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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)




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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)




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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)




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Differing Attitudes Toward Fetal Care by Pediatric and Maternal-Fetal Medicine Specialists

Pediatric specialists are increasingly involved in prenatal care, particularly for congenital fetal conditions. Questions remain about pediatricians’ role in the management of maternal conditions that may affect postnatal health, and the attitudes of obstetric and pediatric specialists around such care.

Obstetric and pediatric specialists’ attitudes differ substantially regarding pediatricians’ role in providing consultation for maternal conditions that may affect a child’s health postnatally, and regarding whether court authorization may be appropriate when a woman refuses certain treatment recommendations. (Read the full article)




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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)




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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)




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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)




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Obesity Disparities Among Elementary-Aged Children: Data From School-Based BMI Surveillance

Nationally representative surveys provide insight into overall childhood obesity trends and disparities but do not identify patterns specific to individual states. School-based surveillance is recommended, but it is unclear whether surveillance is helping to identify children at greatest risk.

This study includes 3 consecutive years of surveillance findings to describe within-state spatial and socioeconomic disparities in obesity among elementary-aged children. Implications for states using and considering school-based surveillance to plan preventive interventions are considered. (Read the full article)




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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)




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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)




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Pediatric Providers' Self-Reported Knowledge, Practices, and Attitudes About Concussion

Previous studies have revealed misconceptions among pediatric patients, their families, and athletic coaches surrounding concussion. Little is known about pediatric primary care and emergency medicine providers’ attitudes and beliefs about diagnosis and management of this mild traumatic brain injury.

Although pediatric primary care and emergency medicine providers regularly care for concussion patients and value their role in management, they may not have adequate training or infrastructure to systematically diagnose and manage these patients. (Read the full article)




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Expected Body Weight in Adolescents: Comparison Between Weight-for-Stature and BMI Methods

In adolescents with eating disorders, percent expected body weight (EBW) is used for diagnosis and to make clinical decisions. The assumption is that the weight-for-stature (WFS) and BMI methods of determining EBW are equivalent, but that may not be true.

This study demonstrates that EBWWFS is ~3.5% higher than EBWBMI. Differences are most pronounced at extremes of height. Compared with the EBWWFS method, sensitivity of EBWBMI to detect those <75% EBW is low. (Read the full article)




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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)




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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)




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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)




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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)




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Pediatric and Adolescent Tuberculosis in the United States, 2008-2010

Foreign-born children and adolescents in the United States experience higher tuberculosis (TB) morbidity rates than US-born children and adolescents. Pediatric risk assessment should account for country of birth, contact with a known TB case, or travel to TB-endemic countries.

Our study reports national data on parental/guardian countries of origin and international residence of pediatric patients with TB. Two-thirds of US-born children with TB have international family connections, and many have lived in countries with increased risk for TB acquisition. (Read the full article)




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Theoretical Breast Cancer Induction Risk From Thoracic Spine CT in Female Pediatric Trauma Patients

High doses of radiation have been linked to cancer induction in irradiated populations such as atomic bomb survivors. Medical imaging directs significant radiation doses to human tissues. Epidemiological studies have demonstrated that children are more sensitive to radiation than adults.

The link between cancer induction from moderate radiation doses such as diagnostic imaging is controversial. This study uses Food and Drug Administration–accepted formulas to calculate theoretical risk of breast cancer induction in female pediatric trauma patients receiving diagnostic imaging of the thoracic spine. (Read the full article)




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Pediatric Inflatable Bouncer-Related Injuries in the United States, 1990-2010

A previous study of inflatable bouncer–related fractures has shown that upper extremity fractures are most common, and many fractures are caused by collisions; however, no study has examined nonfracture injuries or used nationally representative data to investigate inflatable bouncer–related injuries.

This is the first study to use nationally representative data to calculate national injury rates, assess risk factors, and examine trends for pediatric inflatable bouncer–related injuries treated in US emergency departments over a 21-year period (1990–2010). (Read the full article)




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Pediatric Tuberculosis at Beijing Children's Hospital: 2002-2010

Pediatric tuberculosis is significant for public health professionals because it is an indicator of the recent transmission of tuberculosis in the community. Data on incidence and clinical features of pediatric tuberculosis from China are scarce.

We conducted this study to describe the patient characteristics, clinical–epidemiological profile, and treatment outcomes for pediatric tuberculosis in a referral hospital setting in China. (Read the full article)




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Diagnostic Imaging Studies Performed in Children Over a Nine-Year Period

Medical imaging that uses ionizing radiation provides notable benefits in the clinical setting. Controversy regarding increased cancer risk, particularly in children, dictates that ordering practices and use of such medical imaging be evaluated to reduce unnecessary exposure to imaging-related radiation.

