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Recognizing Differences in Hospital Quality Performance for Pediatric Inpatient Care

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)




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Evaluation for Occult Fractures in Injured Children

Screening for occult fractures is a key component of the medical evaluation for young victims of suspected physical abuse. Little is known about adherence to occult fracture evaluation guidelines in children with suspected abuse cared for at non-pediatric-focused hospitals.

Occult fracture evaluations were performed in half of young children diagnosed with abuse or injuries concerning for abuse in a large cohort of hospitals. Evaluations were more common at hospitals caring for higher volumes of young, injured children. (Read the full article)




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Use of Serum Bicarbonate to Substitute for Venous pH in New-Onset Diabetes

Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) is a common and serious first manifestation of diabetes mellitus in children. During initial evaluation, the venous blood pH is frequently used to make the diagnosis and classify the severity of DKA.

This study demonstrates that the serum bicarbonate concentration is a simple and accurate predictor of DKA and its severity and can be used in lieu of venous pH measurement, especially in resource-poor settings where access to pH measurement is limited. (Read the full article)




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Prevalence of and Risk Factors for Intracranial Abnormalities in Unprovoked Seizures

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)




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Home Foreclosure and Child Protective Services Involvement

Prior studies have found a positive relationship between macro-level indicators of home foreclosure and child maltreatment rates. The extent to which home foreclosure may be associated with child protective services involvement at the micro level is largely unknown.

Foreclosure filings are positively associated with child protective services involvement. However, this is true of the periods before and after a filing, which are characterized by economic and other stress, which may drive this association more than the filing itself. (Read the full article)




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Maternal Report of Advice Received for Infant Care

Parental adherence to recommended infant care practices (eg, breastfeeding; safe sleep) is below targeted goals. Adherence to practice recommendations increases when parents receive appropriate advice from multiple sources such as family and physicians.

Using a nationally representative sample, this study explores the advice mothers receive about safe sleep, immunization, breastfeeding, and pacifier use; the findings suggest infant care practices about which mothers receive little or inappropriate advice, suggesting possible targets for intervention. (Read the full article)




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Validation of a Prediction Tool for Abusive Head Trauma

A previous multivariable statistical model, using individual patient data, estimated the probability of abusive head trauma based on the presence or absence of 6 clinical features: rib fracture, long-bone fracture, apnea, seizures, retinal hemorrhage, and head or neck bruising.

The model performed well in this validation, with a sensitivity of 72.3%, specificity of 85.7%, and area under the curve of 0.88. In children <3 years old with intracranial injury plus ≥3 features, the estimated probability of abuse is >81.5%. (Read the full article)




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Thrombocytopenia in Small-for-Gestational-Age Infants

Small-for-gestational-age neonates are at risk for thrombocytopenia during the first days and weeks after birth. However, the incidence, duration, severity, responsible mechanism, value of platelet transfusions, and risk of death from this variety of neonatal thrombocytopenia are unknown.

Ten percent of thrombocytopenic small-for-gestational-age neonates have a recognized cause for low platelets (aneuploidy, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, disseminated intravascular coagulation); they have a high mortality rate (65%). Ninety percent have a moderate, transient (2 weeks), hyporegenerative thrombocytopenia with a low mortality rate (2%). (Read the full article)




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The Impact of Rudeness on Medical Team Performance: A Randomized Trial

Rudeness is routinely experienced by hospital-based medical teams. Individuals exposed to mildly rude behavior perform poorly on cognitive tasks, exhibit reduced creativity and flexibility, and are less helpful and prosocial.

Rudeness had adverse consequences on diagnostic and procedural performance of members of the NICU medical teams. Information-sharing mediated the adverse effect of rudeness on diagnostic performance, and help-seeking mediated the effect of rudeness on procedural performance. (Read the full article)




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Two-Year Outcomes of a Population-Based Intervention for Preschool Language Delay: An RCT

Preschool language delay predicts poorer academic performance, employment opportunities, and social relationships. Language for Learning, a systematic, population-based intervention for 4-year-olds with low language, is feasible, acceptable and has short-term benefits, but long-term benefits are unknown.

Population ascertainment at age 4 followed by a yearlong, one-on-one home program benefited phonological skills (an important literacy determinant) at age 6, but not the primary language outcomes. To be cost-effective, future follow-up would need to demonstrate lasting academic benefits. (Read the full article)




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Trends in Emergency Department Visits for Unsupervised Pediatric Medication Exposures, 2004-2013

Unsupervised medication exposures increased during the previous decade, despite child-resistant packaging and caregiver education. To achieve the Healthy People 2020 objective of reducing emergency department visits for unintentional pediatric medication overdoses, targeted interventions including improved safety packaging may be needed.

