The Social Emergency: A Narrative Review of the Interdisciplinary Management of Pediatric Failure to Thrive and Neglect from Crisis to Recovery
Abstract
Background: Pediatric Failure to Thrive (FTT), characterized by inadequate growth, is a common presentation of child neglect and a medical emergency with profound developmental implications. Its management necessitates a coordinated response across acute, primary, and community care sectors. Aim: This narrative review investigates the multi-agency, interdisciplinary response to pediatric FTT as a potential sentinel event for neglect, mapping the pathway from emergency medical intervention through to community-based recovery and support. Methods: A comprehensive search of PubMed, CINAHL, PsycINFO, and Social Work Abstracts (2010-2024) was conducted, integrating literature from pediatrics, emergency services, nursing, laboratory medicine, social work, and public health. Results: Effective management requires seamless transitions between distinct phases: EMS for safe transport, hospital-based teams (NICU nurses, laboratory) for medical stabilization and diagnostic clarification, and community-based teams (Family Medicine, Home Care, Community Health Workers) for longitudinal monitoring and in-home family support. Communication breakdowns and fragmented systems between these sectors are significant barriers to child safety and family preservation. Conclusion: Pediatric FTT demands a unified, child-centered, and family-focused interdisciplinary model. Success hinges on integrating medical diagnostics with social support through robust communication systems and shared care plans that prioritize safe, therapeutic intervention over punitive approaches.
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Authors
Copyright (c) 2024 Ali Ahmed Mohammed Hobani, Hussain Mohammed Abdullah Matabi, Khalid Mohammed Marshod Alabsi, Nourah Abdullah Ali Alslole, Ahmed Nasser Alqahtani, Fahad Mousa Wasili, Waleed Ali Ahmed Maghfuri, Adel Ali Abdu Harbi, Rwaidh Ali Barnawi, Fatimah Hadi Haddadi, Bayan Suliman Mohammed Haddad, Rawabi Hamdan Muklif Alshammari

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