We evaluated the prevalence and characteristics of diagnostic imaging procedures in children. The proportion of higher radiation procedures is increasing, especially among children evaluated in the inpatient and emergency department settings and those with gastrointestinal and neurologic symptoms, and congenital anomalies. (Read the full article)




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Self- and Parent-Rated Executive Functioning in Young Adults With Very Low Birth Weight

Very low birth weight (VLBW; <1500 g) subjects show lower scores in performance-based tests of executive functioning (EF) than control subjects up to young adulthood.

VLBW adults’ perceptions of their EF in everyday life are very similar to those of term-born adults. Parental evaluation of VLBW/small-for-gestational-age adults’ EF is more negative than adults’ self-reports. (Read the full article)




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Breastfeeding Education and Support Trial for Overweight and Obese Women: A Randomized Trial

Obesity is a risk factor for failure to initiate breastfeeding, formula supplementation, and short breastfeeding duration. There is a need for interventions that can improve the breastfeeding outcomes of overweight and obese women.

Breastfeeding peer counseling targeting overweight/obese women did not affect exclusive breastfeeding rates or breastfeeding continuation beyond 2 weeks. However, the intervention was associated with improvements in early breastfeeding intensity and fewer infant hospitalizations in the first 6 months after birth. (Read the full article)




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Near-Infrared Imaging in Intravenous Cannulation in Children: A Cluster Randomized Clinical Trial

Gaining intravenous access in children can be difficult. Recently, several near-infrared devices have been introduced attempting to support intravenous cannulation by visualizing veins underneath skin. Only one of those devices has been evaluated systemically thus far and results are inconclusive.

Although it was possible to visualize veins with near-infrared in most patients, the VascuLuminator did not improve the success of cannulation. An explanation is that the main problem is probably not localization of the vein but insertion of the cannula. (Read the full article)




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Subclinical Cerebral Edema in Children With Diabetic Ketoacidosis Randomized to 2 Different Rehydration Protocols

Cerebral edema (CE) occurs frequently during treatment of diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) in children. Severe, life-threatening CE occurs rarely, but subclinical CE is common. Whether the rate of infusion of intravenous fluids influences the occurrence or severity of CE is unknown.

This study demonstrates that the rate of fluid infusion in children with DKA does not substantially affect MRI measures of CE. Studies assessing measures other than edema formation are necessary to determine whether fluid infusion rates influence DKA-related brain injury. (Read the full article)




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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)




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Medical Home Quality and Readmission Risk for Children Hospitalized With Asthma Exacerbations

The medical home likely plays a positive role in outpatient health outcomes. Asthma is a common and frequent reason for pediatric hospitalization. It is unknown whether having a quality medical home can prevent readmission in children hospitalized for asthma exacerbations.

Poor access to a medical home was associated with increased readmission for asthma, whereas other measured aspects of medical home were not. Children with private insurance and good access to care had the lowest rates of readmission within a year. (Read the full article)




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Dietary Salt Intake, Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Consumption, and Obesity Risk

Sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption is associated with childhood obesity risk. Because dietary salt intake is a determinant of fluid consumption in adults, a high-salt diet may predict greater consumption of SSBs and therefore increase obesity risk.

In Australian children, the amount of salt consumed was positively associated with fluid consumption, and predicted the amount of SSB consumed. In addition, SSB consumption was associated with obesity risk, indicating a potential link between salt intake and childhood obesity. (Read the full article)




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Physical Disability After Injury-Related Inpatient Rehabilitation in Children

Outcomes analyses after trauma reveal long-term disability but are limited to specific injuries, older data, or all ages combined. There are no contemporary assessments of physical disability among children after inpatient rehabilitation for a wide range of traumatic injuries.

This is the first contemporary study to describe the physical disability of a large pediatric cohort after inpatient rehabilitation for various injuries. After a mean 21-day inpatient rehabilitation stay, significant reductions in functional disability were achieved across injury mechanisms. (Read the full article)




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Exercise-Induced Wheeze, Urgent Medical Visits, and Neighborhood Asthma Prevalence

The prevalence of asthma and associated urgent medical visits vary dramatically across neighborhoods in New York City. Some, but not all, children with asthma wheeze when they exercise.

Exercise-induced wheeze was more common for asthmatic children living in neighborhoods with higher versus lower asthma prevalence. Because exercise-induced symptoms indicate a propensity for rapid-onset symptoms, this increased prevalence may contribute to the observed increase in urgent medical visits. (Read the full article)




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Socioeconomic Status and In-Hospital Pediatric Mortality

Socioeconomic status (SES) is inversely related to mortality and health in children; the higher an individual’s SES, the less likely illness and death. It is unknown whether the association of SES and pediatric mortality exists in the inpatient setting.

