2 min read

When to Skip the ED: The Parent’s Guide to Urgent Injuries

When to Skip the ED: The Parent’s Guide to Urgent Injuries
When to Skip the ED: The Parent’s Guide to Urgent Injuries
3:13

Let’s be real… Kids are tiny, adorable tornadoes. One minute they’re building a Lego castle, the next they’ve stacked it...or even hidden a piece of lego in their nose or ear. 

We’ve all faced that moment of panic: “Do I call an ambo, or do we just go to urgent care?” 

Same, same. We are parents, and we ask ourselves these questions too. We’ve put together this friendly guide to help you decide when urgent care is the right call —and when it’s time for the full-on emergency department. 

Urgent care vs emergency. What’s the difference? 

Emergency Departments are for potentially life-threatening or life-altering situations (we’ll cover what this looks like later). 

Urgent care is for things that need attention today (not when the GP is free next week) but aren’t life threatening. Here are some common urgent-but-not-emergency scenarios: 

  • Sprains, twists and broken bones. 
  • Cuts or smashed fingers. 
  • Fevers. 
  • Minor burns or scalds. 
  • Coughs, colds, flus and viruses. 
  • Vomiting and diarrhoea  

You know your kids best, and you have awesome instincts. If your gut says, “something isn’t right,” it probably isn’t. A visit to urgent care can save time and stress—and often a hospital trip and long wait.  

When it’s safe to come on down 

What makes urgent care at Kinkaya perfect for families. 

  • Fast access: We see kids (and adults!) the same day for urgent care, no appointment necessary. We highly recommend pre-registering your family to save time and stress when you arrive – it's one less thing to do when your kiddo is upset. 
  • Family-focused: We’re fluent in kid. We’re used to calming scared toddlers, distracting nervous kids, and reassuring panicked parents.  
  • Real expertise: From minor fractures to asthma flares, cuts, and tummy bugs, our GPs and paediatric nurses can manage the stuff that isn’t life-threatening. 

Some examples of cases we commonly see. 

  • A five-year-old slipped off the swing at the park and landed on his wrist—X-ray confirmed a small buckle fracture which was treated and splinted in the same visit. 
  • An eight-year-old slammed her finger in the car door—we cleaned, dressed, and managed infection. 
  • An 18-month-old came in with a fever of 38.9°C and a wet chesty cough. She was reviewed by our GP, treated, monitored, and booked for a follow-up. No hospital needed. 

Please... head straight to the hospital... 

Whether you need an ambulance or feel safe to drive, some situations just can’t wait. 

  • Difficulty breathing or chest pain. 
  • Major accidents (car accident, fall from height etc.) 
  • Heavy uncontrolled bleeding. 
  • Unconsciousness, unresponsiveness or seizures 
  • Stroke indicators like slurred speech, blurry vision or paralysis 

If you or your child shows any of these signs, don’t hesitate—you need to call 000 or head to the nearest emergency department immediately 

The takeaway. 

Raising little legends is hard enough without guessing whether your kid’s tumble needs an ER trip. 

Next time your child has a nasty bump, bruise, or a limb that looks a little wrong… take a breath. You’ve got options. We're here when you need us most 8am-10pm 7 days a week with no after-hours, public holiday or weekend surcharges. 

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