Publication | Open Access
Pediatric coin ingestion: A home-based survey
56
Citations
21
References
1995
Year
NutritionPediatric Coin IngestionLead PoisoningPreventive PediatricsPediatric EpidemiologyClinical EpidemiologyToxicologyPublic HealthPediatric ToxicologyPopulation ChildrenNatural HistoryPoisoningPoison Control CenterInfant NutritionForensic ToxicologyPediatricsPediatric GastroenterologySuburban MarylandChild NutritionMedicinePaediatric Medicine
To improve understanding of the natural history of pediatric coin ingestions, an anonymous, home-based mail survey of parents followed by a five-physician private pediatric practice in suburban Maryland was conducted. Of 2,263 families surveyed, 798 (35.3%) responded, representing 1,510 children. Sixty-one (4.0%, 95% confidence interval: 3.1% to 5.1%) children had swallowed a coin, at a mean age of 2.8 years. Fifty-two (85%) coin ingestions were managed at home, usually without calling a physician or poison control center. Only 9 (15%) children were examined by a physician. No child (95% confidence interval: 0% to 4.9%) underwent a removal procedure or had an adverse outcome. Most coin ingestions were found to have been managed at home, often without calling a physician or poison control center. Hospital- or poison control center-based studies underestimate coin ingestion incidence and overestimate the frequency of complications.
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