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(A109) Systematic Literature Review on Pediatric Sleep Disturbance Management Post-Disaster: Implications of Post-Disaster Pediatric Clinical Management in Developing Countries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 May 2011

E.Y.Y. Chan
Affiliation:
CCOC, School of Public Health and Primary Care, NT, Hong Kong
S.D. Koo
Affiliation:
CCOC, School of Public Health and Primary Care, NT, Hong Kong
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Abstract

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Introduction

Sleep disturbances are common symptoms during the immediate and long-term aftermath of exposure of traumatic events. While stress affects sleep in all age groups, due to differences in physiological, psychological, and socio-behavorial risk factors, the clinical management of pediatric patients with sleep disturbances post-disaster might be different. This study aims to systematically review scientific literature on the clinical management of pediatric sleep disturbances post-disaster and its clinical implication in developing countries. Methods: A keyword-based, systematic review was conducted for scientific publication in academic and disaster literature databases (Medline, PUBMED, Academic Search Premier, Google Scholar, ELDIS, PsycINFO, PILOTS and RELIEFWEB) until October 2010. Abstracts of all the hits were inspected to remove non-relevant articles, and all relevant articles were reviewed and scored by two reviewers to determine relevancy before being included in the final study database. Quality, relevance, and applicability of the reported literature were examined critically with the EBM level of evidence and EPPHPPQ (2003) assessment tool.

Results and Discussion

The literature disproportionally emphasized the clinical effects and psychological impacts of traumatic events on pediatric patients, and most reported studies were reported as a subset within PTSD study literature. Management of younger children, gender differences, clinical effectiveness of cross-disciplinary management modalities, and experiences in middle- and low-income countries were extremely limited. While principles of sleep hygiene and clinical guidelines for management of adult sleep disturbance are available, the application of clinical effectiveness and appropriateness of these guidelines in pediatric population must be examined further.

Conclusion and Implications

Currently, there is limited literature on the acute management of pediatric sleep disturbances post-disaster in developing countries. Evidence-based studies are needed to identify the appropriate clinical approaches to support the pediatric population with sleep disturbances post-disaster.

Type
Abstracts of Scientific and Invited Papers 17th World Congress for Disaster and Emergency Medicine
Copyright
Copyright © World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine 2011