Since 2010, emergency department visits for unsupervised medication exposures started to decrease. Most visits involved solid dose medications, typically for adult use. Most liquid medication exposure visits involved 4 over-the-counter pediatric products and may be more readily amenable for interventions. (Read the full article)




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Dexamethasone Therapy for Septic Arthritis in Children

Two prospective studies of children with septic arthritis have shown that the addition of dexamethasone to antibiotic therapy contributes to clinical and laboratory improvement. Nevertheless, the mainstay of treatment remains antibiotics alone.

This study, which was conducted outside a randomized controlled trial, demonstrates that children with septic arthritis treated early with a short course of adjuvant dexamethasone show earlier improvement in clinical and laboratory parameters than children treated with antibiotics alone. (Read the full article)




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Reasons for Rehospitalization in Children Who Had Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome

Infants with neonatal abstinence syndrome are hospitalized for longer after birth and are more likely to be from highly vulnerable families. Determining long-term outcomes is difficult because this is a large and chaotic population.

(Read the full article)




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A Model for Predicting Significant Hyperbilirubinemia in Neonates From China

Guidelines for postdischarge monitoring of hyperbilirubinemia for neonates of white descent are available from the American Academy of Pediatrics; however, such information for healthy term and late preterm Chinese neonates is lacking.

A classification model for predicting the risk of significant hyperbilirubinemia in Chinese neonates was developed that combines a transcutaneous bilirubin–based nomogram with clinical risk factors. It classified newborns into 6 risk groups, which can guide clinicians in planning appropriate follow-up strategies. (Read the full article)




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Intraurethral Lidocaine for Urethral Catheterization in Children: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Urethral catheterization is a painful, yet common procedure to obtain a sterile urine sample in young children. There are conflicting results regarding the effectiveness of lidocaine to reduce pain, and it is unclear if it should be routinely used.

In young children, combined topical and intraurethral lidocaine does not reduce pain during urethral catheterization and is associated with more pain than nonanesthetic lubricant during instillation. Clinicians should use noninvasive methods of analgesia during this painful procedure. (Read the full article)




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Bladder Function After Fetal Surgery for Myelomeningocele

Urologic outcomes of prenatal myelomeningocele closure have previously been reported. This study, however, represents a large, prospectively followed cohort of these patients and presents detailed findings of urologic outcomes. To our knowledge, this is the largest study of this type.

Our study is the only trial to compare urologic outcomes in children with myelomeningocele having undergone prenatal closure with those who had postnatal repair in a prospective and systematic manner. We report our findings at 12 and 30 months. (Read the full article)




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Effectiveness and Cost of Bidirectional Text Messaging for Adolescent Vaccines and Well Care

Adolescent vaccination rates lag behind other childhood vaccines. Text messaging to improve uptake of adolescent vaccines has been shown to be effective in academic centers but has not been studied in other settings.

This study, done in 5 private and 2 safety-net practices, used a bidirectional text message as a behavioral prompt and showed text messaging was effective at increasing uptake of all adolescent vaccines. Costs were similar to other reminder/recall methods. (Read the full article)




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Hospital Use in the Last Year of Life for Children With Life-Threatening Complex Chronic Conditions

Children with life-threatening complex chronic conditions (LT-CCCs) experience high hospital use.

Hospital use in the last year of life for these children varies by type and number of LT-CCCs. Most children with ≥3 LT-CCCs are admitted to the hospital for more than 2 months in the last year of life. (Read the full article)




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Deferred Consent for Randomized Controlled Trials in Emergency Care Settings

Deferral of consent avoids delaying emergency interventions while ensuring consent to ongoing participation and use of data. Deferred consent is particularly important for enabling trials in pediatric settings, where many medicines and devices are unlicensed and untested for use.

Approaches for seeking deferred consent should balance the potential burden of obtaining consent against risk of bias due to outcome-related attrition. Ethics committees could consider approving data use when best efforts to obtain deferred consent are met with no response. (Read the full article)




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Testing for Abuse in Children With Sentinel Injuries

Several injuries have been suggested to be disproportionately associated with abuse in young children, but rates of abuse among children with these injuries are not currently known.