Within children’s hospitals, in-hospital mortality is inversely associated with SES, but is lower than expected for even the lowest SES quartile. The association between SES and mortality varies by clinical service line. (Read the full article)




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Trends in Survival Among Children With Down Syndrome in 10 Regions of the United States

Although survival of children born with Down syndrome has improved, unexplained racial and ethnic disparities in survival persist in the United States.

This study used population-based data from 10 birth defects monitoring programs in the United States to examine survival trends among children born with Down syndrome and to evaluate the changing influence of survival predictors over the life course. (Read the full article)




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Obtaining Consent from Both Parents for Pediatric Research: What Does "Reasonably Available" Mean?

When research involving children is determined to present greater than minimal risk but no potential for direct benefit, permission is required from both parents, unless one is not reasonably available. These requirements are variably understood and applied, and guidance is lacking.

In a study on newborn screening, a sizeable percentage of fathers were not reasonably available, reflecting complexities of parental status and family relations. Guidelines developed in this project may provide tools for researchers and institutions to apply in other contexts. (Read the full article)




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Weight-Based Victimization: Bullying Experiences of Weight Loss Treatment-Seeking Youth

Studies have linked bullying with BMI, with overweight and obese youth vulnerable to bullying and its negative psychological and health consequences. However, there has been little comprehensive assessment of weight-based victimization, especially in weight loss treatment–seeking samples of youth.

WBV is prevalent in treatment-seeking youth, who report victimization from peers (92%), friends (70%), parents (37%), and teachers (27%). Providers should discuss WBV in their assessment and treatment of pediatric patients who are overweight or obese. (Read the full article)




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Use and Accuracy of Diagnostic Imaging by Hospital Type in Pediatric Appendicitis

Because pediatric appendicitis is challenging to diagnose, computed tomography (CT) is used frequently. Childhood radiation exposure is associated with increased risk of cancer. Ultrasound avoids radiation exposure but is less sensitive for appendicitis than CT.

Controlling for referral bias, evaluation at a community compared with a children’s hospital is associated with higher CT and lower ultrasound use before appendectomy. CT and ultrasound accuracy for appendicitis in children varies with hospital type. (Read the full article)




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Part C Early Intervention for Infants and Toddlers: Percentage Eligible Versus Served

Part C early intervention serves ~2.8% of US children who are younger than 3 years old; however, there is evidence that substantial numbers of infants and toddlers with developmental delays receive no early intervention services.

Broad eligibility criteria can classify children who have no delays or minimal delays as candidates for Part C services. Despite this, no jurisdiction provides Part C services to all children who have substantial delays. (Read the full article)




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Growth of Extremely Preterm Survivors From Birth to 18 Years of Age Compared With Term Controls

Children born at very low birth weights have significant catch-up weight gain but differences in height remain. Their BMI, however, tends not to be higher than expected. Data are lacking regarding representative cohorts, defined by gestation and compared with contemporaneous controls.

In a geographic cohort of extremely preterm participants followed until age 18, compared with term controls, weight differences diminish over time, and height differences persist. BMI at age 18 is similar. Height at age 2 is a better predictor of final height than midparental height. (Read the full article)




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Pediatric Resident Debt and Career Intentions

Educational debt is an important topic in pediatrics. Deciding on a career path is a critical personal decision, shaped by multiple factors. The relationship between educational debt and career choice is unclear.

Educational debt among graduating pediatric residents is high and continues to increase. Higher debt is one factor that may lead residents toward a career in primary care or hospitalist practice, rather than pursuing fellowship training and a subspecialist career. (Read the full article)




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Effectiveness of a Safe Routes to School Program in Preventing School-Aged Pedestrian Injury

A number of studies have demonstrated community acceptance of Safe Routes to School interventions as well as their success in addressing perceptions about safety, but little is known about their effectiveness in reducing pedestrian injury risk in school-aged children.

Implementation of a Safe Routes to School program in New York City may have contributed to a substantial reduction in school-aged pedestrian injury rates, with the effects largely limited to school-travel hours in census tracts with these interventions. (Read the full article)




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Complementary and Alternative Medicine Use by Pediatric Specialty Outpatients

Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) use is common among children, especially those with chronic, recurrent, or incurable conditions. Concurrent use of CAM with conventional medications is of concern and needs to be assessed, especially in vulnerable patient populations.

CAM use is high among pediatric cardiology, gastroenterology, neurology, oncology, and respiratory patients, most of whom use CAM concurrently with conventional care. This study provides additional evidence to suggest the use of CAM be included in routine patient history taking. (Read the full article)




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A Randomized Clinical Trial of a Web-Based Tobacco Cessation Education Program

Children exposed to second-hand smoke have high rates of hospitalization for respiratory illness. These visits represent a "teachable moment" when parental smokers can be motivated to quit. However, pediatric health care practitioners receive little training in tobacco cessation.

