of

Measuring Adverse Events and Levels of Harm in Pediatric Inpatients With the Global Trigger Tool

The Global Trigger Tool uses a sampling methodology to identify and measure harm rates. It has been shown to effectively detect adverse events when applied in the adult environment, but it has never been evaluated in a pediatric setting.

The Global Trigger Tool can be used in the pediatric inpatient environment to measure adverse safety events. We detected a 2 to 3 times higher harm rate than previously found with different metrics in this setting. (Read the full article)




of

Allowing Adolescents and Young Adults to Plan Their End-of-Life Care

Discussing end-of-life (EoL) care with adolescents and young adults (AYAs) is difficult. Often, such conversations are delayed or avoided, but AYAs contemplate EoL issues and want to make decisions about their care. Few established resources exist to help this process.

Results support the use of a developmentally appropriate document that allows AYAs an opportunity to share their choices about EoL care and how they would like to be remembered in the future. (Read the full article)




of

Occurrence and Family Impact of Elopement in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorders

Anecdotal accounts that suggest elopement behavior occurs in children with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs), that injuries and fatalities can result, and that associated family burden and stress are substantial. However, there has been little research characterizing the phenomenon or its frequency.

Nearly half of children with an ASD elope, and more than half of these "go missing." Elopement is associated with autism severity, and is often goal-directed. Addressing elopement behavior is an important aspect of intervention for many individuals with ASDs. (Read the full article)




of

Prediction of Inflicted Brain Injury in Infants and Children Using Retinal Imaging

Retinal hemorrhages occur in accidental and inflicted traumatic brain injury (ITBI) and some medical encephalopathies. Large numbers and peripherally located retinal hemorrhages are frequently cited as distinguishing features of ITBI in infants, but the predictive value has not been established.

This prospective retinal imaging study found that a diagnosis of ITBI in infants and children can be distinguished from other traumatic and nontraumatic causes by the presence of >25 dot-blot (intraretinal layer) hemorrhages (positive predictive value = 93%). (Read the full article)




of

Prevention of Invasive Cronobacter Infections in Young Infants Fed Powdered Infant Formulas

Invasive Cronobacter infection is a rare but devastating disease known to affect hospitalized premature or immunocompromised infants fed powdered infant formulas (PIFs). PIF labels imply that powdered formulas are safe for healthy, term infants if the label instructions are followed.

Cronobacter can also infect healthy, term infants in the first months of life, even if PIF label instructions are followed. Invasive Cronobacter infection is extremely rare in exclusively breastfed infants or those fed commercially sterile, ready-to-feed formulas. (Read the full article)




of

Clinical Utility of Chromosomal Microarray Analysis

Chromosomal microarray analysis offers a superior diagnostic yield over karyotyping for the evaluation of individuals with developmental disabilities. Many third-party payers, however, do not reimburse for microarray testing, citing a lack of evidence that patients benefit from testing.

This study demonstrates that microarray testing frequently identifies conditions that include features requiring specific medical follow-up and that referring physicians respond to abnormal test results with appropriate clinical actions. Microarray testing, therefore, provides direct benefits to patients. (Read the full article)




of

Effects of School-Wide Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports on Child Behavior Problems

School-Wide Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (SWPBIS) is a widely used universal prevention strategy currently implemented in >16 000 schools across the United States. Previous research has shown positive effects on school climate and school-level discipline problems.

This study reports multilevel results on data from a 4-year randomized controlled effectiveness trial of SWPBIS in 37 elementary schools. Results indicate significant impacts on children’s aggressive behavior problems, concentration problems, office discipline referrals, emotion regulation, and prosocial behavior. (Read the full article)




of

Impact of Sleep Extension and Restriction on Children's Emotional Lability and Impulsivity

Healthy sleep is essential for supporting alertness and other key functional domains required for academic success. Research involving the impact of modest changes in sleep duration on children’s day-to-day behavior in school is limited.

