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Daniel S Tsze

Department of Emergency Medicine, Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Columbia University, Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY.

1 paper in the library · 1 citation · publishing 2025

Papers

Upper Respiratory Infections and Respiratory Adverse Events and Interventions in Emergency Department Sedation of Children.

Annals of emergency medicine April 22, 2025 Daniel S Tsze, Nick Barrowman, Maala Bhatt 1 citation

Children with upper respiratory infections (URIs) undergoing sedation in emergency departments (EDs) do not face a higher risk of respiratory complications or need for serious interventions compared to those without URIs. A secondary analysis of 6,292 children aged 17 years or younger who received parenteral sedation in six pediatric EDs found that the adjusted odds of any respiratory adverse event, serious adverse event, or serious intervention (such as bag-valve-mask ventilation or intubation) were not significantly elevated. The odds ratios were 1.00, 0.53, and 1.08, respectively, with confidence intervals crossing 1.0, indicating no detectable increase in risk.