πŸ§’ Nursing · Pediatrics

Nursing tricks that make pediatric nursing stick

Growth milestones, pediatric diseases, immunizations, and age-appropriate safety β€” memorized.

πŸ§’ Pediatrics

Memory tricks

Proven mnemonics — fast to learn, hard to forget.

Developmental Milestones
Milestones: 2 months smile, 6 months sit, 9 months crawl, 12 months walk/word, 2 years 2-word phrases, 4 years sentences.
Developmental Milestones
The motor and language milestones NCLEX uses to screen for developmental delay
Gross motor: 2 months β€” holds head up. 4 months β€” rolls front to back. 6 months β€” sits with support. 9 months β€” pulls to stand. 12 months β€” walks independently. 18 months β€” runs. 2 years β€” goes up stairs. Fine motor: 3 months β€” grasp reflex disappears. 6 months β€” transfers objects. 9 months β€” pincer grasp (thumb + forefinger). 12 months β€” releases objects intentionally. Language: 2 months β€” coos. 6 months β€” babbles. 12 months β€” 1–3 words (mama, dada). 18 months β€” 10+ words. 2 years β€” 2-word phrases. 3 years β€” 3-word sentences. 4–5 years β€” sentences, strangers understand speech.
2 months
Social smile, holds head up
6 months
Sits with support, babbles
9 months
Pincer grasp, crawls
12 months
Walks, 1–3 words
2 years
2-word phrases, runs
4 years
Full sentences
Immunization Schedule
Key vaccines: DTaP (2,4,6,15-18 mo, 4-6 yr), MMR (12-15 mo, 4-6 yr), Varicella (12-15 mo, 4-6 yr), Hep B (birth, 2, 6 mo).
Pediatric Immunizations
The childhood vaccine schedule β€” the ages and contraindications NCLEX tests most
Hepatitis B: birth, 1–2 months, 6–18 months. DTaP (diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis): 2, 4, 6 months, 15–18 months, 4–6 years. IPV (polio): 2, 4 months, 6–18 months, 4–6 years. Hib: 2, 4, 6 months, 12–15 months. PCV13: 2, 4, 6 months, 12–15 months. MMR (measles, mumps, rubella): 12–15 months, 4–6 years. Varicella: 12–15 months, 4–6 years. Hep A: 12–23 months (2 doses). Contraindications to live vaccines (MMR, Varicella): immunocompromised, pregnancy, severe egg allergy (MMR). Mild illness (cold) is NOT a contraindication. Anaphylaxis to previous dose = absolute contraindication.
Hep B
Birth, 1–2 mo, 6–18 mo
DTaP
2, 4, 6 mo, 15–18 mo, 4–6 yr
MMR
12–15 mo, 4–6 yr (live)
Varicella
12–15 mo, 4–6 yr (live)
Live vaccine CI
Immunocompromised, pregnancy
Febrile Seizures
Febrile seizure: common in 6 months–5 years, occurs with rapid temp rise. Simple: <15 min, generalized. Priority: airway, prevent injury.
Febrile Seizures
The most common seizure type in children β€” NCLEX expects correct priority interventions
Febrile seizures: 6 months–5 years, occur when temperature rises rapidly (usually >38.8Β°C/102Β°F). Simple febrile seizure: generalized, <15 minutes, resolves spontaneously, no focal deficit. Complex: >15 min, focal, or multiple in 24 hrs. Management DURING seizure: protect from injury (lower to floor, padding), position on side (recovery position), loosen clothing, time the seizure, do NOT put anything in mouth, do NOT restrain. AFTER seizure: assess LOC, check temperature, administer antipyretics, reassure parents. Rectal diazepam (Diastat): if seizure >5 min. Not associated with epilepsy development in most simple cases. Parents need education β€” very frightening to witness.
Epiglottitis vs Croup
Epiglottitis: sudden, toxic, tripod position, drooling, NO throat inspection. Croup: gradual, barking cough, steeple sign, racemic epinephrine.
Epiglottitis vs Croup
Two pediatric airway emergencies β€” telling them apart is critical because management differs completely
