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Going Home After a Head Injury

Going Home After a Head Injury. Jacqueline McPherson Paediatric Neurology Nurse Specialist Ward 7 Neuroscience Department RHSC. Head Injuries. April 2011 – March 2012 Attended A&E - 1419 Admitted from A&E – 113 Classified into mild = GCS 13-15 moderate = GCS 9-12

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Going Home After a Head Injury

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  1. Going Home After a Head Injury Jacqueline McPherson Paediatric Neurology Nurse Specialist Ward 7Neuroscience DepartmentRHSC

  2. Head Injuries April 2011 – March 2012 • Attended A&E - 1419 • Admitted from A&E – 113 Classified into mild = GCS 13-15 moderate = GCS 9-12 severe = GCS 8 or less (SIGN)

  3. Mild-Moderate Head Injury • Support, information, advice and reassurance for child & family • School/Nursery point of contact • Ward review • Out-patient (OP) clinic appointment; paediatric neurosurgery and/or paediatric neurorehabilitation

  4. Moderate – Severe Head Injury • A period of neuro assessment and rehabilitation • Integrated Care Pathway • Link with Education – point of contact • ‘Wean’ off ward; day pass, overnight pass, weekend pass • Regular ward reviews and OP appointments

  5. FAQ • Mood & Temperament • Memory • Fatigue – especially returning to school • Sports

  6. SIGN Guidelines • Mild - Some evidence to show that some children will have moderate disability and this group would benefit from telephone/postal follow up • Moderate/Severe – follow up is of benefit in terms of reducing behavioural changes, reducing anxiety and reducing reporting of symptoms

  7. Case Studies

  8. Case Study 1 • 11 year old girl • Fell from monkey bars • No loss of consciousness (LOC) • Travelling to local emergency department (ED) became sleepy and incoherent • CT showed a fracture extending through R mastoid and into the temporal bone, a small extradural (3mm) and a small pneumocephalus • Transferred to Royal Hospital for Sick Children, (RHSC) Edinburgh and admitted into ward 7

  9. Case Study 1 Cont: • Post traumatic amnesia (PTA ≤24hrs) • Continued with significant headaches and a further vomit • Repeat scan showed no change • In-patient for 4 days • Remained neurological stable • Discharge home with 6 week Neurosurgical follow up.

  10. Case Study 1 Cont: • Paediatric Neurology Nurse Specialist (PNNS) in frequent contact with Mum for support and information • PNNS in contact with school about phased return and any difficulties which may be present

  11. Case Study 2 • 3 year old boy • Fell 2 stories onto concrete • Sustained a severe head injury/traumatic brain injury • Intubated in Emergency Department

  12. Case Study 2 cont: • CT scan showed right subdural collections, frontal lobe contusions and dramatic fracture from left parietal to right spheroid bone with injury to right orbital roof and adjacent muscles and proptosis (forward displacement of the eye) • Transferred and admitted into intensive care unit (ITU)

  13. Case Study 2 cont: • On going problems with raised intracranial pressure • Underwent bifrontal decompressive craniectomy (subsequent re-insertion of autologous frontal bone flap) • Extubated and transferred to neuroscience unit (ward 7) for rehabilitation – 2/52 • Multidisciplinary team discharge planning meeting 5/52 • Discharged home – 6 weeks after initial injury

  14. Case Study 2 cont: • Attending ward reviews and outpatient appointments • Health Visitor for information and advice • Nursery School for information, advice and reassurance • Transition meetings; nursery to primary • Neuropsychology assessment • Long term follow up

  15. Service Development • Promote Role • Enhance referral system e.g. surgical ward admissions • Information packs

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