This study shows that modest changes in sleep duration have significant impact on the behavior of typically developing children in school. Modest sleep extension resulted in detectable improvement in behavior, whereas modest sleep restriction had the opposite effect. (Read the full article)




of

Genotype Prediction of Adult Type 2 Diabetes From Adolescence in a Multiracial Population

Among middle-aged adults, genotype scores predict incident type 2 diabetes but do not improve prediction models based on clinical risk factors including family history and BMI. These clinical factors are more dynamic in adolescence, however.

A genotype score also predicts type 2 diabetes from adolescence over a mean 27 years of follow-up into adulthood but does not improve prediction models based on clinical risk factors assessed in adolescence. (Read the full article)




of

Antecedents of Neonatal Encephalopathy in the Vermont Oxford Network Encephalopathy Registry

Most term and late preterm infants with neonatal encephalopathy have not had recognized asphyxial birth events. Several nonasphyxial risk factors for neonatal encephalopathy have been identified in previous studies.

In a large sample, we confirm the association of several nonasphyxial factors with neonatal encephalopathy, including markers of intrauterine exposure to infection or inflammation, intrauterine fetal growth restriction, and birth defects. We identify steps that would improve studies of neonatal encephalopathy. (Read the full article)




of

Effects of Glutamine on Brain Development in Very Preterm Children at School Age

Brain maturation processes of very premature children are adversely affected by serious neonatal infections. Differences in brain development persist into childhood and adolescence, and underpin widespread neurocognitive and behavioral deficits in very preterm children.

We present evidence for long-term beneficial effects of early nutritional intervention with glutamine in very preterm infants on brain development at 8 years of age, mediated by a decrease in the number of serious neonatal infections. (Read the full article)




of

Sexual Activity-Related Outcomes After Human Papillomavirus Vaccination of 11- to 12-Year-Olds

Concerns persist about sexual disinhibition after human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination of preteenage girls. Self-reported surveys have indicated few anticipated behavior changes after HPV vaccination. Little is known about sexual activity–related clinical outcomes after HPV vaccination.

Utilizing managed care organization electronic data, we evaluated the incidence of adverse outcomes of sexual activity among vaccinated preteenage girls and found little difference between those who received HPV vaccine and those who did not. (Read the full article)




of

Comparison of One-Tier and Two-Tier Newborn Screening Metrics for Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia

The false-positive rate of newborn screening for classic congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) remains high and has not been significantly improved by adjusting 17α-hydroxyprogesterone cutoff values for birth weight and/or gestational age. In response, 4 states have initiated second-tier steroid profile screening.

Under second-tier screening, the false-positive rate remains high, and classic CAH cases missed by screening (false-negatives) occur more frequently than reported. Physicians are cautioned that a negative screen does not necessarily rule out CAH. (Read the full article)




of

Secondary Sexual Characteristics in Boys: Data From the Pediatric Research in Office Settings Network

Recent investigations of pubertal onset in US girls suggest earlier maturation. The situation for US boys is unknown, and existing investigations are outdated and lack information on a key physical marker of male puberty: testicular enlargement.

US boys appear to be developing secondary sexual characteristics and achieving testicular enlargement 6 months to 2 years earlier than commonly used norms, with African American boys entering Tanner stages 2 to 4 earlier than white or Hispanic boys. (Read the full article)




of

Influence of Hospital Guidelines on Management of Children Hospitalized With Pneumonia

There are limited data on current testing and treatment patterns for children hospitalized with pneumonia, and on whether institutional guidelines affect care.

The use of institutional clinical practice guidelines was not associated with changes in diagnostic testing, hospital length of stay, or costs for children hospitalized with pneumonia, but was associated with increased use of narrow-spectrum antibiotics. (Read the full article)




of

Influence of Stress in Parents on Child Obesity and Related Behaviors

Stress in parents has been shown to be related to child obesity.

The presence of multiple parent stressors was related to child obesity, and parent perception of stress was related to child fast-food consumption. Stress in parents may be an important risk factor for child obesity and related behaviors. (Read the full article)




of

Randomized Trial of Prongs or Mask for Nasal Continuous Positive Airway Pressure in Preterm Infants

Nasal continuous positive airway pressure (NCPAP) is commonly given to premature infants with nasal prongs and nasal masks. Prongs and masks appear to injure the nose of preterm infants with equal frequency.