Epiglottitis (bacterial β€” Hib, now rare due to vaccine): sudden onset, high fever, severe sore throat, drooling (cannot swallow), tripod position (leaning forward, neck extended), muffled voice, toxic appearance. Do NOT examine throat (laryngospasm risk), do NOT put child supine, do NOT use tongue depressor. Call provider immediately, prepare for intubation, X-ray shows 'thumbprint sign.' Croup (viral β€” parainfluenza): gradual onset, low grade fever, barking/seal-like cough, inspiratory stridor, worse at night. X-ray: steeple sign (subglottic narrowing). Treatment: cool mist, racemic epinephrine (aerosol), dexamethasone (steroid), calm environment.
Epiglottitis
Tripod, drooling, toxic β€” NO throat exam
Croup
Barking cough, stridor β€” racemic epi, steroids
Epiglottitis X-ray
Thumbprint sign
Croup X-ray
Steeple sign
Dehydration in Children
Mild dehydration: <5% weight loss, dry mouth. Moderate: 5–10%, tachycardia, decreased turgor. Severe: >10%, hypotension, delayed cap refill.
Pediatric Dehydration
Assessing dehydration severity in children β€” the signs that indicate IV fluids are needed
Mild (<5% weight loss): dry mucous membranes, slightly decreased UO, thirsty. Moderate (5–10%): tachycardia (compensatory), decreased skin turgor (pinch test β€” tents), sunken eyes and fontanelle (infants), decreased UO, no tears when crying. Severe (>10%): hypotension (LATE β€” decompensated), mottled skin, cap refill >3 seconds, lethargy/irritability, absent tears. Oral rehydration: mild-moderate β€” Pedialyte (NOT water, juice, or sports drinks β€” wrong electrolyte balance). IV fluids: severe or unable to tolerate oral β€” NS or LR bolus 20 mL/kg. Monitor: weight (most accurate), UO (1–2 mL/kg/hr adequate), skin turgor.
Mild
Dry mouth, thirsty
Moderate
Tachycardia, decreased turgor, sunken eyes
Severe
Hypotension, cap refill >3 sec, lethargy
Oral
Pedialyte β€” mild to moderate
IV
20 mL/kg bolus β€” severe
Sickle Cell Disease
Sickle cell crisis: pain crisis (vaso-occlusive), aplastic crisis (infection), sequestration crisis (spleen trapping RBCs). Treat: hydration, oxygen, analgesia.
Sickle Cell Disease
Three types of crisis and the nursing management for each
Sickle cell: autosomal recessive, HbS β€” sickle-shaped RBCs obstruct vessels. Vaso-occlusive (pain) crisis: most common β€” severe pain in bones/joints/chest. Triggers: dehydration, infection, cold, stress, hypoxia. Aplastic crisis: parvovirus B19 infection β†’ bone marrow suppression β†’ severe anemia. Sequestration crisis: blood pools in spleen β†’ rapidly enlarging spleen, hypovolemic shock (most dangerous, especially in infants). Nursing management for all crises: IV hydration (dilutes blood, prevents sickling), oxygen (maintain SpO2 >95%), analgesia (opioids β€” do NOT withhold due to addiction concerns), warm compresses (not cold β€” vasoconstriction worsens). Hydroxyurea: reduces frequency of crises.
Pain crisis
Most common β€” hydrate, O2, analgesia
Aplastic
Parvovirus B19 β€” severe anemia
Sequestration
Spleen traps RBCs β€” shock risk
Treatment
Hydration + O2 + opioids + warmth
Pediatric Safety by Age
Infants: car seat, no soft bedding (SIDS). Toddlers: poisoning, drowning, falls. School-age: bike helmets. Teens: MVA, guns, suicide.
Pediatric Safety
Age-specific safety β€” the leading causes of injury and death at each developmental stage
Infant: SIDS prevention β€” back to sleep, firm mattress, no loose bedding/pillows/toys, no co-sleeping. Never leave alone on elevated surface. Car seat rear-facing until 2 years. Toddler (leading cause of death: unintentional injury): poisoning (lock up meds/cleaners β€” Poison Control 1-800-222-1222), drowning (never leave alone near water β€” even bathtub), falls (stair gates, window guards). School-age: bicycle helmets, safety in sports, stranger danger, firearm safety. Adolescent: motor vehicle accidents (#1 cause of teen death), alcohol/drugs, suicide (#2), firearms. Parents: always know where firearms are stored β€” lock and store separately from ammunition.
Pyloric Stenosis
Pyloric stenosis: 2–6 weeks, projectile vomiting after feeding, olive-shaped mass, metabolic alkalosis. Tx: surgery (pyloromyotomy).
