TY - JOUR T1 - Trends and patterns in urgent pediatric otolaryngology inter-hospital referrals in Saudi Arabia JF - Saudi Medical Journal JO - Saudi Med J SP - 91 LP - 97 DO - 10.15537/smj.2022.43.1.20210710 VL - 43 IS - 1 AU - Marwa A. Algadi AU - Alanoud A. Alshathri AU - Rawan S. Alsugair AU - Mohrah A. Alyabis AU - Saad A. Alsaleh AU - Nawfal A. Aljerian Y1 - 2022/01/01 UR - http://smj.org.sa/content/43/1/91.abstract N2 - Objectives: To assess trends in otolaryngology-head and neck surgery (ORL-HNS) referrals among pediatric patients, and to address common urgent causes of ORL-HNS referrals in this population. Additionally, to give recommendations regarding these causes, and assessing the impacts of coronavirus desease-19 on such referrals.Methods: A retrospective descriptive study were the data was extracted from the referral system of the Saudi Ministry of Health (Ehalati), from 2019-2020. Pediatric patients from all hospitals across Saudi Arabia with problems related to ORL-HNS who have been referred urgently to other hospitals were included.Results: A total of 1318 urgent ORL-HNS referrals were collected. The average age of the sample was 6.5 years, with the unavailability of specialty being the major cause for referrals. Foreign bodies, recurrent epistaxis, and tracheostomy were also common clinical causes. The average time for accepting referrals was 21 hours. Most cases had medical or surgical intervention prior to referral. The Western region of Saudi Arabia was the most common sender and receiver of all referrals. In 2020, referrals decreased by 18.4%.Conclusion: Maternity and pediatric hospitals make up the largest number of referring hospitals for ORL-HNS urgent cases. Expanding ORL-HNS services has been recommended in highly demanding areas. standards for urgent ORL-HNS referrals may limit inappropriate urgent referrals. ER -