Rodney Times

Fever sends kids to ED

- KASHKA TUNSTALL

Fever is the most likely cause for a child’s emergency department visit in Auckland’s North and Western regions.

In the year to June 30, the Waitemata¯ District Health Board recorded 19,678 children under the age of 15 turned up in emergency rooms at North Shore Hospital and Waitakere Hospital.

Feverish children made up 2462 of that number, while 1892 presented with vomiting.

Rashes and coughs were among the top ten causes for visits, as was shortness of breath which saw 942 children take a trip to the hospital.

Another 680 kids visited with breathing difficulti­es and head injuries were at fault in 612 cases.

Over the 12 month period, 2511 children were admitted to general hospital beds - about 13 per cent of the children who went to the emergency department.

Of those who were admitted to a bed, 61 per cent were discharged within 48 hours, with the average length of stay 28 hours.

The remaining 39 per cent stayed for an average of 92 hours.

In the specialise­d paediatric short stay beds in Waitakere Hospital, 846 kids were admitted over the year.

The vast majority of kids - 831 were released within two days, while 15 children remained in the ward longer, for an average 61 hours.

June saw the highest amount of visits for kids to the ED, with 2016 over the month, leading to 255 hospital admissions.

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