@article {Chang220144, author = {Anne B. Chang and Jeanette Boyd and Andrew Bush and Adam T. Hill and Zena Powell and Angela Zacharasiewicz and Efthymia Alexopoulou and James D. Chalmers and Andrew J. Collaro and Carolina Constant and Konstantinos Douros and Rebecca Fortescue and Matthias Griese and Jonathan Grigg and Andreas Hector and Bulent Karadag and Oleksandr Mazulov and Fabio Midulla and Alexander Moeller and Marijke Proesmans and Christine Wilson and Stephanie T. Yerkovich and Ahmad Kantar and Keith Grimwood}, title = {Quality standards for managing children and adolescents with bronchiectasis: an international consensus}, volume = {18}, number = {3}, elocation-id = {220144}, year = {2022}, doi = {10.1183/20734735.0144-2022}, publisher = {European Respiratory Society}, abstract = {The global burden of bronchiectasis in children and adolescents is being recognised increasingly. However, marked inequity exists between, and within, settings and countries for resources and standards of care afforded to children and adolescents with bronchiectasis compared with those with other chronic lung diseases. The European Respiratory Society (ERS) clinical practice guideline for the management of bronchiectasis in children and adolescents was published recently. Here we present an international consensus of quality standards of care for children and adolescents with bronchiectasis based upon this guideline. The panel used a standardised approach that included a Delphi process with 201 respondents from the parents and patients{\textquoteright} survey, and 299 physicians (across 54 countries) who care for children and adolescents with bronchiectasis.The seven quality standards of care statements developed by the panel address the current absence of quality standards for clinical care related to paediatric bronchiectasis. These internationally derived, clinician-, parent- and patient-informed, consensus-based quality standards statements can be used by parents and patients to access and advocate for quality care for their children and themselves, respectively. They can also be used by healthcare professionals to advocate for their patients, and by health services as a monitoring tool, to help optimise health outcomes.Child-BEAR-Net has developed internationally derived, clinician-, parent- and patient-informed, consensus-based quality standards of care statements that patients and parents can use to access and advocate for quality care https://bit.ly/3w0tweP}, issn = {1810-6838}, URL = {https://breathe.ersjournals.com/content/18/3/220144}, eprint = {https://breathe.ersjournals.com/content/18/3/220144.full.pdf}, journal = {Breathe} }