The Web-Based Respiratory Education About Tobacco and Health online training program was effective at increasing the provision of an effective tobacco cessation intervention by pediatric hospital-based respiratory therapists, registered nurses, and nurse practitioners to adult smokers. (Read the full article)




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Population-Based Estimates of In-Unit Survival for Very Preterm Infants

Survival estimates for preterm infants are vital for counseling parents, informing care, and planning services. Widely use estimates of in-unit survival derived from a large UK population for infants born at <33 weeks’ gestational age have been available since 1999.

These survival charts have been updated and will be of use to clinicians, parents, and managers. An alternative method for graphical representation of survival probabilities is offered: contour survival plots. (Read the full article)




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Capture of Complexity of Specialty Care in Pediatric Cardiology by Work RVU Measures

Few reports have explored the measurement validity of the relative value unit (RVU) system, particularly in pediatrics. The RVU system, although broadly applied in health care settings, was developed for the adult population and thus may possess unique inadequacies in pediatrics.

We found deficiencies in the ability of the RVU system to capture features of case mix complexity and differences related to age. Additional investigation may be warranted to determine the validity of RVU as a measurement tool in pediatrics. (Read the full article)




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Disparities in Unmet Need for Care Coordination: The National Survey of Children's Health

Care coordination has been proposed as a key mechanism for increasing quality and reducing costs of care. Little is known about the degree to which disparities exist in care coordination or whether having high-quality primary care attenuates disparities.

A considerable proportion of parents reported unmet care coordination needs for their children, especially parents of children with special health care needs. Black and Latino children also may have more unmet needs because they received family-centered care less often. (Read the full article)




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Randomized Trial of Iron Supplementation versus Routine Iron Intake in VLBW Infants

The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that infants <1500 g birth weight receive an iron intake of 4 mg/kg per day. There are no randomized trials to support this recommendation.

This trial compared the effect of iron supplementation of 2 mg/kg per day on the hematocrit at 36 weeks' postmenstrual age. This study concluded that iron supplementation does not affect the 36-week hematocrit or the number of transfusions in infants <1500 g. (Read the full article)




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Nine-Year Follow-up of a Home-Visitation Program: A Randomized Trial

A number of studies have shown that home-visiting interventions can improve outcomes for children being raised in families that face multiple adversities. It is less clear how well these benefits are sustained over long periods.

The current study shows that the Early Start program of home visitation has benefits in terms of reducing child abuse, increasing parental competence, and improving childhood behavioral adjustment for up to 9 years, suggesting long-term benefits of home visitation. (Read the full article)




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Symptoms and Otoscopic Signs in Bilateral and Unilateral Acute Otitis Media

Bilateral acute otitis media (AOM) is considered more severe than unilateral AOM, and several guidelines recommend more active management of bilateral AOM. However, severity of symptoms and otoscopic signs of bilateral and unilateral AOM have previously not been comprehensively studied.

Bilateral AOM seems to be clinically only a slightly more severe illness than unilateral AOM. When assessing AOM severity, bilaterality should not be used as a determining criterion; instead, the child’s symptoms together with otoscopic signs should also be acknowledged. (Read the full article)




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Prehypertension and Hypertension in Community-Based Pediatric Practice

Prevalence of hypertension in children increased significantly over the past few decades, tracks into adulthood, and is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease. However, current prevalence estimates in children have largely been based on studies conducted in school environments.

The current study reports the prevalence of childhood hypertension in community pediatric practice, which provides a typical pediatric examination environment, unlike blood pressure measured in school. The results show a significantly lower prevalence than what has previously been reported. (Read the full article)




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Surfactant Administration via Thin Catheter During Spontaneous Breathing: Randomized Controlled Trial

A policy of intubation, mechanical ventilation, and surfactant administration is commonly used for the treatment of respiratory distress syndrome worldwide; however subsequent development of bronchopulmonary dysplasia remains as risk with this standard approach.

Noninvasive surfactant administration technique during spontaneous breathing (Take Care) along with nasal continuous positive airway pressure support successfully reduces the need for further respiratory support and bronchopulmonary dysplasia rate in very low birth weight infants. (Read the full article)




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Readiness of Primary Care Practices for Medical Home Certification

Practice characteristics, such as practice size, have been associated with the readiness of adult primary care practices for medical home certification. Little is known about how ready primary care practices for children are for medical home certification.

Primary care practices for children attained only 38% of the infrastructure required for medical home certification. Smaller practice size was significantly associated with lower infrastructure scores. Medical home programs need effective approaches to support practices with limited resources. (Read the full article)