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Tonsillitis (recurrent) - Paediatric


+ Emergency

If any of the following are present or suspected, please refer the patient to the emergency department (via ambulance if necessary) or seek emergent medical advice if in a remote region.

Adult

EAR

  • ENT conditions with associated neurological signs
  • Sudden onset hearing loss in absence of clear aetiology and/or associated with vertigo and tinnitus
  • Sudden onset debilitating constant vertigo where the patient is very imbalanced (vestibular neuritis/stroke)
  • Sudden onset facial weakness
  • Barotrauma with sudden onset vertigo
  • Foreign body
  • Complicated mastoiditis/cholesteatoma or sinusitis (periorbital cellulitis, frontal sinusitis with persistent frontal headache)
  • Ear canal oedema/unable to clear discharge
  • Trauma

NOSE

  • Acute bacterial rhinosinusitis - visual disturbance/signs, neurological signs/frontal swelling/severe unilateral or bilateral headache
  • Acute nasal fracture with septal haematoma
  • Severe or persistent epistaxis

THROAT

  • Airway compromise- stridor/drooling breathing difficulty/acute or sudden voice change/severe odynophagia
  • Ludwig’s angina
  • Acute tonsillitis with airway obstruction and/or unable to tolerate oral intake and/or uncontrolled fever
  • Tonsillar haemorrhage
  • Acute hoarseness associated with neck trauma or surgery
  • Laryngeal obstruction and/or fracture
  • Pharyngeal/laryngeal foreign body
  • Accidental dislodgement or obstruction of permanent tracheostomy
  • New onset of bleeding or shrinkage of laryngectomy stoma
  • Abscess or haematoma, (e.g. peritonsillar abscess/quinsy, salivary abscess, septal or auricular haematoma, paranasal sinus pyocele) with or without associated cellulitis

Paediatric

EAR

  • Foreign body
  • Trauma
  • ENT conditions with associated neurological signs e.g. facial nerve palsy, profound vertigo and/or sudden deterioration in sensorineural hearing
  • Acute and/or complicated mastoiditis
  • Otitis externa with uncontrolled pain and/or cellulitis extending beyond the ear canal and/or ear canal is swollen shut
  • Auricular haematoma

NOSE

  • Foreign body (button batteries)
  • Trauma
  • Periorbital cellulitis with or without swelling with or without sinusitis
  • Severe or persistent epistaxis
  • Septal haematoma

THROAT

  • Foreign body (button batteries – inhaled or ingested)
  • Airway compromise: severe stridor/drooling/ breathing difficulty/acute, sudden voice change/ severe odynophagia
  • Trauma
  • Abscess or haematoma (e.g. peritonsillar, parapharyngeal (quinsy), salivary, neck or retropharyngeal abscess)
  • Post-tonsillectomy haemorrhage
  • Hoarseness associated with neck trauma or surgery

+ Other management information

  • No other information

+ Minimum referral criteria - Does your patient meet the minimum referral criteria?

+ Standard referral information To be included in all referrals

 

Essential referral information

Without this information the referral will be rejected
  • General referral information
  • The number and timeframe of previous episodes
  • The degree of systemic upset
  • Previous antibiotic prescriptions
  • Medical management to date

+ Additional referral information for referrals

  • EBV serology/monospot results
  • FBC results


Last updated: Sunday, August 12, 2018

Send referrals to


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Secure web transfer IQ43050005G

General Fax:
3810 1438

Priority Fax for urgent category 1 referrals:
3413 7277

Post:
Outpatients Referrals Centre
PO Box 73, Ipswich
Queensland, 4305

Patient Enquiries:
3810 1217

GP/Specialist Referral Enquiry:
3810 1869 or 3810 1858


Named referrals

If you would like to send a named referral, please address it to the specialist on the referral template, who will allocate a suitably qualified specialist to see the patient.

From July 1 2017 Commonwealth growth funding has been capped. This changes how WMHS can fund its growth as an organisation. Named referrals from GP’s help support hospital funding through a Medicare bulk-billing arrangement. The new federal funding model incorporates specific pricing for patients which removes concerns around ‘double dipping'. This benefits hospital and patient services.


Patient must bring

  • Medicare card
  • Any concession cards (e.g. Pension, Health Care, DVA, PBS Safety Net, ADF, etc)