Nasal masks are more effective than nasal prongs for preventing intubation and mechanical ventilation in premature infants within 72 hours of starting NCPAP. (Read the full article)




of

Trajectories of Autism Severity in Children Using Standardized ADOS Scores

Autism spectrum disorders are characterized by heterogeneous severity. Previous latent variable analyses of longitudinal data have focused on trajectories of related features such as IQ, and not on changes over time in standardized, observational measures of core autism symptoms.

Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule–calibrated severity scores allow comparisons of observational data from toddlerhood to adolescence. This first report of latent autism severity trajectory classes indicates that most children show stability in core symptom severity over many years; small groups improved or worsened. (Read the full article)




of

Detection of Viruses in Young Children With Fever Without an Apparent Source

Fever without an apparent source is common in children. Currently in the United States, serious bacterial infection is uncommonly the cause. Most cases are assumed to be viral, but the specific viral causes have not been delineated. Antibiotics are frequently prescribed.

By using polymerase chain reaction, we detected pathogenic viruses frequently in children with fever without an apparent source. Adenovirus, human herpesvirus-6, enterovirus, and parechovirus were predominant. Testing of blood had high yield. Better recognition of viral etiologies may help reduce unnecessary antibiotic use. (Read the full article)




of

Long-term Benefits of Home-based Preventive Care for Preterm Infants: A Randomized Trial

Randomized controlled trials of early developmental interventions for very preterm infants demonstrate short-term benefits for infant neurobehavioral functioning. The longer-term benefits of these interventions for children and their families are not yet clear.

This randomized trial shows that home-based preventive care over the first year of life for very preterm infants has selective long-term benefits. Caregivers report less anxiety and fewer were at risk for an anxiety disorder. Preschoolers show fewer internalizing behaviors. (Read the full article)




of

Hospitalization of Rural and Urban Infants During the First Year of Life

Patients living in rural versus urban counties encounter different health care environments. Whether these differences result in different health care utilization for rural versus urban infants is not known.

In this study, infants living in rural California counties were hospitalized less often than infants living in urban counties. Among those hospitalized, infants living in rural counties were hospitalized for fewer cumulative days than infants residing in urban counties. (Read the full article)




of

Identifying Teens at Risk: Developmental Pathways of Online and Offline Sexual Risk Behavior

Today’s adolescents increasingly use the Internet to explore their sexual identity. There is public concern that the Internet, because of its accessibility, affordability, and anonymity, stimulates adolescents to engage in online sexual risk behavior (eg, sending sexual images to strangers).

This 4-wave panel study is the first to delineate the typical development of online sexual risk behavior, its relationship with offline sexual risk behavior, and the factors (eg, sensation seeking, family cohesion, life satisfaction, education, online communication) that predict both behaviors. (Read the full article)




of

Health-Related Quality of Life in Children and Adolescents With Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy

Medical advances have prolonged life for children and adolescents with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), the most common inherited pediatric neuromuscular disorder. Children with this progressive disease surviving to adulthood still face significant threats to their quality of life.

Self-reported psychosocial quality of life was impaired in a significant number (57%) of boys with DMD, unrelated to their need for mobility aids. Concordance between the perceptions of parents and their sons related to psychosocial functioning was fair to poor. (Read the full article)




of

15-Year Follow-Up of Recurrent "Hypoglycemia" in Preterm Infants

It has been widely thought for the past 20 years that recurrent low blood glucose levels ≤2.5 mmol/L (45 mg/dL), even in the absence of any suggestive clinical signs, can harm a preterm infant’s long-term development.

This prospective study showed the outcome at 2 and 15 years later for the preterm infants who had a blood glucose level this low in the first 10 days of life did not differ from that of matched controls. (Read the full article)




of

Impact of a Third Dose of Measles-Mumps-Rubella Vaccine on a Mumps Outbreak

Mumps outbreaks continue to occur among unvaccinated and highly vaccinated populations. In highly vaccinated populations, options for outbreak control are limited. No previous study has documented the impact of a third measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine dose on a mumps outbreak.

Our study assessed the use of a third MMR vaccine dose for mumps outbreak control in a setting with preexisting high 2-dose vaccine coverage. The findings suggest a potential role of MMR vaccine for outbreak control in such limited settings. (Read the full article)




of

Predictors of Delayed or Forgone Needed Health Care for Families With Children

The past several decades have seen a dramatic increase in the costs of health care and the prevalence of childhood activity limitations. More families with children are experiencing financial burden related to the cost of health care and insurance.

We find significant inequities in the occurrence of delayed or forgone needed health care for families with children as a result of high health care–related financial burden and having a child with an activity limitation. (Read the full article)




of

Booster Seat Laws and Fatalities in Children 4 to 7 Years of Age

Previous studies have demonstrated that booster seat legislation decreased fatalities in children. However, these studies have not accounted for confounding factors such as other legislation and temporal trends in safety.

This study demonstrates that state booster seat laws are associated with decreased rates of fatalities and injuries in children 4 to 7 years of age in the United States, with the strongest effects in the older children. (Read the full article)




of

The Globalization of Pediatric Clinical Trials

There is concern about the potential exploitation of children who are enrolled into clinical trials in developing and transition countries. Previous studies of globalization have only examined pediatric drug trials, and only 1 study has provided patient-level data by country.

The involvement of developing and transition countries depends on the product or indication under investigation and is greater for vaccines than for drugs or biologicals. Compared with our previous analysis, involvement of these countries in pediatric drug development has decreased. (Read the full article)




of

Office-Based Randomized Controlled Trial to Reduce Screen Time in Preschool Children

Interventions to reduce screen time in preschool-aged children are promising.

A screen time intervention in 3-year-old children implemented in the primary care setting did not reduce screen time or BMI. (Read the full article)




of

Self-Report of Child Care Directors Regarding Return-to-Care

Previous studies have found variable child care provider compliance with American Academy of Pediatrics child care illness exclusion guidelines and high rates of unnecessary exclusion of mildly ill children from child care.

Our study is the first to compare child care directors’ return-to-child care practices before the release of the new American Academy of Pediatrics return-to-child care guidelines and to describe the guidelines’ impact if actively adopted by child care providers. (Read the full article)




of

Informed Choice for Newborn Blood Spot Screening in the United Kingdom: A Survey of Parental Perceptions

Newborn screening is often seen as a fait accompli, even in programs that ostensibly proceed on the basis of informed choice and parental consent.

The study reports details of parental understanding, perceived ability to make an informed choice, and the availability of choice together with variables predictive of parental assessments of having made an informed choice. (Read the full article)




of

Effectiveness of Protective Eyewear in Reducing Eye Injuries Among High School Field Hockey Players

Data from several states that have implemented protective eyewear mandates at the scholastic level have shown a substantial reduction in eye injuries. However, there are no studies that critically evaluate the effectiveness of protective eyewear in girls’ field hockey.

Data collected from regional/national high school sports injury surveillance databases by certified athletic trainers has resulted in the largest prospective national study examining the effectiveness of mandated protective eyewear in reducing head, eye/orbital, concussive, and facial injuries performed to date. (Read the full article)




of

Prevalence of Overweight in Dutch Children With Down Syndrome

Some groups of children are especially prone to develop overweight and obesity. Overweight in children affects their physical and psychological health and shortens life expectancy. Overweight in children with Down syndrome (DS) is attributed to their commonly found comorbidities.

This study provides prevalence rates of overweight and obesity in a nationwide sample of otherwise healthy children with DS. Overweight is observed from young ages in healthy children with DS and those with severe congenital heart defects. (Read the full article)




of

Cost-Effectiveness of an Injury and Drowning Prevention Program in Bangladesh

Drowning is a leading cause of death for children in low- and middle-income countries. However, few childhood mortality reduction programs target drowning because of a lack of evidence on costs and effectiveness of these interventions.

