Lesson 1Red flags and indications for urgent referral or ED evaluation: hypoxia, dehydration, severe respiratory distress, apneaIdentifies warning signs needing quick referral or emergency check, like low oxygen, severe distress, stopping breathing, dehydration, and changed mind state, and explains quick stabilizing and safe transfer when needed.
Recognizing hypoxia and cyanosis promptlySevere work of breathing and exhaustionApnea, poor tone, and color change eventsSigns of significant dehydration or shockHigh-risk groups needing lower thresholdsCoordinating safe transport and handoffLesson 2Communication with caregivers: explaining likely diagnosis, home care instructions, and safe escalation stepsCovers ways to explain diagnoses, expected illness path, and home care in simple words, while handling caregiver worry, health knowledge, and culture, and giving clear steps for worsening and safety advice.
Assessing caregiver understanding and concernsExplaining likely diagnosis in simple languageTeaching home care: fever, fluids, nasal careSetting clear, specific return precautionsShared decision-making and safety-nettingDocumenting key counseling points in the chartLesson 3Focused history for febrile cough in preschoolers: onset, fever pattern, respiratory distress signs, exposures, immunization statusProvides a structured way to take history for fever with cough in young children, stressing start, fever type, breathing trouble signs, contacts, vaccine status, and risks to tell mild from serious disease.
Characterizing cough onset and durationFever pattern, height, and response to medsRespiratory distress symptoms at homeExposure history and sick contactsImmunization status and risk modifiersPast medical history and prior episodesLesson 4Follow-up planning: return precautions, timeline for expected improvement, criteria for reassessmentExplains planning follow-up for sudden breathing illness, including expected times for better symptoms, setting reassessment, repeating return warnings, and recording plans for ongoing care and caregiver trust.
Expected recovery timelines by diagnosisWhen to schedule in-person follow-upPhone and telehealth check-in strategiesClear written return and ED precautionsDocumenting plans and caregiver agreementAddressing barriers to reliable follow-upLesson 5Reasoned use of diagnostics: when to order chest x-ray, rapid viral testing (RSV/flu), pulse oximetry, CBC, CRP, blood culturesOutlines when tests change care in outpatient places, including reasons and limits of chest x-ray, virus tests, oxygen check, and basic blood work, while avoiding low-value tests that raise cost or worry.
When chest x-ray meaningfully guides careRole of rapid RSV and influenza testingUsing pulse oximetry for triage decisionsWhen CBC or CRP may add valueRare indications for blood culturesCommunicating test limits to familiesLesson 6Antibiotic stewardship: criteria for suspecting bacterial pneumonia and first-line antibiotic choices by local guidelinesFocuses on spotting when bacterial lung infection is likely, using history, exam, and risks, and picking first-choice outpatient antibiotics, doses, and lengths that fit local resistance and wise use rules.
Clinical predictors of bacterial pneumoniaDistinguishing viral from bacterial patternsFirst-line oral antibiotics and dosingPenicillin allergy options and limitationsDuration of therapy and follow-up needsAvoiding unnecessary broad-spectrum agentsLesson 7Differential diagnoses: viral upper respiratory infection, bronchiolitis, community-acquired pneumonia, croup, pertussis—key distinguishing featuresReviews main signs that tell apart virus upper breathing infection, small airway illness, lung infection from community, barking cough disease, and whooping cough in kids, focusing on age, symptom types, exam, and warnings for serious lower airway problems.
Typical features of viral upper respiratory infectionClinical hallmarks of infant bronchiolitisCommunity-acquired pneumonia: signs by ageCroup: barking cough and stridor patternsPertussis stages and whooping cough cluesUsing patterns to separate overlapping syndromesLesson 8Initial outpatient management strategies: supportive care, antipyretics, hydration, inhaled bronchodilators—evidence-based indicationsDescribes evidence-based outpatient treatments for common breathing illnesses, including fever reducers, nose salt water, fluid plans, and airway openers, stressing reasons, doses, and avoiding useless or harmful treatments.
Evidence-based fever and pain controlHydration strategies and oral rehydrationNasal saline, suction, and humidified airWhen to use inhaled bronchodilatorsAvoiding cough suppressants and decongestantsHome monitoring and positioning adviceLesson 9Targeted physical exam for respiratory illness: vital signs, respiratory rate by age, auscultation, work of breathing assessmentDetails a focused breathing exam in children, including normal vital signs by age, breathing effort scoring, listening techniques, and spotting signs of coming breathing failure or need to act fast.
Age-based normal ranges for vital signsAssessing respiratory rate and rhythmWork of breathing: retractions and gruntingAuscultation: wheeze, crackles, stridorSigns of fatigue and impending failureIntegrating exam findings into triage level