## Correct Answer: C. Oral amoxicillin for five days This 24-month-old child presents with **fast breathing** (RR 38/min, which is ≥40 for age 2–59 months per IMCI guidelines) and **chest indrawing**, classifying him as **pneumonia with chest indrawing** — i.e., **severe pneumonia**. However, the absence of danger signs (stridor in calm child, severe malnutrition, inability to drink, persistent vomiting, lethargy, unconsciousness, severe respiratory distress) means this is **non-severe pneumonia with chest indrawing** per IMCI/IAP guidelines. The child is alert, maintaining oxygen saturation, and has no comorbidities. According to Indian Academy of Pediatrics (IAP) and WHO IMCI protocols, **first-line management of non-severe pneumonia with chest indrawing in children 2–59 months is oral amoxicillin** (45 mg/kg/dose, twice daily for 5 days). Oral antibiotics are preferred over parenteral in non-severe cases because they are equally effective, reduce hospitalization burden, and improve compliance in the Indian context. The child can be managed as an outpatient with appropriate follow-up instructions. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Start antipyretics urgently** — This is wrong because the clinical presentation is **pneumonia with chest indrawing**, not simple fever. Antipyretics address only the symptom (fever) and do not treat the underlying bacterial infection. NBE traps students who focus on fever as the presenting complaint rather than recognizing the respiratory signs (fast breathing + chest indrawing) as the key diagnostic feature requiring antibiotic therapy. **B. Administer IV antibiotics and ask the patient to be brought after 24 hours** — This is wrong because the child has **non-severe pneumonia** (no danger signs, alert, no severe respiratory distress). IV antibiotics are reserved for **severe pneumonia** (danger signs present) or hospitalized cases. Asking the parent to return after 24 hours without close monitoring is unsafe and violates IMCI guidelines. NBE pairs IV antibiotics with pneumonia to lure students who conflate all pneumonia cases with severe disease requiring parenteral therapy. **D. Urgent referral to the tertiary care centre immediately** — This is wrong because **urgent referral is indicated only for severe pneumonia with danger signs** (stridor, severe malnutrition, inability to drink, lethargy, severe respiratory distress, SpO₂ <90%). This child has non-severe pneumonia and can be safely managed in primary/secondary care with oral antibiotics and appropriate follow-up. Unnecessary referral overloads tertiary centres and delays care. NBE tests whether students can stratify pneumonia severity correctly. ## High-Yield Facts - **IMCI pneumonia classification**: Fast breathing (RR ≥40 in 2–59 months) + chest indrawing = **non-severe pneumonia**; add danger signs → **severe pneumonia**. - **First-line DOC for non-severe pneumonia (2–59 months)**: **Oral amoxicillin** 45 mg/kg/dose BD × 5 days per IAP/WHO IMCI guidelines. - **Danger signs requiring urgent referral**: Stridor in calm child, severe malnutrition, inability to drink, persistent vomiting, lethargy, unconsciousness, severe respiratory distress, SpO₂ <90%. - **Oral vs IV antibiotics**: Oral amoxicillin is **equally effective** as parenteral antibiotics in non-severe pneumonia; reduces hospitalization and improves compliance in Indian settings. - **Follow-up timing**: Child should be reviewed after **2–3 days** to assess response; if no improvement, escalate to IV antibiotics and referral. ## Mnemonics **IMCI Pneumonia Severity (FAST-DANGER)** **FAST** breathing + chest indrawing = non-severe pneumonia → oral antibiotics. Add **DANGER** signs (Stridor, Severe malnutrition, Danger signs of dehydration, Lethargy, Severe respiratory distress) → severe pneumonia → IV antibiotics + referral. **Amoxicillin Dosing (45-5 Rule)** **45 mg/kg/dose**, twice daily, for **5 days** in non-severe pneumonia (2–59 months). Easy to remember: 45 = dose, 5 = duration. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs **chest indrawing** with **IV antibiotics and referral** to lure students who equate any sign of severity (indrawing) with severe pneumonia. The trap is missing that **non-severe pneumonia with indrawing is managed with oral antibiotics in outpatient settings** — indrawing alone does not mandate hospitalization or IV therapy without danger signs. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian primary health centres and pediatric OPDs, **oral amoxicillin for non-severe pneumonia with chest indrawing is the standard of care** because it reduces unnecessary hospitalization, improves medication adherence (easier to give at home), and frees up limited inpatient beds for truly severe cases. A 2–3 day follow-up ensures clinical response; if the child worsens, escalation to IV therapy and referral is then appropriate. _Reference: IAP Guidelines on Pneumonia Management (2017); WHO IMCI Handbook; OP Ghai's Essential Pediatrics Ch. 9 (Respiratory Infections)_
Sign up free to access AI-powered MCQ practice with detailed explanations and adaptive learning.