This study presents the cost-effectiveness results of a low-cost injury and drowning prevention program in Bangladesh. We show that child care centers and swimming lessons are highly cost-effective interventions that could be scaled to other countries. (Read the full article)




of

A Randomized Placebo-Controlled Trial of Massage Therapy on the Immune System of Preterm Infants

Stressful events adversely affect the immune system, particularly the natural killer (NK) cells. Infants in the NICUs are exposed to stressful stimuli. The effect of massage therapy on the immune system of preterm infants has not been investigated.

This randomized placebo-controlled study found daily massage performed in stable preterm infants for a minimum of 5 days was associated with an increase in NK cell cytotoxicity despite lower absolute NK cell numbers compared with controls. (Read the full article)




of

Timing of the Introduction of Complementary Foods in Infancy: A Randomized Controlled Trial

In a previous randomized trial, infants from a low-resource country exclusively breastfed for 6 months had lower iron stores at 6 months compared with breastfeeding infants receiving solid foods. Randomized trials of exclusive breastfeeding in high-income countries are lacking.

In a high-income country, infants who receive complementary foods in addition to breast milk from 4 months of age had higher iron stores at 6 months compared with those exclusively breastfed for 6 months. (Read the full article)




of

Pediatricians' Use of Health Information Technology: A National Survey

Information is limited on adoption of fully functional electronic health records (EHRs) in office-based pediatric practices, such as rates of adoption, barriers to adoption, and features that pediatricians choose.

A nationwide survey of members of the AAP in 2009 found that pediatric adoption of fully functional EHRs lags general adoption. Barriers include financial and productivity concerns, but pediatricians are also concerned about finding systems that meet their specific needs. (Read the full article)




of

Continuous Versus Bolus Infusion of Doxorubicin in Children With ALL: Long-term Cardiac Outcomes

Doxorubicin therapy, effective against many malignancies, is limited by cardiotoxicity. Continuous-infusion doxorubicin, compared with bolus-infusion, reduces early cardiotoxicity in adults. Its effectiveness in reducing late cardiotoxicity in children remains uncertain.

This multicenter randomized trial assessed whether continuous-infusion of doxorubicin in pediatric patients provides long-term cardioprotection or improvement in event-free survival over bolus-infusion in acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Continuous-infusion of doxorubicin provided no cardioprotection or improvement in event-free survival. (Read the full article)




of

Predictors of Persistence After a Positive Depression Screen Among Adolescents

Adolescents have high placebo response rates in depression treatment trials. Screening for depression will likely detect youth with a broad range of symptom severity, including some who would benefit from watchful waiting but might not require active treatment.

The strongest predictors of symptom persistence are depressive symptom severity at presentation and continued symptoms on repeat screening 6 weeks later. These results provide important information for the development of postscreening management protocols in the primary care setting. (Read the full article)




of

Prevalence and Characteristics of Rib Fractures in Ex-preterm Infants

Osteopathy of prematurity continues to occur in preterm infants. Osteopathy of prematurity can cause rib fractures in ex-preterm infants.

Rib fractures in ex-preterm infants are often posterior and multiple. Posterior rib fractures may not be diagnostic of nonaccidental injury in ex-preterm infants. (Read the full article)




of

Patterns and Costs of Health Care Use of Children With Medical Complexity

Children with medical complexity are high users of acute health care, but little is known about their service use across the continuum of care services and in the context of overall health care expenditures.

Although accounting for <1% of the child population, children with medical complexity use almost one-third of all pediatric health care expenditures and make multiple transitions across providers and health care settings. (Read the full article)




of

The Effect of an Osmotic Contrast Agent on Complete Meconium Evacuation in Preterm Infants

Delayed meconium passage impairs gastrointestinal function in premature infants. No intervention has been identified that accelerates meconium passage sufficiently. Gastrografin is an osmotic contrast agent used for radiologic examination of the bowel or for conservative treatment of uncomplicated meconium ileus.

