for the new Cambridge Children s Hospital approved in 2022 plan to fully integrate mental and physical health provision for children and young people bringing together services of three partners Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust and the University of Cambridge with physical and mental health services located alongside research activity 14 Staffing editIn addition to psychosocial support children s hospitals have the added benefit of being staffed by professionals who are trained in treating children A medical doctor that undertakes vocational training in paediatrics must also be accepted for membership by a professional college before they can practice paediatrics These include the Royal Australasian College of Physicians RACP Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health RCPCH and the American Board of Pediatrics In New Zealand the RACP offers vocational training in paediatrics Once RACP training is completed the doctor is awarded the Fellowship of the RACP FRACP in paediatrics 15 While many normal hospitals can treat children adequately pediatric specialists may be a better choice when it comes to treating rare afflictions that may prove fatal or severely detrimental to young children in some cases before birth Also many children s hospitals will continue to see children with rare illnesses into adulthood allowing for a continuity of care History editThe examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with Western culture and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Early Voluntary Care edit Prior to 19th century hospital reforms the well being of the child was thought to be in the hands of the mother therefore there was little discussion of children s medicine and as a result next to no widespread formal institutions which focused on healing children Dispensaries and foundling hospitals were the earliest forms of what would later become children s hospitals Florence s Hospital of the Innocent Ospedale degli Innocenti was originally a charity based orphanage which opened in 1445 its aim was to nurse sick and abandoned infants back to health Foundling hospitals such as the Foundling Hospital founded by Thomas Coram in 1741 were created to receive abandoned infants nurse them back to health teach them a trade or skill and integrate them back into society Dispensaries funded by donations also provided medicine and medical attention to those who could not afford private care The Scottish paediatrician George Armstrong who established the first British dispensary in 1769 was against in patient care for sick children Armstrong stated But a very little reflection will clearly convince any thinking person that such a Scheme as this can never be executed If you take away a sick child for its Parents or Nurse you break its heart immediately 16 Objections to admission were sometimes based on pragmatic reasons e g reducing the threat of cross infection from children with diseases such as typhus diphtheria and measles that were a major cause of infant mortality The voluntary nature of hospitals meant that such outbreaks were very costly 19th century models edit In the mid 19th century western world middle class women and physicians became increasingly concerned about the well being of children in poor living conditions Although infant mortality had begun to decline it still remained a prominent issue Social reformers blamed the emergence of the industrial society and poor parents for not properly caring for their children By the 1870s the prevalent view among doctors and nurses was that children were better off by being removed to hospital away from the often poor unsanitary conditions at home 17 In response reformers and physicians founded children s hospitals 18 By the early 19th century children s hospitals opened in major cities throughout Europe 19 The first formally recognized paediatrics hospital was the Hopital des Enfants Malades in Paris which opened in 1802 Great Ormond Street Hospital was established in London in 1852 and was the first British children s hospital 20 The Children s Hospital of Philadelphia in Pennsylvania was created in 1855 21 The Royal Hospital for Sick Children Edinburgh was the first children s hospital in Scotland and opened in 1860 22 The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto Ontario was the first Canadian children s hospital and opened in 1875 23 By the end of the 19th century and the during the first two decades of the 20th century the number of children s hospitals tripled in both Canada and the United States 18 From the 1850s to around 1910 most cities in the UK had built children s hospitals which included a large number of prestigious hospitals such as the Royal Hospital for Sick Children Glasgow Great Ormond Street Hospital and the Royal Manchester Children s Hospital 24 Early western children s hospitals were independent institutions funded by voluntary donations and from research 19 Often children could only be admitted if they were sponsored by a letter of recommendation from a hospital affiliate The undeserving poor were sent to workhouse infirmaries whilst middle class children were generally cared for and indeed operated on at home 25 Hospitals set their own rules and had their own way of working including