Pediatric Emergencies: A Comprehensive Clinical Guideline
Evidence-based guideline for pediatric resuscitation, respiratory emergencies, sepsis, febrile infant evaluation, seizures, dehydration, and common surgical emergencies in children.
SSC 2026 Guidelines now available — 129 adult & 61 pediatric recommendations View guidelines →
Evidence-based guideline for pediatric resuscitation, respiratory emergencies, sepsis, febrile infant evaluation, seizures, dehydration, and common surgical emergencies in children.
Intussusception, pyloric stenosis, testicular torsion, PECARN head CT and abdominal trauma decision rules, solid organ injury non-operative management, non-accidental trauma screening, neonatal emergencies including hypoglycemia, congenital heart disease with PGE1, hyperbilirubinemia, and a comprehensive pediatric medication dosing reference table.
Febrile seizure evaluation, status epilepticus protocol with stepwise treatment, clinical dehydration assessment, WHO dehydration classification, ORT protocol, IV fluid calculation with Holliday-Segar rule, hyponatremia correction, and pediatric diabetic ketoacidosis management including 2-bag system and cerebral edema monitoring.
Pediatric sepsis recognition with age-specific SIRS criteria, sepsis resuscitation protocol, vasopressor selection, antibiotic guidance, febrile infant risk stratification by age, Rochester-Philadelphia-Boston criteria comparison, PECARN febrile infant rule, and neonatal CSF interpretation.
Croup scoring and management, bronchiolitis evaluation and supportive care, acute asthma severity classification and stepwise treatment, anaphylaxis recognition and epinephrine dosing, and foreign body aspiration management.
Pediatric vital signs by age, pediatric assessment triangle, weight estimation, PALS algorithms for pulseless arrest, bradycardia, and tachycardia, weight-based medication dosing, defibrillation energy, and equipment sizing.
Complete NICU vascular access guide: umbilical arterial and venous catheters (UAC/UVC), neonatal PICC lines, neonatal peripheral IV, gestational age considerations, skin protection, heparin-free protocols, and light protection for neonatal PN.
A parent's guide to vascular access in the NICU — explaining umbilical catheters, neonatal PICC lines, and peripheral IVs in newborns: why they are placed, what they look like, how they are cared for, and how parents can help protect them.