Purpose of review Pediatric delirium has emerged as a common and clinically meaningful complication of critical illness, with growing recognition of its association with adverse short-term and long-term outcomes. This review is timely given increasing guideline recommendations for routine delirium screening in pediatric critical care settings and the expanding use of validated bedside tools by multidisciplinary teams. Recent findings Recent literature demonstrates that delirium affects a substantial proportion of critically ill children, particularly those in pediatric ICUs (PICUs) and pediatric cardiac ICUs (PCICUs). The development and validation of pediatric-specific delirium screening instruments have enabled reliable, real-time detection without exclusive reliance on psychiatric consultation. Studies highlight the clinical impact of delirium on morbidity, mortality, length of stay, discharge disposition, and post-intensive care sequelae. However, persistent challenges include variable implementation across units, limited data in certain subpopulations, and gaps in evidence linking screening to targeted interventions and improved outcomes. Summary Routine delirium screening represents an important advance in pediatric critical care, positioning delirium as a modifiable adverse outcome. Future research should focus on optimizing implementation strategies, addressing special populations, and integrating screening into effective prevention and management pathways to improve patient-centered outcomes.
Javadi et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: