(Press-News.org) New research shows that 1 in 4 children with major traumatic injury do not receive care in a pediatric trauma centre, where outcomes are generally better than in adult centres. The authors of the study, published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal) https://www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.250625, recommend evidence-based strategies to improve care for this vulnerable age group.
“Given the strong evidence of improved clinical outcomes associated with care in pediatric trauma centres, access to these centres in Canada must be improved urgently,” writes Dr. Lynne Moore, professor, Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, Université Laval, Québec, Quebec, with coauthors. “Since most severely injured children first present to nonpediatric hospitals, the most effective strategies lie in strengthening decision support in prehospital environments and nonpediatric hospitals, not in costly new infrastructure.”
Researchers found that in a study across 9 Canadian provinces over 5 years (2016 to 2021), 3007 children were admitted to an acute care hospital with major traumatic injuries. Of these, 2335 (77%) were directly transported (879, 29%) or transferred (1456, 48%) to a pediatric trauma centre.
Pediatric trauma centres offer specialized health care and support for the specific physical and psychological needs of children and their families.
Variability in access to pediatric trauma centres exists, with higher access in Alberta and Manitoba than in Ontario, and lower access in British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and the Atlantic provinces.
The authors suggest that provincial trauma systems integrate evidence-based strategies to improve access to pediatric care. A standardized prehospital triage tool adapted to pediatric patients, pediatric readiness assessments for nonpediatric hospitals, and teleconsultation pathways between referring hospitals and pediatric centres are some strategies.
“Immediate implementation of evidence-based strategies to improve care for children with major trauma, coupled with targeted research and national data coordination, would save lives and provide more equitable trauma care for children in Canada, regardless of where they live,” the authors conclude.
END
1 in 4 children with major traumatic injuries not cared for in pediatric trauma centres
Need to improve access to care for pediatric patients
2025-12-15
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Duke and Duke-NUS’ joint cross-population research to uncover "East-West" differences in disease and care
2025-12-15
Singapore, 15 December 2025—As global health systems brace for the next wave of infectious and chronic diseases, scientists are looking to human genetics, population differences, medical imaging and health informatics for answers. As an example, researchers have proposed that understanding how genetic variants shape disease susceptibility across populations could transform how the world prepares for future threats.
To investigate this possibility, one of the five projects awarded under this year’s Duke–Duke-NUS Research Collaboration Pilot Project Grants focuses on studies comparing cohorts in Singapore and the United States to determine genetic features ...
Scientists to ‘spy’ on cancer- immune cell interactions using quantum technology breakthrough
2025-12-15
A revolutionary quantum sensing project that could transform cancer treatment by tracking how immune cells interact with tumours has been awarded a prestigious £2 million Future Leaders Fellowship.
The four-year fellowship, funded by UK Research and Innovation, focuses on a critical problem: immune cells often fail when they encounter cancer tissue because the tumour environment disrupts their metabolism. The pathbreaking project could enable the development of improved patient-tailored cancer therapies and provide tools for earlier diagnosis and evaluation of anti-cancer drugs.
Dr Aldona Mzyk will use quantum sensors, devices that harness the properties ...
Tech savvy users have most digital concerns
2025-12-15
UCL Press release
Under embargo until Monday 15 December at 00:01 GMT
Tech savvy users have most digital concerns
Digital concerns around privacy, online misinformation, and work-life boundaries are highest among highly educated, Western European millennials, finds a new study from researchers at UCL and the University of British Columbia.
The research, published in Information, Communication & Society, also found individuals with higher ...
Making lighter work of calculating fluid and heat flow
2025-12-13
Tokyo, Japan – Scientists from Tokyo Metropolitan University have re-engineered the popular Lattice-Boltzmann Method (LBM) for simulating the flow of fluids and heat, making it lighter and more stable than the state-of-the-art. By formulating the algorithm with a few extra inputs, they successfully got around the need to store certain data, some of which span the millions of points over which a simulation is run. Their findings might overcome a key bottleneck in LBM: memory usage.
From rocket fuel and drainpipes to the inner workings of organisms, simulations of fluids ...
Normalizing blood sugar can halve heart attack risk
2025-12-13
For the first time, an international analysis has shown that when people with prediabetes bring their blood glucose back into the normal range through lifestyle changes, their risk of heart attack, heart failure, and premature death is cut in half. These findings could revolutionize prevention and establish a new, measurable target for clinical guidelines. Among others, researchers from University Hospital Tübingen, Helmholtz Munich, and the German Center for Diabetes Research (DZD) took part in the study.
Millions of people in Germany live with elevated blood glucose levels without knowing ...
Lowering blood sugar cuts heart attack risk in people with prediabetes
2025-12-13
Lowering blood sugar levels halves the likelihood of serious heart problems in people with prediabetes.
