Today’s question focuses on priority action in pediatric respiratory care. This skill matters because children can worsen fast when their airway is affected. A nurse must notice the pattern, connect the assessment findings, and act before a child moves from distress to failure.
Clinical Scenario
A 3-year-old child is brought to the emergency department in late evening by a parent. The parent says the child woke up suddenly with a harsh cough and “sounds scary” when breathing in. The child has had a runny nose for 2 days and a low-grade fever at home. On assessment, the child is sitting upright on the parent’s lap, appears anxious, and has a barking cough with inspiratory stridor at rest. Respiratory rate is 34/min, heart rate is 128/min, oxygen saturation is 94% on room air, and the child has mild suprasternal retractions. The child becomes more upset when staff try to move them to the stretcher.
The Question
Which nursing action should the nurse take first?
Answer Choices
- Use a tongue blade to inspect the child’s throat for swelling and redness
- Place the child in a treatment room alone to reduce stimulation and obtain a full set of vital signs
- Keep the child on the parent’s lap, minimize agitation, and prepare to administer humidified oxygen as tolerated
- Offer oral fluids to thin secretions and reduce the barking cough
Correct Answer
C. Keep the child on the parent’s lap, minimize agitation, and prepare to administer humidified oxygen as tolerated
Detailed Rationale
This child’s presentation is most consistent with croup, also called laryngotracheobronchitis. The key clues are the barking cough, inspiratory stridor, recent upper respiratory symptoms, mild fever, and age. Croup causes upper airway swelling, especially around the larynx and trachea. That swelling narrows an already small pediatric airway. Even a little more swelling can significantly increase work of breathing.
The nurse’s first priority is airway support. In a child with suspected upper airway narrowing, agitation can make obstruction worse. Crying increases oxygen demand and can increase turbulent airflow through the narrowed airway, which makes stridor louder and breathing harder. That is why the nurse should avoid separating the child from the parent and avoid unnecessary procedures at the start.
Keeping the child on the parent’s lap is not just comforting. It is a clinical intervention. It helps maintain a position of comfort, lowers anxiety, and may reduce respiratory effort. The nurse should also prepare to give humidified oxygen if the child will tolerate it. In pediatrics, “as tolerated” matters. Forcing a mask onto an anxious child can backfire and worsen distress. A blow-by setup may be better if needed.
After that immediate first action, the nurse should continue a focused respiratory assessment. This includes listening for stridor at rest, watching for retractions, checking respiratory rate and oxygen saturation trends, and observing mental status. A child who becomes drowsy, less responsive, or quieter despite continued distress may be tiring out, which is a dangerous sign.
The nurse should also anticipate provider orders that match the severity of symptoms. A child with stridor at rest often needs corticosteroid treatment such as dexamethasone to reduce airway swelling. More significant distress may require nebulized epinephrine, which acts quickly to decrease upper airway edema. If nebulized epinephrine is given, the child should be monitored closely because symptoms can recur after the medication effect wears off.
On shift, the nurse would also monitor for signs that the situation is no longer mild or moderate. These include increasing retractions, declining oxygen saturation, cyanosis, poor air movement, lethargy, and inability to maintain hydration. Those findings mean the child may need rapid escalation of care.
Why the Other Options Are Wrong
A. Use a tongue blade to inspect the child’s throat for swelling and redness
This is unsafe as a first action in a child with upper airway symptoms. Putting anything in the mouth can trigger more agitation and worsen airway obstruction. While croup is the likely problem here, the nurse should always think carefully before stimulating the airway in any child with stridor. The priority is to keep the child calm and breathing effectively.
B. Place the child in a treatment room alone to reduce stimulation and obtain a full set of vital signs
Reducing stimulation is correct in principle, but separating the child from the parent is the wrong move. The parent is helping the child stay calm. Also, a “full set” of vitals should not come before the immediate airway-focused intervention. In pediatrics, the sequence matters. If measuring something will upset the child and worsen breathing, delay it until the child is more stable.
D. Offer oral fluids to thin secretions and reduce the barking cough
Hydration matters later, but it is not the first priority. A child with stridor at rest and mild retractions needs airway-focused support before oral intake. Giving fluids to an anxious child in respiratory distress can increase coughing or aspiration risk. Stabilize breathing first, then reassess readiness for oral fluids.
Key Takeaways
- In children with croup, agitation can worsen airway obstruction.
- A barking cough plus inspiratory stridor strongly suggests upper airway swelling.
- Keep the child with the parent and in a position of comfort whenever possible.
- Give oxygen in the least upsetting way the child will tolerate.
- Watch for signs of fatigue or worsening obstruction, not just the oxygen saturation number.
- What you’d do on shift: Keep the child calm, avoid unnecessary throat exams, assess work of breathing, apply oxygen as tolerated, prepare for dexamethasone or nebulized epinephrine if ordered, and reassess often after any intervention.
Quick Practice Extension
1. A child with croup receives nebulized epinephrine and looks much better 20 minutes later. What assessment finding would make you most concerned during the next few hours?
2. Which finding would suggest the child is moving from respiratory distress toward respiratory failure: louder stridor, mild restlessness, increasing thirst, or decreasing level of responsiveness?
Category for today: Pediatrics
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