Parents or Ambulance: How a Child Reaches an ER Could Matter
By Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
TUESDAY, Oct. 15, 2024 -- It’s natural for a parent to bundle an injured child into a car and rush their kid to the emergency room.
But that decision could actually delay their child’s emergency care, a new study shows.
Severely injured children brought to an ER by their parents aren’t treated as quickly as those who arrive via ambulance, the researchers discovered.
On average, a child brought to an emergency room by a parent will wait nearly an hour before they’re seen by an ER doctor, researchers found.
That’s because paramedics call ahead to alert an ER prior to arrival, explained researcher Dr. Robert Hirst, an emergency medicine registrar with the Bristol Royal Hospital for Children in the United Kingdom.
“This leads to early trauma team activation, resulting in specialist services and resources being ready and prepared to see these patients as soon as they arrive,” Hirst said. “This has been shown to be associated with better outcomes for children with significant injuries.”
Parents bringing a badly injured child in themselves “can lead to delays in the appropriate level of care being provided,” Hirst added.
For the study, researchers analyzed data on 24 children brought to the Bristol Royal Hospital by their parents following a severe injury.
Three out of four of the patients were boys. A little more than half (54%) had head injuries, 33% had limb injuries and 13% had abdominal injuries.
These kids waited an average of 58 minutes before a doctor saw them, with individual wait times ranging from 3 minutes to nearly 3 hours, results show.
Those delays happened even though 42% of the kids required surgery for their injuries, researchers said. This included neurosurgery or surgery to set a broken thigh bone.
ERs can help these cases by implementing triage to look for three symptoms of severe injury among incoming kids, Hirst said. These include swelling of the head, abdominal bruising and thigh swelling or deformity.
“This could prompt an urgent senior clinician review,” Hirst said. “This could improve management of this particular group of children by triggering trauma teams and appropriate allocation of resources for this high-risk population.”
Researchers reported their findings at the European Society for Emergency Medicine’s annual meeting in Copenhagen, Denmark.
“If pre-hospital emergency services have not been activated for a severely injured child, then it’s possible that the carer or emergency department medical staff may not recognize the severity of the injury immediately,” Dr. Barbra Backus, chair of the society’s abstract selection, said in a meeting news release.
“This is why adoption of triage alerts for the three key features identified in this study could make a significant difference to how quickly these patients are reviewed by a senior clinician and, potentially, to their outcomes,” added Backus, an emergency physician in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, who was not involved in the research.
Findings presented at a medical meeting should be considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed article.
Sources
- European Society for Emergency Medicine, news release, Oct. 13, 2024
Disclaimer: Statistical data in medical articles provide general trends and do not pertain to individuals. Individual factors can vary greatly. Always seek personalized medical advice for individual healthcare decisions.

© 2025 HealthDay. All rights reserved.
Posted October 2024
Read this next
FDA Plans to Use AI to Speed Up Drug and Food Safety Reviews
WEDNESDAY, June 11, 2025 — The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) says it plans to use artificial intelligence (AI) to help speed the approval of new drugs and medical...
These Smiling Salamanders Are Helping Scientists Learn to Regrow Limbs
WEDNESDAY, June 11, 2025 — With their goofy grins and feathery gills, axolotls have become stars of the pet world and video games like Minecraft. But these small...
Real-World Results For GLP-1 Drugs Underwhelm, Study Says
WEDNESDAY, June 11, 2025 — Real-world results for blockbuster weight-loss meds like Ozempic, Wegovy and Zepbound aren’t as impressive as those promised by the...
More news resources
- FDA Medwatch Drug Alerts
- Daily MedNews
- News for Health Professionals
- New Drug Approvals
- New Drug Applications
- Drug Shortages
- Clinical Trial Results
- Generic Drug Approvals
Subscribe to our newsletter
Whatever your topic of interest, subscribe to our newsletters to get the best of Drugs.com in your inbox.