Paediatric pulmonology in the Czech Republic and Slovakia
Authors:
P. Pohunek 1; Peter Bánovčin 2
Authors place of work:
Pediatrická klinika 2. LF UK a FN Motol, Praha, Česká republika
1; Klinika detí a dorastu, Jesseniova lekárska fakulta, Univerzita Komenského, Univerzitná nemocnice Martin, Slovensko
2
Published in the journal:
Čes-slov Pediat 2020; 75 (7): 388-392.
Category:
Summary
Respiratory diseases have traditionally been one of the important topics in paediatric care. Acute illnesses are usually treated by a paediatric general practitioner or inpatient wards of paediatric departments at various levels of general and specialised care. The situation is different for chronic diseases or for chronic consequences of respiratory pathologies of various aetiologies. Such conditions usually need to be monitored in departments with more experience and with additional technical and personnel equipment. As is the case in other paediatric specialisations, paediatric pulmonology is an important extension specialisation that requires specialised education and qualification.
Specialised care for respiratory diseases has a significant tradition in the Czech and Slovak Republics. The current generation of paediatric pulmonologists certainly has something to build on and significantly develops the tradition of paediatric respiratory care based on what the founders introduced many years ago.
Keywords:
respiratory diseases in children – chronic respiratory diseases – paediatric pulmonology – specialised training
Štítky
Neonatology Paediatrics General practitioner for children and adolescentsČlánok vyšiel v časopise
Czech-Slovak Pediatrics
2020 Číslo 7
- What Effect Can Be Expected from Limosilactobacillus reuteri in Mucositis and Peri-Implantitis?
- The Importance of Limosilactobacillus reuteri in Administration to Diabetics with Gingivitis
Najčítanejšie v tomto čísle
- When should a physician consider ciliary dysfunction?
- Long-term consequences of preterm birth on respiratory system in children
- How and when to perform pulmonary function testing in infants
- Paediatric pulmonology in the Czech Republic and Slovakia