Pyloric Stenosis
Classic pediatric GI emergency β€” the hungry vomiting infant with a metabolic problem
Pyloric stenosis: hypertrophy of pylorus β†’ obstruction of gastric outlet. Age: 2–6 weeks, first-born males most common. Signs: projectile (forceful, non-bilious) vomiting after EVERY feeding, child remains hungry (feeds eagerly), visible peristaltic waves, olive-shaped mass in RUQ. Metabolic alkalosis (hypochloremic): losing HCl in vomit β†’ pH↑, Cl↓, K↓. Diagnosis: ultrasound. Treatment: IV fluids to correct metabolic alkalosis FIRST, then surgical pyloromyotomy (Ramstedt procedure). Post-op: small, frequent feedings starting 4–6 hrs after surgery. Prognosis: excellent with surgery.
Meningitis in Children
Bacterial meningitis: fever, headache, nuchal rigidity (stiff neck), photophobia, Kernig's, Brudzinski's signs. Petechial rash = meningococcal.
Meningitis
The feared pediatric infection β€” recognizing it and the critical nursing interventions
Bacterial meningitis: most common organisms β€” Neisseria meningitidis (teens, outbreaks), S. pneumoniae. Signs: classic triad β€” fever + headache + nuchal rigidity (stiff neck). Also: photophobia (sensitive to light), phonophobia, altered LOC, Kernig's sign (pain/resistance on knee extension with hip flexed), Brudzinski's sign (involuntary knee flexion when neck flexed). Petechial/purpuric rash: meningococcal meningitis β€” may progress rapidly to septic shock (Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome). Treatment: antibiotics immediately (do NOT wait for LP if patient unstable), dexamethasone (reduce inflammation), isolation (droplet for meningococcal β€” first 24 hrs antibiotics). LP: cloudy CSF, high WBC (neutrophils), high protein, low glucose.
Asthma in Children
Pediatric asthma: expiratory wheezing, prolonged expiration, accessory muscle use. SABA first (albuterol). Spacer required for children.
Pediatric Asthma
Childhood asthma management β€” the assessment and stepwise treatment NCLEX expects
Asthma: most common chronic disease in children. Triggered by: URI (most common in children), allergens, exercise, cold air, smoke. Assessment: expiratory wheezing, prolonged expiration, tachypnea, nasal flaring, retractions (intercostal, subcostal, sternal), accessory muscle use, SpO2. Peak expiratory flow: green >80%, yellow 50–80%, red <50% of personal best. Medications: SABA (albuterol/Ventolin): rescue inhaler β€” use FIRST before exercise or at onset. ICS (inhaled corticosteroid β€” fluticasone): controller, rinse mouth after (prevents thrush). Children need spacer with MDI. Theophylline: narrow therapeutic index, monitor levels. Status asthmaticus: severe attack not responding to albuterol β†’ IV magnesium sulfate, possible intubation.
Respiratory Distress in Children
Pediatric respiratory distress: nasal flaring, grunting, retractions (subcostal, intercostal, suprasternal), seesaw breathing. Early signs before SpO2 drops.
Signs of Pediatric Respiratory Distress
Recognizing respiratory distress in children β€” they show signs before oxygen drops
Children compensate well β€” SpO2 may be normal until they are severely compromised. Assess EARLY signs: Nasal flaring (nostrils widen with each breath), Grunting (physiologic PEEP β€” keeps alveoli open), Retractions (skin pulls in during inhalation): subcostal (below ribs), intercostal (between ribs), suprasternal (above sternum) β€” more retractions = more severe. Head bobbing (infants β€” uses neck muscles), Seesaw breathing (chest caves in, abdomen rises β€” severe, paradoxical). Stridor: inspiratory = upper airway (croup, epiglottitis). Wheeze: expiratory = lower airway (asthma, bronchiolitis). Always position for comfort β€” never force a position. Tripod position (leaning forward on hands) = severe distress.