Abuse is diagnosed commonly in children with sentinel injuries, including the majority of children <24 months with rib fractures. (Read the full article)




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Risk Factors for Central Nervous System Tuberculosis

Central nervous system (CNS) tuberculosis has high morbidity and mortality, and it frequently affects children aged <5 years.

In California, children who were US-born, Hispanic, and aged <5 years were at increased risk of CNS tuberculosis. Children with CNS tuberculosis were more likely to die. Specific populations of US-born infants might benefit from additional prevention measures. (Read the full article)




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Outpatient Visits and Medication Prescribing for US Children With Mental Health Conditions

Seven percent of children in the United States receive mental health services each year. There are more pediatric outpatient mental health care visits to primary care physicians (PCPs) than to psychiatrists. Mental health utilization patterns regarding different conditions and medication prescribing are unknown.

One-third of children with mental health conditions see PCPs only. A greater proportion of children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder see PCPs for this than do those with anxiety/mood disorders. Children seeing PCPs are prescribed psychotropic medications more often than those seeing psychiatrists. (Read the full article)




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Early-Onset Neutropenia in Small-for-Gestational-Age Infants

Small for gestational age neonates (weight <10th percentile) are at risk for neutropenia during the first days after birth. However, the duration, responsible mechanism, and outcomes of this variety of neonatal neutropenia are not precisely known.

Six percent of small for gestational age neonates had neutrophils <1000/μL, with an average neutropenia duration of 7 days. Neutropenia was more closely linked with small for gestational age status than maternal hypertension. This neutropenia is associated with elevated nucleated red blood cell count and increased odds of necrotizing enterocolitis. (Read the full article)




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Safety of Botulinum Toxin Type A for Children With Nonambulatory Cerebral Palsy

Children with marked cerebral palsy (CP) are considered at greater risk of adverse events (AEs) after intramuscular injections of BoNT-A. To date there has been no randomized controlled trial examining safety of intramuscular BoNT-A injections in children with marked CP.

Children with nonambulatory CP had no greater risk of moderate or serious AEs after intramuscular injections of BoNT-A compared with a sham/control group. There was no greater risk of AEs for children receiving 2 compared with 1 episode of BoNT-A. (Read the full article)




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Derivation of Candidate Clinical Decision Rules to Identify Infants at Risk for Central Apnea

Central apnea sometimes complicates bronchiolitis. Because apnea tends to occur early in the course of bronchiolitis, there is a danger that infants may be discharged from the emergency department only to subsequently develop apnea at home.

This study prospectively derived clinical decision rules to help emergency physicians admit infants at risk for apnea while discharging those not at risk. (Read the full article)




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Growth Charts for Children With Down Syndrome in the United States

Children with Down syndrome (DS) grow differently from other children. Advances in medical care, access to care, and improved life expectancy suggest that contemporary growth patterns may have improved over recent decades for children with DS in the United States.

New growth charts are presented for length/height, weight, head circumference, and BMI for children with DS (birth to 20 y). Weight gain in children <36 months, and stature for males are improved compared with older growth charts. (Read the full article)




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Laser Acupuncture for Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome: A Randomized Controlled Trial

The impact of neonatal abstinence syndrome is of concern because the number of newborns showing symptoms of withdrawal after intrauterine drug exposure is increasing worldwide. Newborns developing neonatal abstinence syndrome require prolonged medical treatment and longer hospital admission after birth.

This first randomized controlled trial presents data on newborns with neonatal abstinence syndrome treated with laser acupuncture. The findings suggest that adjuvant laser acupuncture has the potential to reduce duration of morphine therapy and length of hospital stay. (Read the full article)




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Characteristics of Physicians Who Dismiss Families for Refusing Vaccines

The American Academy of Pediatrics discourages providers from dismissing families who refuse vaccines for their children, yet some providers continue to do so.

We show that ~1 in 5 pediatricians dismiss families who refuse vaccines, and there is significant regional variation in the practice. Dismissing families for refusing vaccines was also associated with stricter state nonmedical exemption policies. (Read the full article)




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The Best iPad Apps for 2020

Our list of the best iPad apps can transform your iPad, iPad mini, or iPad Pro into the ultimate tablet computer for work and play.




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Valve Launches New Steam Chat App for iOS, Android

A richer chat experience was rolled out by Valve last year on PC, but now it's being joined by a 'modernized chat experience' for iOS and Android devices.