Gastrografin did not accelerate complete meconium evacuation but stimulated gastrointestinal motility in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial in premature infants. Application shortened the time to full enteral feedings and hospital stay but was associated with necrotizing enterocolitis as a possible adverse event. (Read the full article)




of

Trends and Socioeconomic Correlates of Adolescent Physical Fighting in 30 Countries

Adolescent physical fighting is an important public health concern with known social origins. However, existing international studies of adolescent fighting provide little evidence about its prevalence, trends over time, or possible socioeconomic determinants.

We studied frequent physical fighting among 494 874 adolescents in 30 countries over an 8-year period. Physical fighting declined in most countries. National measures of absolute wealth but not socioeconomic inequalities related to risk of frequent physical fighting. (Read the full article)




of

Influence of Tobacco Displays and Ads on Youth: A Virtual Store Experiment

Youth exposure to retail tobacco advertisements and displays is associated with smoking initiation. The Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act of 2009 gives states and local governments legal authority to regulate the time, place, and manner of tobacco advertising.

This is the first experimental study using a virtual store environment to provide evidence that a policy banning tobacco product displays at the point of sale may deter youth from attempting to purchase tobacco products at retail stores. (Read the full article)




of

Correlation of Care Process Measures With Childhood Asthma Exacerbations

Asthma is a common focus of pediatric quality improvement efforts. Various processes of care have been postulated as markers of high-quality pediatric asthma care, but it is not clear which processes correlate with a lower risk of asthma exacerbations.

This study analyzed the correlation of processes of care identifiable through administrative data with asthma exacerbations. The use of 0 vs ≥1 controller medications and the asthma medication ratio had the strongest correlation with asthma exacerbations. (Read the full article)




of

Nonsteroidal Antiinflammatory Drugs in Late Pregnancy and Persistent Pulmonary Hypertension of the Newborn

Knowledge is limited regarding the epidemiology of persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (PPHN). Previous work has implicated a host of perinatal risk factors and a few antenatal antecedents of PPHN, including maternal consumption during pregnancy of nonsteroidal antiinflammatory medications.

In contrast to results of previous studies, we found no association between PPHN and maternal consumption during late pregnancy of nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs in general or ibuprofen in particular. (Read the full article)




of

Readability, Suitability, and Characteristics of Asthma Action Plans: Examination of Factors That May Impair Understanding

National asthma treatment guidelines include the recommendation that all asthma patients receive a written asthma action plan. No previous study has sought to examine the readability, suitability, and content of asthma action plans within a nationally representative sample.

Although variability was found across written asthma action plans, and improvements in readability, suitability, and content are needed, there were also many common elements that would support a move to a single universal standard action plan. (Read the full article)




of

Lifetime Growth and Blood Pressure in Adolescence: Hong Kong's "Children of 1997" Birth Cohort

Most observational studies from Western populations suggest that blood pressure is positively associated with low birth weight and faster infant growth; however, it is unclear whether these associations are biologically based or contextually specific.

In a developed non-Western setting with relatively little socioeconomic patterning of size or growth, birth weight and infant growth had relatively limited impacts on early adolescent blood pressure, which was more strongly related to recent growth and current size. (Read the full article)




of

A Randomized Trial of Stylets for Intubating Newborn Infants

Endotracheal intubation of newborn infants is a common procedure. Competency in this skill is mandatory for many pediatric training programs. The safety and benefits of using a stylet for intubating newborn infants are unknown.

Pediatric trainees are commonly unsuccessful at performing endotracheal intubation. Adverse events of using a stylet are uncommon. The use of a stylet does not increase success rates. (Read the full article)




of

Preventability of Early Readmissions at a Children's Hospital

There is widespread belief that many hospital readmissions in adults are avoidable by improvements in care and discharge planning processes, resulting in significant cost savings; however, current studies have not examined the preventability of such readmissions in children’s hospitals.

The overall rate of pediatric 15-day readmissions considered to be preventable was low, less than 2% of total hospital admissions. Pediatric readmissions are unlikely to serve as a highly productive focus for cost savings or quality measurement. (Read the full article)