According to King’s College London research, published today in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, bringing blood glucose back to normal levels – effectively reversing prediabetes – cuts the risk of death from heart disease or hospital admission for heart failure by more than 50%.
This finding is especially important in light of recent research showing that lifestyle changes alone - including ...
Study links genetic variants to risk of blinding eye disease in premature infants
2025-12-12
OKLAHOMA CITY – A new study from the University of Oklahoma suggests that small genetic differences in two proteins – previously known for their role in premature infants’ lungs – may also influence how their eyes develop, potentially affecting the risk of retinopathy of prematurity (ROP).
ROP is a serious eye disease that affects premature infants, whose retinas – the light-sensitive tissue at the back of the eye – are still developing when they are born. In some babies, the blood vessels in the retina grow abnormally, which can lead to vision problems or even blindness. ROP is the leading ...
Non-opioid ‘pain sponge’ therapy halts cartilage degeneration and relieves chronic pain
2025-12-12
SereNeuro Therapeutics, a preclinical biotechnology company developing non-opioid pain therapies, unveiled new data today on a novel approach to chronic pain management and joint tissue preservation. The data highlights SN101, a first-in-class induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived therapy.
SN101 utilizes mature iPSC-derived peripheral pain-sensing neurons (nociceptors) to treat chronic osteoarthritis joint pain. The data highlights a scientific approach that challenges traditional pain management logic.
“Our approach utilizes high-purity, iPSC-derived nociceptors (SN101) that effectively function as a sponge for pain factors. By injecting SN101 ...
AI can pick up cultural values by mimicking how kids learn
2025-12-12
Artificial intelligence systems absorb values from their training data. The trouble is that values differ across cultures. So an AI system trained on data from the entire internet won’t work equally well for people from different cultures.
But a new University of Washington study suggests that AI could learn cultural values by observing human behavior. Researchers had AI systems observe people from two cultural groups playing a video game. On average, participants in one group behaved more altruistically. ...
China’s ecological redlines offer fast track to 30 x 30 global conservation goal
2025-12-12
A new commentary in Environmental and Biogeochemical Processes proposes a practical pathway for countries to meet the global goal of protecting 30 percent of land and sea by 2030, known as the 30 × 30 target, by rethinking how existing ecological policies are counted and governed. Focusing on China, the authors argue that the country’s Ecological Protection Redline policy offers a ready model for turning ambitious maps into real conservation outcomes while balancing development needs.
Turning redlines into real protection
China’s Ecological Protection Redline system has legally identified about 32 percent of the ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
YouTubers love wildlife, but commenters aren't calling for conservation action
New study: Immune cells linked to Epstein-Barr virus may play a role in MS
AI tool predicts brain age, cancer survival, and other disease signals from unlabeled brain MRIs
Peak mental sharpness could be like getting in an extra 40 minutes of work per day, study finds
No association between COVID-vaccine and decrease in childbirth
AI enabled stethoscope demonstrated to be twice as efficient at detecting valvular heart disease in the clinic
Development by Graz University of Technology to reduce disruptions in the railway network
Large study shows scaling startups risk increasing gender gaps
Scientists find a black hole spewing more energy than the Death Star
A rapid evolutionary process provides Sudanese Copts with resistance to malaria
Humidity-resistant hydrogen sensor can improve safety in large-scale clean energy
Breathing in the past: How museums can use biomolecular archaeology to bring ancient scents to life
Dementia research must include voices of those with lived experience
Natto your average food
Family dinners may reduce substance-use risk for many adolescents
Kumamoto University Professor Kazuya Yamagata receives 2025 Erwin von Bälz Prize (Second Prize)
Sustainable electrosynthesis of ethylamine at an industrial scale
A mint idea becomes a game changer for medical devices
Innovation at a crossroads: Virginia Tech scientist calls for balance between research integrity and commercialization
Tropical peatlands are a major source of greenhouse gas emissions
From cytoplasm to nucleus: A new workflow to improve gene therapy odds
Three Illinois Tech engineering professors named IEEE fellows
Five mutational “fingerprints” could help predict how visible tumours are to the immune system
Rates of autism in girls and boys may be more equal than previously thought
Testing menstrual blood for HPV could be “robust alternative” to cervical screening
Are returning Pumas putting Patagonian Penguins at risk? New study reveals the likelihood
Exposure to burn injuries played key role in shaping human evolution, study suggests
Ancient American pronghorns were built for speed
Two-stage hydrothermal process turns wastewater sludge into cleaner biofuel
Soil pH shapes nitrogen competition between wheat and microbes, new study finds
[Press-News.org] 1 in 4 children with major traumatic injuries not cared for in pediatric trauma centresNeed to improve access to care for pediatric patients