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Adobe Photoshop for iPad

Adobe's initial attempt to shoehorn the sprawling Photoshop image editor into the tablet form-factor makes an impressive and pleasing start, but it really is just a start.




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Two Great Valley professors awarded seed grants for COVID-19 research

Ashkan Negahban, assistant professor of engineering management, and Satish Srinivasan, assistant professor of information science, will lead projects that help address the COVID-19 crisis, thanks to seed grants from the Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences.




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Germany see off Sweden for Olympic gold

Silvia Neid brought down the curtain on her 11-year reign as Nationalelf coach triumphantly as Germany overcame a spirited Sweden side 2-1 to win their first Olympic title.




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Kylie Jenner spends £9k on jewelled cheetah handbags for sisters on Mother's Day

Source: www.mirror.co.uk - Saturday, May 09, 2020
At least the garish crystal cheetah clutches aren't as saucy as the hamper sent to Kim Kardashian from cheeky Khloé as the family shower each other with odd gifts


All Related | More on Mother's Day




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Fin24.com | MONEY CLINIC: My property registration was sent off just before the lockdown. Do I still have to pay rent?

A Fin24 reader who bought a property in December 2019 sent his registration papers off just before the lockdown was announced, which was unfortunately too late. A property law expert responds.




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Fin24.com | MONEY CLINIC: My pension is in an aggressive portfolio. Is it too late to opt for a lower risk?

Investment consultant, Andre Tuck, tackles the question of investment strategy.




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Comfort Is a Killer of Innovation

As a profession, we need to work to innovate, see education as it needs to be now, and stop comparing it to what it was when we were doing it. The stakes are too high.




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Straight Up Conversation: First American to Win WISE Prize for Education Innovation

Rick talks with Larry Rosenstock, education icon, the founder and CEO of High Tech High, and recent recipient of the WISE Prize for Education, about what he's learned after a half century in education.




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8 Great Gifts for Gamers Under $50

If you're shopping for a gamer, especially if you can pin down their preferred platform, these cheap but fun accessories are guaranteed winners.




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7 Forgotten Atari 2600 Classics

The Atari 2600's library is incredibly diverse; let's explore hidden gems from the golden age of console gaming.




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Find an Xbox Security Bug? Microsoft Might Have Some Cash for You

Microsoft notes it can pay bug bounty participants more than $20,000, depending on the vulnerability's severity and the report's quality. Just make sure you don't use the flaw on unsuspecting users.




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Nvidia GeForce Now

Nvidia's GeForce Now streaming service lets you play many games from your Steam library on nearly any device.




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SB 11-84 Sea Fishing Quotas for 2012

6 December 2011This briefing highlights some of the important issues in the December 2011 fisheries negotiations at which decisions on fishing quotas and limits on fishing time will be made for 2012.




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SB 13-26 Regulatory Reform (Scotland) Bill - Stage 1

16 May 2013The Regulatory Reform (Scotland) Bill was introduced in the Scottish Parliament on 27 March 2013. This briefing provides background information on existing regulatory regimes, and the introduction of the Bill.




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SB 13-67 The Procurement Reform (Scotland) Bill

24 October 2013The Procurement Reform (Scotland) Bill aims to establish a national legislative framework for public procurement in Scotland. This Briefing sets out the background to the Bill and summarises its main provisions.




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SB 14-03 Regulatory Reform (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3

13 January 2013This briefing provides a summary of the parliamentary scrutiny of the Regulatory Reform (Scotland) Bill prior to Stage 3 proceedings which are scheduled to take place on 16 January 2014.




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SB 14-31 Procurement (Reform) (Scotland) Bill – Parliamentary consideration prior to Stage 3

8 May 2014This briefing summarises Stage 1 and Stage 2 consideration of the Procurement (Reform) (Scotland) Bill, introduced in the Parliament on 3rd October 2013.




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How Growth Mindset Makes for Better Student Writing

When students begin to value their own improvement, and see their weaknesses as opportunities, the grades will come, writes teacher Stephanie Curtis.




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National Study Bolsters Case for Teaching 'Growth Mindset'

A national study of nearly 12,500 9th graders finds that two sessions of a 25-minute exercise on “growth mindset” can boost students’ grades and their willingness to take on challenging classes.




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Yes, I Get My Period. School Shouldn't Shame Me for It

Schools should take the lead in removing the stigma around menstruation, writes 16-year-old Maggie Di Sanza, founder of Bleed Shamelessly.