Nursing nursemaids' elbow

Researchers analyze potential new protocol for common childhood injury.

Amy Hewko - 24 March 2014

Pulled elbows-where a young child's elbow may dislocate because of the immaturity of their elbow joint-are common injuries in children under six years of age. Though the process to treat the injury only takes a few minutes, children and their parents can wait for hours in the emergency room before they see a physician. But Andrew Dixon, assistant professor of pediatrics in the Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry, says emergency room resources and children's discomfort could be lessened if triage nurses could treat the injury.

Dixon led a trial at the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO) to investigate the success rate of nurse-led versus physician-led pulled elbow treatment. An informal survey of pediatricians throughout Canada determined that they would consider implementing nurse-led treatment as routine protocol if their success rate was within 10 per cent of the physician success rate. The study was published today in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.

"From our experience nurses are good at identifying pulled elbows," Dixon said. "We thought that if we could teach them to reduce the injury, then these kids who are waiting, in pain, for several hours in the emergency room to see the physician, could be treated by a triage nurse within minutes of arrival and feel better almost immediately."

Approximately 60 nurses were trained in the technique. The protocol outlined for the study dictates that hyperpronation-the technique of turning the forearm inward-should be attempted first. If the child isn't using the arm normally within 10 minutes, supination-flexion-turning the arm outward and ending with flexing movement-is the next step. If the injury persisted after nurse treatment, children were placed in line to see in the traditional emergency system to await physician treatment. All patients were seen by a physician prior to discharge home.

Over the course of a year, triage nurses and physicians were assigned random days to lead treatment of the injury. Results showed that nurses came slightly short of their goal: they had an 85 per cent success rate, compared to the physicians' 97 per cent.

Dixon suspects the nurses were hesitant to perform the procedure because it is outside their traditional training, and their exposure during the trial was limited. With 124 children treated by nearly 60 triage nurses, each nurse only completed one or two procedures.

"I think some of [the nurses' hesitancy] was [lack of] comfort and experience that still needed to develop," he said, and that the nurses did not attempt a second reduction in 79 per cent of failed cases. If those cases were excluded because of deviation from standardized protocol, nurses would have fallen in the accepted margin with a 91 per cent success rate.

Despite falling slightly outside of the 10 per cent margin, Dixon would like to see nurses identifying and reducing pulled elbow.

"Over time, once all of those nurses have done 10 treatments, are they going to be better? I think they will be," he noted. "The only way to know that is to go forward and look at the numbers after implementation of the protocol and see where they're at a year down the road."