regulating admissions They often excluded children under the age of two on humanitarian and pragmatic grounds and were often hesitant to admit children who required long term care in fear that those lives would be lost or that long term care would block beds for those in immediate need 19 26 Early children s hospitals focused more on short term care and treating mild illnesses rather than long term intensive care Treating serious diseases and illnesses in early children s hospitals could result in the disease spreading throughout the hospital which would drain already limited resources A serious disease outbreak in a children s hospital would result in more deaths than lives saved and would therefore reinforce the previous notion that people often died while in the hospital 18 Professionalization of Children s Hospitals edit In the 19th century there was a societal shift in how children were viewed This shift took away some of the parents control and placed it in the hands of medical professionals 27 By the early 20th century a child s health became increasingly tied to physicians and hospitals 28 This was a result of licensing acts the formation of medical associations and new fields of medicine being introduced across countries 28 New areas of medicine offered physicians the chance to build their careers by overseeing the medical needs of private patients caring for and trying new therapies on the sick poor and teaching medical students 28 In order to raise their status further physicians began organizing children s hospitals by doing so it also brought attention and importance to their speciality in the modern health care system 18 Voluntary or religiously associated female care was often replaced by care provided by professionally trained nurses 29 Critiques of children s hospital care editHistorically many children s hospitals limited the ability of children and parents to interact such as by limiting visiting hours This approach was criticised for decades before shifts in practice occurred Surgeon James Henderson Nicholl of the Glasgow Hospital for Sick Children who pioneered day surgery procedures such as Hernia and cleft palate stated in 1909 that I n children under 2 years of age there a few operations indeed that cannot be as advantageously carried out in the out patient departments as in the wards Nicholl believed that hospitalisation wasn t necessary and children were better cared from in their own home by their parents and by nurses making daily visits Nicholl argued that separation from mother is often harmful 30 During the interwar period leading up to World War II psychiatrists expressed concerns about children being away from parents such as during hospitalisation Harry Edelston a Psychiatrist in Leeds detailed that children were emotionally damaged by their stay in hospital 31 In the post war era critiques became more widespread and studies were conducted to examine potential harms Rene Spitz an Austrian American psychoanalyst published an article in 1945 in which he noted deleterious effects of hospitalisation based on his research with institutionalised children 32 L A Perry wrote a 1947 Lancet article that protested the restrictions of parental visits on hospitalized children However Edelston wrote in 1948 that many of this colleagues still refused to believe in hospitalisation trauma 33 Bowlby studied 44 juvenile thieves and found that a significantly high number had experienced early and traumatic separation from their mother In 1949 he used the data to write a report for the World Health Organization s on the mental health of homeless children in post war Europe 33 With the introduction of penicillin into the majority of the medical community by the 1940s the major objection by doctors and nurses that visits by parents into hospital wards introduced cross infections had been removed A major review in 1949 over an 11 month period showed that children admitted to 26 wards in 14 hospitals showed no correlation between visits and cross infection from parents to children By that time the working practices of doctors and nurses still posed the main objection to visiting 34 A D Hunt reported that The hospitalised child was considered essentially a biological unit far better off without his parents who on weekly or bi weekly visiting hours were fundamentally toxic in their effect causing noise generally disorderly conduct and rejection by hospital personnel 35 British Psychiatrist John Bowlby who had previously criticised World War II evacuation schemes separating parents and children 36 and his research assistant at the Tavistock Clinic James Robertson a Scottish social worker and psychoanalyst researched the separation of young children from their parents during hospital stays and criticised the negative impacts on the children of policies of limited visiting 37 38 39 By the 1950s British politicians were concerned enough about the impact of children s hospital policy to create a committee to research the welfare of sick children in hospital This committee produced the Platt Report of 1959 recommending that children should have more access to their parents while ill The Report had effects on hospital care of children in the UK and New Zealand Australia Canada and the United States 40 Utilization in the