Is the NICE traffic light system fit-for-purpose for children presenting with undifferentiated acute illness in primary care?

Author:

Blyth Megan HeddORCID,Cannings-John Rebecca,Hay Alastair D,Butler Christopher C,Hughes Kathryn

Abstract

BackgroundThe National Institute of Clinical Excellence (NICE) traffic light system uses children’s symptoms and signs to categorise acute infections into red, amber and green. To our knowledge, no study has described the proportion of children with acute undifferentiated illness who fall into these categories in primary care, which is important since red and amber children are considered at higher risk of serious illness requiring urgent secondary care assessment.AimTo estimate the proportion of acutely unwell children presenting to primary care classified by the NICE traffic light system as red, amber or green, and to describe their initial management.Design and settingSecondary analysis of the Diagnosis of Urinary Tract infection in Young children prospective cohort study.Method6797 children under 5 years presenting to 225 general practices with acute undifferentiated illness were retrospectively mapped to the NICE traffic light system by a panel of general practitioners.Results6406 (94%) children were classified as NICE red (32%) or amber (62%) with 1.6% red and 0.3%, respectively, referred the same day for hospital assessment; and 46% and 31%, respectively, treated with antibiotics. The remaining 385 (6%) were classified green, with none referred and 27% treated with antibiotics. Results were robust to sensitivity analyses.ConclusionThe majority of children presenting to UK primary care with acute undifferentiated illness meet red or amber NICE traffic light criteria,with only 6% classified as low risk, making it unfit for use in general practice. Research is urgently needed to establish as triage system suitable for general practice.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference12 articles.

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5. Accuracy of the "traffic light" clinical decision rule for serious bacterial infections in young children with fever: a retrospective cohort study;De;BMJ,2013

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