ni Sodium and Sugar in Complementary Infant and Toddler Foods Sold in the United States By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-02-02T00:05:27-08:00 US children consume excessive amounts of sodium and substantial amounts of added sugars. Early life exposures to salt and sugar can set taste preferences and health trajectories.A substantial proportion of toddler meals and other commercial foods meant for children age ≥12 months are of potential concern because of their high sodium content or presence of ≥1 added sugar. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Timing of Initial Well-Child Visit and Readmissions of Newborns By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-02-02T00:05:27-08:00 Current recommendations for the first outpatient visit for newborns are based on known health risks during the first week of life. Knowledge of the relationship between early well child visits and hospital readmissions may inform newborn health policy interventions.Newborns who have a first well child visit within the recommended time period after hospital discharge are substantially less likely be readmitted. Obstacles to early follow-up should be addressed to reduce the risk of readmission in this population. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Hair Nicotine Levels in Children With Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-02-02T00:05:27-08:00 Little is known about the impact of tobacco smoke exposure on preterm children with bronchopulmonary dysplasia. It is essential to understand how environmental exposures, such as tobacco smoke, influence respiratory morbidities in this vulnerable population.Chronic tobacco smoke exposure is common in children with bronchopulmonary dysplasia. In children who required home respiratory support, hair nicotine levels were a better predictor of hospitalization and activity limitation than caregiver self-report. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Youth Tobacco Product Use in the United States By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-02-02T00:05:27-08:00 Noncigarette tobacco products are increasingly popular among youth, especially youth who smoke cigarettes. Although youth use of conventional cigarettes is on the decline, use of other tobacco products is rising and multiple product use may be an escalating trend.More than twice as many youth in the United States currently use 2 or more tobacco products than cigarettes alone. Youth multiple product use is associated with increased nicotine dependence, raising concerns about the additive harms of noncigarette tobacco products. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Cost Saving and Quality of Care in a Pediatric Accountable Care Organization By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-02-09T00:05:27-08:00 Accountable care organizations are expanding. In pediatrics, however, there is no information on cost savings or quality generated by such organizations.Partners for Kids is a pediatric accountable care organization that increased value for Medicaid children in 34 Ohio counties, primarily through cost savings. This slowing in cost growth was achieved without diminishing the overall quality or outcomes of care. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Timing of Opioid Administration as a Quality Indicator for Pain Crises in Sickle Cell Disease By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-02-09T00:05:27-08:00 Patients with sickle cell disease frequently express dissatisfaction with emergency department treatment of painful crises. Time to opioid administration has been suggested as a quality of care measure for painful crises.Although not associated with hospital admission, time to opioid administration in sickle cell disease painful crises was associated with secondary outcomes including improvement between the first 2 pain scores, decreased pain score area under the curve at 4 hours, decreased emergency department length of stay, and increased total opioids. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Noninvasive Ventilation Strategies for Early Treatment of RDS in Preterm Infants: An RCT By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-02-09T00:05:27-08:00 Noninvasive ventilation (NIV) reduced the need of intubation in preterm infants with RDS. However, randomized studies comparing nasal synchronized intermittent positive pressure ventilation and bilevel continuous positive airway pressure are still lacking.The present study shows no differences in short-term outcomes between 2 different NIV strategies, nasal synchronized intermittent positive pressure ventilation and bilevel continuous positive airway pressure, in preterm infants for the initial treatment of RDS. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Racial-Ethnic Disparities in Management and Outcomes Among Children With Type 1 Diabetes By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-02-16T00:05:26-08:00 Previous studies have demonstrated racial and ethnic differences in glycemic control even after adjustment for variables such as insulin dosage, diabetes duration, and socioeconomic status. It is controversial whether genetic, physiologic, cultural, socioeconomic, and/or provider-related factors underlie these disparities.This study in a large, racially/ethnically diverse sample of children with type 1 diabetes demonstrates that racial disparities in insulin treatment methods and diabetes outcomes remain even after adjustment for socioeconomic status. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Prevalence of Duchenne and Becker Muscular Dystrophies in the United States By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-02-16T00:05:25-08:00 Worldwide prevalence estimates of Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophies (DBMD) vary, likely due to differences in diagnostic criteria, ascertainment, and survival. To date, no population-based prevalence data for DBMD by race/ethnicity have been published in the United States.Approximately 2 per 10 000 boys, ages 5 to 9 years, in 6 sites in the United States have DBMD; prevalence remained rather constant across 4 birth cohorts that spanned 2 decades. Prevalence differed among selected racial/ethnic groups across the time period examined. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Intellectual and Academic Functioning of School-Age Children With Single-Suture Craniosynostosis By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-02-23T00:05:25-08:00 It is unclear whether developmental delays observed among infants with single-suture craniosynostosis (SSC) persist at school age. Few neurodevelopmental studies have examined children with SSC beyond age 3, with most having methodological limitations.This study is the first to follow and test infants with SSC and a control group at school age. Infancy delays among children with SSC persisted at school age in some areas (IQ, math) but not others (reading, spelling). (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Cognitive Outcomes After Neonatal Encephalopathy By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-02-23T00:05:25-08:00 Surviving infants with neonatal encephalopathy treated with hypothermia have lower rates of moderate to severe cerebral palsy and cognitive impairment at 18 to 24 months. Limited data exist on the association between cognitive functioning and neuromotor, behavioral, and school outcomes.Although the incidence of death or IQ <55 is reduced after therapeutic hypothermia, survivors of neonatal encephalopathy with and without cerebral palsy are at elevated risk for subnormal IQ and the need for specialized educational services at 6 to 7 years. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Late Preterm Birth and Neurocognitive Performance in Late Adulthood: A Birth Cohort Study By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-03-02T00:05:26-08:00 More than 70% of all preterm deliveries are late preterm (34–36 weeks of gestation). Existing evidence suggests that compared with those born at term, those born late preterm score lower on neurocognitive tests in childhood and young adulthood.The effect of late preterm birth on neurocognitive performance persists up to late adulthood, especially among those who have only a basic or upper secondary level of education. Late preterm birth is also associated with a risk of memory impairments. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Clinical Features of Celiac Disease: A Prospective Birth Cohort By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-03-02T00:05:26-08:00 Celiac disease (CD) may develop at any age. Young children with CD are at particular risk for malabsorption and failure to thrive. HLA-DR3-DQ2 homozygotes are at the highest genetic risk and develop CD very early in life.Most children with CD detected in screening by 4 years of age have no symptoms and normal growth. Symptoms are unrelated to HLA genotype. Autoantibody levels correlate higher with severity of mucosal lesions in symptomatic as compared to asymptomatic children. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Pneumonia in Childhood and Impaired Lung Function in Adults: A Longitudinal Study By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-03-02T00:05:25-08:00 Early-life lower respiratory illnesses, including pneumonia, are associated with increased prevalence of asthma and diminished lung function in children. Whether early-life pneumonia is associated with subsequent impaired lung function and asthma in adults is not yet clear.This is the first article providing strong data for an association between early-life pneumonia in an outpatient setting and airflow limitation and asthma into adulthood, supporting the hypothesis of the early-life origins of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Off-Label Use of Inhaled Nitric Oxide After Release of NIH Consensus Statement By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-03-09T00:05:25-07:00 Off-label prescription of inhaled nitric oxide (iNO) to neonates <34 weeks’ gestation has increased during the past decade. In early 2011, the National Institutes of Health determined that the available evidence did not support iNO use in this population.Use of iNO among neonates <34 weeks’ gestation has increased since 2011, entirely from greater use in extremely preterm neonates. Off-label prescription of this drug now accounts for nearly half of all iNO use in American NICUs. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Etiology of Childhood Bacteremia and Timely Antibiotics Administration in the Emergency Department By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-03-09T00:05:25-07:00 Childhood bacteremia caused by vaccine-preventable organisms has substantially declined over the last decade. Recognition of bacteremia in children is difficult, and delayed administration of antibiotics is associated with poor outcomes. Adults with health care–associated Gram-negative bacteremia experience delays in receiving appropriate antibiotics.Bacteremia in children presenting to the emergency department is increasingly health care associated and resistant to empirical antibiotics. These infections are associated with increased length of stay. Rates of Gram-negative bacteremia have increased, and children with Gram-negative bacteremia experience delayed antibiotic administration. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Diversity and Inclusion Training in Pediatric Departments By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-03-09T00:05:24-07:00 The diversifying US population has led to the examination of workforce diversity and training. National data on diversity, inclusion, and cultural competency training have been previously collected but have been assessed only at the macro level of medicine.This study assesses workforce diversity, inclusion, and cultural competency training in departments of pediatrics across the country and provides the first assessment of departmental efforts to improve diversity and inclusion and provide cultural competency training to trainees and faculty. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Improvement Methodology Increases Guideline Recommended Blood Cultures in Children With Pneumonia By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-03-16T00:05:25-07:00 Blood cultures are the most widely available diagnostic tool to identify bacterial pathogens in community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). Despite a recent national guideline recommendation for blood culture performance in children with moderate/severe CAP, there is still wide variation across institutions.Using improvement methodology, we demonstrated that blood cultures can be routinely performed in children admitted for CAP, in accordance with a recent national guideline, without increasing length of stay in a setting with a low false-positive blood culture rate. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Infectious and Autoantibody-Associated Encephalitis: Clinical Features and Long-term Outcome By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-03-23T00:05:24-07:00 Encephalitis is a serious and disabling condition. There are infectious and immune-mediated causes of encephalitis, but many cases remain undiagnosed.This large single-center study on childhood encephalitis provides insight into the relative frequency and clinicoradiologic phenotypes of infectious, autoantibody-associated, and unknown encephalitis. Risk factors for an abnormal outcome are also defined. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Nicotine Replacement Therapy in Pregnancy and Major Congenital Anomalies in Offspring By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-04-06T00:05:20-07:00 Smoking has been found to increase the risk of some specific congenital anomalies; however, results remain inconsistent. Nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) is increasingly being used as for smoking cessation in pregnancy although little is known about its association with congenital anomalies.Being prescribed NRT while pregnant was not associated with major congenital anomalies (MCA), except a small increase in respiratory anomalies (3/1000 births). This must be considered in context of the rarity of MCAs and higher morbidities in the NRT group. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Childhood Vaccination Coverage Rates Among Military Dependents in the United States By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-04-13T00:05:18-07:00 Current childhood vaccination coverage rates among military dependents in the United States are not known. Past studies on childhood vaccination coverage in military dependents have shown mixed results, with the majority showing lower than ideal coverage rates.This study analyzes a national database with 6 years of data and provider-confirmed vaccination status to describe the current documented vaccination coverage rates among military dependents in the United States. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Antibiotic Use By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-04-20T00:05:24-07:00 Although treatment of infection is a mainstay of neonatal intensive care, little attention has focused on the proportion of patient antibiotic exposures validated by clinical indications that are unambiguous.Septic workups in 127 California NICUs reveal similar burdens of proven infection, yet patient antibiotic exposures in those NICUs vary 40-fold. Because antibiotic stewardship principles dictate that antibiotic use should correlate with burden of infection, some NICUs overuse antibiotics. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Bayley-III Cognitive and Language Scales in Preterm Children By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-04-20T00:05:23-07:00 There is concern that the Bayley-III overestimates developmental functioning in preterm populations. The ability of the Bayley-III Cognitive and Language scales to predict later functioning in very preterm children has not been examined.The norms on the Bayley-III Cognitive and Language scales at 24 months had low sensitivity for impairment across general cognitive, verbal and nonverbal reasoning domains at 4 years, which was better detected using cut-points based on local term-born reference data. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni The Early Benefits of Human Papillomavirus Vaccination on Cervical Dysplasia and Anogenital Warts By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-04-27T00:05:20-07:00 Clinical trials of the quadrivalent human papillomavirus vaccine show it to be highly efficacious in preventing vaccine-type–specific cervical dysplasia and anogenital warts, but few studies have assessed its effects in the real world and none have done so at the program/population level.This study provides strong evidence of the early benefits of quadrivalent human papillomavirus vaccination on reductions in cervical dysplasia and possible reductions in anogenital warts among girls aged 14 to 17 years, offering additional justification for not delaying vaccination until girls are older. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni First Use of a Serogroup B Meningococcal Vaccine in the US in Response to a University Outbreak By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-04-27T00:05:19-07:00 Outbreaks of serogroup B meningococcal disease occur at universities and other organizations. Until October 2014, options for control of serogroup B outbreaks were limited by the absence of a licensed vaccine for serogroup B meningococcal disease in the United States.We describe a serogroup B outbreak at a university in 2013 and the campaign with investigational serogroup B vaccine held in response. This was the first use of a serogroup B vaccine as an outbreak response in the United States. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Inconclusive Diagnosis of Cystic Fibrosis After Newborn Screening By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-05-11T00:05:26-07:00 Infants with an inconclusive diagnosis of cystic fibrosis after newborn screening may turn out to have cystic fibrosis. However, little is known about the incidence, characteristics (phenotype and genotype), and outcomes of these infants to guide investigations and follow-up.In this prospective longitudinal study, a proportion (11%) of infants with an initial inconclusive diagnosis were subsequently diagnosed with cystic fibrosis. This finding underscores the need for follow-up of this population. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Outcomes of Infants With Indeterminate Diagnosis Detected by Cystic Fibrosis Newborn Screening By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-05-11T00:05:25-07:00 Little is known about the prevalence or outcomes of infants with indeterminate diagnostic results after a positive cystic fibrosis (CF) newborn screen (CF transmembrane conductance regulator–related metabolic syndrome [CRMS]).CRMS accounted for 15.7% of newborn screened diagnoses in the CF Patient Registry from 2010 to 2012 (CRMS:CF ratio = 5.0:1.0). Although most infants were healthy, some infants demonstrated clinical features concerning for CF. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Factors Associated With Meaningful Use Incentives in Children's Hospitals By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-05-11T00:05:25-07:00 Meaningful use (MU) incentive payments have been developed to encourage adoption and use of electronic health records (EHRs). Several studies have revealed children’s hospitals have unique barriers to the use of EHRs but were relatively early adopters of information technology.Although a minority of children’s hospitals have succeeded with MU incentives, freestanding children’s hospitals are significantly more likely to succeed. Improvement of EHRs for pediatric use should focus on information exchange, quality reporting, and MU relevance to pediatrics. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Estimated Number of Infants Detected and Missed by Critical Congenital Heart Defect Screening By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-05-11T00:05:25-07:00 Newborn screening for critical congenital heart defects (CCHDs) has been implemented in many hospitals, yet there is uncertainty about the number of infants with CCHDs that might be detected through universal implementation of newborn CCHD screening in the United States.We estimated that ~875 infants with CCHDs might be detected, and ~880 missed, annually through universal CCHD screening in the United States. Increases in prenatal diagnosis are unlikely to substantially impact the number of infants detected through CCHD screening. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni BMI and Magnitude of Scoliosis at Presentation to a Specialty Clinic By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-05-11T00:05:24-07:00 Early detection of scoliosis facilitates treatment. For detection, topographic features, such as truncal asymmetry or rib hump, are used.We show a correlation between curve magnitude at presentation and BMI. Obesity may obscure physical examination findings. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Active Play Opportunities at Child Care By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-05-18T00:07:06-07:00 Physical activity (PA) of preschoolers has been found to be highly correlated with their child care environment. Preschool-aged children are sedentary for most of their time at child care and most are not meeting PA recommendations.Preschoolers were presented with significantly fewer than recommended PA opportunities at child care. More active play opportunities are needed to increase PA, including more outdoor time, more teacher-led and child-initiated active play, and flexibility in naptime for preschoolers. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Head Growth and Neurocognitive Outcomes By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-05-18T00:07:06-07:00 Microcephaly is known to be associated with neurocognitive disorders and increasing head size with hydrocephalus. Head circumference is widely measured in childhood, but its practical value as a screening test is unclear.Measured head size is not a stable characteristic and centile shifts occur very commonly, mostly reflecting measurement error or regression to the mean. Even where head size was consistently extreme, it was not a good predictor of later developmental problems. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Long-Chain Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids and Cognition in VLBW Infants at 8 years: an RCT By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-05-18T00:07:05-07:00 Suboptimal brain development and increased risk of cognitive deficits are well documented in very low birth weight children. Supplementation with docosahexaenoic acid and arachidonic acid has been associated with positive cognitive effects.This follow-up study of a randomized controlled trial of supplementation with docosahexaenoic acid and arachidonic acid to very low birth weight infants is the first report on both cognition and brain macrostructure measured with MRI. No cognitive or neuroanatomical effects were detected at 8 years. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Youth Drinking in the United States: Relationships With Alcohol Policies and Adult Drinking By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-06-01T06:07:57-07:00 Youth drinking is associated with adult drinking. Alcohol policies can influence youth and adult drinking. However, it is unknown whether alcohol policies influence youth drinking patterns directly or through their effect on adult drinking.Alcohol policies, including population-oriented policies, are protective for youth drinking. The effect of population-oriented policies may be mediated though effects on adults. These findings suggest that efforts to reduce youth drinking should rely on policies that address all age groups. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Global and Regional Burden of Isoniazid-Resistant Tuberculosis By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-06-01T06:07:56-07:00 Fifteen percent of tuberculosis cases globally are resistant to the drug isoniazid. Isoniazid resistance puts patients with tuberculosis at risk for poor treatment outcomes and threatens the effectiveness of isoniazid preventive therapy in people with latent tuberculosis infection.We present the first global and regional estimates of the proportion of children with tuberculosis who have isoniazid-resistant disease, showing large geographic variations in risk of resistance. We estimate the number of annual incident cases of isoniazid-resistant tuberculosis in children. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Personal Belief Exemptions to Vaccination in California: A Spatial Analysis By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-06-01T06:07:55-07:00 An increasing number of children are unvaccinated at entry into public schools, potentially endangering children who cannot be vaccinated for medical reasons and threatening herd immunity. Voluntary exemptions from immunizations vary geographically and by parental characteristics.We find that exemption behavior is highest in peripheral areas of cities and that specific types of student populations are associated with high exemption rates. Additionally, there is spatial overlap between clusters of high personal exemption and medical exemption populations. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Physician Communication Training and Parental Vaccine Hesitancy: A Randomized Trial By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-06-01T06:07:55-07:00 Parental hesitancy about childhood vaccines is prevalent and related to delay or refusal of immunizations. Physicians are highly influential in parental vaccine decision-making, but may lack confidence in addressing parents’ vaccine concerns.A physician-targeted communications intervention designed to reduce maternal vaccine hesitancy through the parent-physician relationship did not affect maternal hesitancy or physician confidence communicating with parents. Further research should determine the most effective approaches to addressing vaccine hesitancy. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Prenatal Hemoglobin Levels and Early Cognitive and Motor Functions of One-Year-Old Children By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-06-08T00:07:19-07:00 Studies on the consequences of abnormal prenatal hemoglobin (Hb) concentration have focused on maternal morbidities and adverse birth outcomes. To date, very little is known about the association between prenatal Hb concentration and infant cognitive and motor functions.There is an inverted U-shaped relationship between maternal Hb concentration and infant gross motor function. Hb concentration between 90 and 110 g/L appears to be optimal for early gross motor function of children. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Cognition and Brain Structure Following Early Childhood Surgery With Anesthesia By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-06-08T00:07:18-07:00 Permanent neuronal deletion and neurocognitive impairment after anesthetic exposure in animals raised substantial concern that similar effects occur in children. Human studies were equivocal but have not combined structural and intelligence tests in otherwise healthy children after childhood anesthesia.Anesthetic exposure for surgery did not lead to measurable neuronal elimination in brain regions previously identified in animals. However, language comprehension and performance IQ were decreased in exposed children and associated with decreased gray matter, primarily in posterior brain regions. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine and Clinically Suspected Invasive Pneumococcal Disease By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-06-15T00:06:46-07:00 Conventional invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) definition using laboratory confirmation lacks sensitivity. Using a vaccine-probe design, the FinIP trial showed that IPD disease burden and vaccine-preventable disease incidence were fourfold higher when a more sensitive outcome, clinically suspected IPD, was used.Vaccine-preventable disease incidence (ie, absolute reduction due to PCV10 vaccination) during routine vaccination program was threefold with the more sensitive outcome of clinically suspected IPD compared with the conventional IPD definition. This has major implications for cost-effectiveness of PCVs. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Car Seat Screening for Low Birth Weight Term Neonates By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-06-15T00:06:46-07:00 Almost half of NICUs include low birth weight (<2.5 kg) as an inclusion criterion for car seat tolerance screening (CSTS), formerly car seat challenges. However, little is known about incidence and risk factors for failure in this group.This is the largest study to date evaluating the incidence and predictors of CSTS failure in full-term low birth weight neonates. Epidemiologic data are provided to help guide future CSTS policies and protocol development for this group. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Unrecognized Celiac Disease in Children Presenting for Rheumatology Evaluation By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-06-15T00:06:46-07:00 Associations have been reported between celiac disease (CD) and numerous autoimmune conditions in adults and children. However, current screening guidelines do not consider patients with rheumatic diseases to be at high risk for CD.The prevalence of CD in children presenting for rheumatology evaluation was found to be 2% by routine serologic screening. The majority of screening-detected CD cases had no CD-associated symptoms. Gluten restriction was found to relieve some musculoskeletal complaints. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Immunogenicity and Safety of a 9-Valent HPV Vaccine By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-06-22T00:06:54-07:00 Prophylactic vaccination of young women 16 to 26 years of age with the 9-valent human papillomavirus (HPV)–like particle (9vHPV) vaccine prevents infection and disease with vaccine HPV types.These data support bridging the efficacy findings with 9vHPV vaccine in young women 16 to 26 years of age to girls and boys 9 to 15 years of age and implementation of gender-neutral HPV vaccination programs in preadolescents and adolescents. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Antibiotic Choice for Children Hospitalized With Pneumonia and Adherence to National Guidelines By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-06-22T00:06:54-07:00 The 2011 national guidelines for the management of pediatric community-acquired pneumonia recommended narrow-spectrum antibiotic therapy (eg, ampicillin) for most children hospitalized with pneumonia. Before the release of the guidelines, the use of broader-spectrum antibiotics (eg, third-generation cephalosporins) was much more common.After release of the guidelines, third-generation cephalosporin use declined and penicillin/ampicillin use increased among children hospitalized with pneumonia. Changes were most apparent among institutions that proactively disseminated the guidelines, underscoring the importance of local efforts for timely guideline implementation. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Public Perceptions of the Benefits and Risks of Newborn Screening By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-07-13T00:07:33-07:00 Infant screening is valued by members of the lay public, but how different benefits are independently valued, and whether harms are disvalued, is not known. Public expectations of screening can inform decisions about what diseases to screen for.The public values clinical benefits of screening and disvalues harms, with tolerance for harm proportional to clinical benefit. These findings support newborn screening policies prioritizing clinical benefits over solely informational benefits, coupled with concerted efforts to avoid or minimize harms. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Maternal Consequences of the Detection of Fragile X Carriers in Newborn Screening By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-07-13T00:07:32-07:00 Parents generally adapt well to newborn screening results, but reactions to carrier status for X-linked conditions are unknown.Results suggest that detection and disclosure of FMR1 newborn carrier status may not result in significant adverse events for mothers. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of a National Newborn Screening Program for Biotinidase Deficiency By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-07-13T00:07:34-07:00 Biotinidase deficiency (BD) might cause severe and permanent consequences. Cases detected through newborn screening and under treatment are shown to remain asymptomatic. However, some countries, including Spain, do not provide universal BD screening within their national newborn screening programs.It provides a first estimate of the lifetime costs and health outcomes of a Spanish birth cohort with and without neonatal screening for BD. It shows that newborn screening for BD is likely to be a cost-effective use of resources. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Recognizing Differences in Hospital Quality Performance for Pediatric Inpatient Care By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-07-13T00:07:33-07:00 Hospital quality-of-care measures are publicly reported to inform consumer choice and stimulate quality improvement. The number of hospitals and states with a sufficient number of pediatric hospital discharges to detect worse-than-average pediatric inpatient care quality remains unknown.Most children are admitted to hospitals in which all-condition measures of inpatient quality are powered to show differences in performance from average, but most condition-specific measures are not. Policy on incentives for pediatric inpatient quality should take these findings into account. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Antibiotic Exposure and Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis: A Case-Control Study By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-07-20T00:07:28-07:00 The etiology of juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is poorly understood. A recent study suggested a link between antibiotics and JIA but did not examine the potential for confounding from infections or the role of antibiotic timing.Antibiotics were associated with newly diagnosed JIA in a dose- and time-dependent manner after adjusting for infection and other confounders. Antibiotics may play a role in the pathogenesis of JIA. (Read the full article) Full Article
ni Prevalence of and Risk Factors for Intracranial Abnormalities in Unprovoked Seizures By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2015-07-20T00:07:29-07:00 Weak recommendations exist to guide emergent neuroimaging decisions in children with first, unprovoked seizures. The prevalence of and risk factors associated with clinically relevant abnormalities on neuroimaging have not been well defined in prospective studies.Clinically relevant intracranial abnormalities on neuroimaging occur in 11% of children with first, unprovoked seizures. Emergent/urgent abnormalities, however, occur in <1%, suggesting that most of these children do not require emergent neuroimaging. Specific clinical findings identify patients at higher risk. (Read the full article) Full Article