United States editUsing hospital discharge data from 2003 to 2011 the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality AHRQ studied trends in aggregate hospital costs average hospital costs and hospital utilization The Agency found that for children aged 0 17 aggregate costs rose rapidly for the surgical hospitalizations and decreased for injury hospitalizations Further average hospital costs or cost per discharge increased at least 2 for all hospitalizations and were expected to grow by at least 4 through 2013 The exception to this was mental health hospitalizations which saw a lower percentage increase of 1 2 and was projected to increase only 0 9 through 2013 Despite the rising aggregate costs and costs per discharge hospitalizations except for mental health hospitalizations for children aged 0 17 decreased over the same time and were projected to continue decreasing 41 In 2006 2011 the rate of emergency department ED use in the United States was highest for patients aged under one year but lowest for patients aged 1 17 years The rate of ED use for patients aged under one year declined over the same time period this was the only age group to see a decline 42 Between 2008 and 2012 growth in mean hospital costs per stay in the United States was highest for patients aged 17 and younger 43 In 2012 there were nearly 5 9 million hospital stays for children in the United States of which 3 9 million were neonatal stays and 104 700 were maternal stays for pregnant teens 44 Ranking editEvery year U S News amp World Report ranks the top children s hospitals and pediatric specialties in the United States For the year 2010 2011 eight hospitals ranked in all 10 pediatric specialties The ranking system used by U S News amp World Report depends on a variety of factors In past years 2007 was the 18th year of Pediatric Ranking ranking of hospitals has been done solely on the basis of reputation gauged by random sampling and surveying of pediatricians and pediatric specialists throughout the country The ranking system used is currently under review 45 See also editList of children s hospitals Pediatrics Child life specialist List of children s hospitals in the United StatesReferences edit YLE New Children s Hospital celebrates official opening 7 September 2018 Archived from the original on 2020 07 02 Retrieved 2020 06 30 Steiner MJ Hall M Sutton AG Stephens JR Leyenaar JK Chase L McDaniel CE October 30 2023 Pediatric Hospitalization Trends at Children s and General Hospitals 2000 2019 JAMA 330 19 1906 1908 doi 10 1001 jama 2023 19268 PMC 10616761 PMID 37902774 C S Mott Children s Hospital to provide care for all patients through 21st birthday CS Mott Children s Hospital Michigan Medicine www mottchildren org Archived from the original on 2020 03 23 Retrieved 2020 01 24 I m Not a Kid Why am I Being Treated at a Children s Hospital CHOC Children s Blog 2018 09 11 Archived from the original on 2020 02 13 Retrieved 2020 01 24 Approval for Overage Le Bonheur Patients www lebonheur org Archived from the original on 2021 08 15 Retrieved 2020 01 24 Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine CHLA 2015 06 05 Archived from the original on 2020 02 01 Retrieved 2020 01 24 Philadelphia The Children s Hospital of 2016 07 18 Transition to Adult Care Policy www chop edu Archived from the original on 2020 09 26 Retrieved 2020 01 24 Hardin Amy Peykoff Hackell Jesse M Medicine Committee on Practice and Ambulatory 2017 09 01 Age Limit of Pediatrics Pediatrics 140 3 doi 10 1542 peds 2017 2151 ISSN 0031 4005 PMID 28827380 Archived from the original on 2020 02 13 Retrieved 2020 01 24 Adolescent Unit CAD2 BMSCH Nursing Unit RWJBarnabas Health Archived from the original on 2020 06 22 Retrieved 2020 01 24 Nationwide Children s Hospital Adult Admission Policy permanent dead link Adult Congenital Heart Disease Program Texas Children s Hospital www texaschildrens org Archived from the original on 2020 10 06 Retrieved 2020 05 21 Where special treatment is just what the doctor ordered News 2016 08 21 Archived from the original on 2016 08 21 Retrieved 2018 10 19 The 50 Most Amazing Children s Hospitals in the World Healthcare Administration Degree Programs www healthcare administration degree net Archived from the original on 19 December 2017 Retrieved 12 April 2018 Special report Designing a new model for children s hospitals Building Better Healthcare 21 July 2022 Archived from the original on 28 September 2022 Retrieved 28 September 2022 Paediatrics www mcnz org nz Archived from the original on 13 April 2018 Retrieved 12 April 2018 H Beukers John Michael Henderson Moll 1989 Clinical Teaching Past and Present Rodopi p 27 ISBN 978 90 5183 082 8 Retrieved 21 May 2018 Davies Ruth 5 January 2010 Marking the 50th anniversary of the Platt Report from exclusion to toleration and parental participation in the care of the hospitalized child Journal of Child Health Care 14 1 6 23 doi 10 1177 1367493509347058 PMID 20051502 S2CID 206719396 a b c d Sloane David October 2005 Not Designed Merely to Heal Women Reformers and the Emergence of Children s Hospitals The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 4 4 331 354 doi 10 1017 S1537781400002747 S2CID 162917903 a b c Abreu Laurinda 2013 Hospital Life Theory and Practice From the Medieval to the Modern Pieterien Peter Lang AG pp 209 210 213 214 220 222 Great Osmond Street Hospital Charity Archived from the original on 2016 03 23 Retrieved 2016 04 08 About the Children s Hospital of Philadelphia The Children s Hospital of Philadelphia Archived from the original on 2010 06 29 Retrieved 2016 04 08 Young D G August 1999 The Mason Brown Lecture Scots and paediatric surgery Journal of the Royal College of Surgeons Edinburgh 44 211 15 Archived from the original on 2014 07 14 History and milestones Archived from the original on 2009 03 01 Retrieved 2016 04 08 Davies Ruth 5 January 2010 Marking the 50th anniversary of the Platt Report from exclusion to toleration and parental participation in the care of the hospitalized child Journal of Child Health Care 14 1 6 23 doi 10 1177 1367493509347058 PMID 20051502 S2CID 206719396 Professor Margaret Stacey 2 September 2003 The Sociology of Health and Healing A Textbook Routledge pp 63 66 ISBN 978 1 134 89793 3 Retrieved 25 September 2018 Davies Ruth 5 January 2010 Marking the 50th anniversary of the Platt Report from exclusion to toleration and parental participation in the care of the hospitalized child Journal of Child Health Care 14 1 6 23 doi 10 1177 1367493509347058 PMID 20051502 S2CID 206719396 Duffin Jacalyn 2010 History of Medicine A Scandalously Short Introduction Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 341 ISBN 978 0 8020 9556 5 a b c Connolly Cindy Growth and Development Of a Specialty The Professionalization of Child Health Care Pediatric Nursing 31 no 3 May 2005 211 215 Academic Search Premier EBSCOhost Fass Paula Encyclopedia of Children and Childhood In History and Society Macmillan Reference USA p 176 Nicoll James H 18 September 1909 The Surgery of Infancy PDF British Medical Journal 753 754 Retrieved 21 May 2018 Robert Karen 1994 Becoming Attached First Relationships and how They Shape Our Capacity to Love Oxford University Press p 68 ISBN 978 0 19 511501 7 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Spitz Rene A 13 February 2017 Hospitalism An Inquiry into the Genesis of Psychiatric Conditions in Early Childhood The Psychoanalytic Study of the Child 1 1 53 74 doi 10 1080 00797308 1945 11823126 PMID 21004303 a b Robert Karen 1994 Becoming Attached First Relationships and how They Shape Our Capacity to Love Oxford University Press p 68 ISBN 978 0 19 511501 7 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Watkins A G Lewis Faning E 17 September 1949 Incidence of Cross infection in Children s Wards BMJ 2 4628 616 619 doi 10 1136 bmj 2 4628 616 PMC 2051037 PMID 18140555 Hunt A D November 1974 On the Hospitalisation of Children An Historical Approach Pediatrics 54 5 542 546 doi 10 1542 peds 54 5 542 PMID 4616215 S2CID 39091723 Winnicott Donald W Bowlby John Miller Emanuel 2016 Letter to the British Medical Journal Evacuation of Small Children Vol 1 p 47 doi 10 1093 med psych 9780190271343 001 0001 ISBN 9780190271343 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Jools Page October 2015 Chapter 9 The Legacy of John Bowlby s Attachment Theory PDF The Routledge International Handbook of Philosophies and Theories of Early Childhood Education and Care University of Brighton Repository Routledge pp 80 90 ISBN 9781138022812 Retrieved 23 May 2018 Alsop Shields Linda Mohay Heather 20 December 2001 John Bowlby and James Robertson theorists scientists and crusaders for improvements in the care of children in hospital Journal of Advanced Nursing 35 1 50 58 doi 10 1046 j 1365 2648 2001 01821 x PMID 11442682 Robertson James 10 December 1958 Going to Hospital with Mother Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine 52 381 381 3 discussion 383 4 doi 10 1177 003591575905200518 PMC 1869195 PMID 13658166 Dr Jim Richardson Edward Alan Glasper 19 May 2010 A Textbook of Children s and Young People s Nursing E Book Elsevier Health Sciences p 33 ISBN 978 0 7020 4440 3 Retrieved 16 June 2018 Weiss AJ Barrett ML Andrews RM July 2014 Trends and Projections of U S Hospital Costs by Payer 2003 2013 HCUP Statistical Brief 176 Rockville MD Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Archived from the original on 2022 03 11 Retrieved 2014 08 15 Skiner HG Blanchard J Elixhauser A September 2014 Trends in Emergency Department Visits 2006 2011 HCUP Statistical Brief 179 Rockville MD Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Archived from the original on 2014 12 24 Retrieved 2014 10 20 Moore B Levit K Elixhauser A October 2014 Costs for Hospital Stays in the United States 2012 HCUP Statistical Brief 181 Rockville MD Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Archived from the original on 2014 11 29 Retrieved 2014 11 26 Witt WP Wiess AJ Elixhauser A December 2014 Overview of Hospital Stays for Children in the United States 2012 HCUP Statistical Brief 186 Rockville MD Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Archived from the original on 2018 09 24 Retrieved 2015 04 06 Birth of a New Methodology Archived October 10 2007 at the Wayback Machine Avery Comarow U S News amp World Report August 26 2007 Accessed October 10 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Children 27s hospital amp oldid 1194326089, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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