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Clinic-Integrated Behavioral Intervention for Families of Youth With Type 1 Diabetes: Randomized Clinical Trial

Strategies to assist patients in achieving optimal chronic disease self-management are critical. The complex family and regimen issues surrounding pediatric type 1 diabetes management suggest the need to integrate such strategies into routine clinical care.

This study demonstrates the efficacy of a practical, low-intensity behavioral intervention delivered during routine care for improving glycemic outcomes. Findings indicate that the approach may offer a potential model for integrating medical and behavioral sciences to improve health care. (Read the full article)




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Parental Psychological Well-Being and Behavioral Outcome of Very Low Birth Weight Infants at 3 Years

Preterm infants are at increased risk of behavioral problems, which has been associated with maternal distress. Paternal psychological well-being is less studied. Parents’ concerns may affect their perceptions or attitudes and have negative effects on the behavior of the child.

Parents report more behavior problems in VLBW children at age 3 if they themselves have had symptoms of depression, parenting stress, or weak sense of coherence. Also, the paternal psychological well-being contributes to the behavioral development of a preterm child. (Read the full article)




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Effective Analgesia Using Physical Interventions for Infant Immunizations

Pain during routine infant immunization causes parental anxiety. Oral sucrose solutions are effective pain-reduction strategies. Few studies have measured a combined strategy of a physical intervention along with sucrose to decrease the infant’s pain response.

We demonstrate that a physical, nonpharmacological intervention called the 5 S’s (swaddling, side/stomach position, shushing, swinging, and sucking) provides significant pain reduction with or without sucrose during routine 2- and 4-month vaccinations. (Read the full article)




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Evaluation of a Clinical Dehydration Scale in Children Requiring Intravenous Rehydration

Evaluating dehydration severity is a challenging task. Clinical dehydration scores that combine multiple clinical findings are promising. One clinical dehydration scale score has been developed and subsequently evaluated; however, few participants in the derivation and validation studies were significantly dehydrated.

In children requiring intravenous rehydration, the dehydration scale displayed moderate reliability and weak associations with objective measures. Thus, although the scale can assist in assessing dehydration, it should not be used in isolation to dictate interventions (eg, intravenous rehydration, hospitalization). (Read the full article)




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Clinical Research Involving Children: Registration, Completeness, and Publication

Existing clinical research policy does not guarantee availability of results. Registration on the Web site ClinicalTrials.gov and the Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act improved transparency in pediatric clinical research. Registration and publication remain voluntary for many trials involving children.

Only 29% of completed registered studies and 53% of National Institutes of Health–funded trials involving children were published. Numbers of studies are increasing. Registration and posting of results on ClinicalTrials.gov should be mandatory for all studies involving children. (Read the full article)




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Prevalence of Retinal Hemorrhages in Critically Ill Children

The association of retinal hemorrhages (RHs) with abusive head trauma (AHT) is robust; 46% to 100% RHs are reported in AHT. There is potential selection bias with risk of circular reasoning because the majority of studies describing RH focus on AHT.

This is the first prospective observational study defining prevalence and distribution of RH in critically ill children excluding those with AHT. Severe multilayered RH were rare and observed in children with accidental fatal head injury, severe coagulopathy, severe sepsis, or a combination of these factors. (Read the full article)




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The Distribution of Physical Activity in an After-school Friendship Network

New, effective approaches to obesity prevention are urgently needed. Social network interventions warrant our attention. Social networks play a significant role in adult and adolescent obesity. The role of social networks in pediatric obesity has not been examined.

Afterschool friendship ties play a critical role in setting physical activity patterns in children as young as 5 to 12 years. Children’s activity levels can be changed by the activity level of their social network during a 12-week afterschool program. (Read the full article)




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Interfacility Transfers of Noncritically III Children to Academic Pediatric Emergency Departments

Although many children are treated in general emergency departments, many such facilities have limited pediatric capabilities. Transfer to academic centers improves outcomes for critically ill patients, but transfers of noncritically ill children have not been well studied.

Although more than half of these patients are seriously ill, many transferred patients are discharged directly from the emergency department or are admitted for less than 24 hours. Orthopedic problems, gastrointestinal conditions, and traumatic head injury are the most common complaints. (Read the full article)




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Physical Activity and Sedentary Behaviors and Health-Related Quality of Life in Adolescents

There are limited cross-sectional data from observational studies of adolescents showing that regular participation in physical activity is associated with a higher quality of life status, whereas time spent in screen-based entertainment is associated with a poorer quality of life.

Adolescents who were physically active (particularly engaging in outdoor activity) over a 5-year period had higher quality of life than their less active peers. Conversely, high levels of screen-based entertainment over 5 years negatively affected quality of life status. (Read the full article)




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Impact of Language Proficiency Testing on Provider Use of Spanish for Clinical Care

Providers who speak Spanish, regardless of their proficiency level, may use Spanish for clinical care without seeking professional interpretation. Failure to use professional interpretation increases the risk for miscommunication and can lead to patient harm.

Providing residents with objective feedback on Spanish language proficiency decreased willingness to use Spanish in straightforward clinical scenarios. Language proficiency testing, coupled with institutional policies requiring professional interpretation, may improve care for patients with limited English proficiency. (Read the full article)




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Physical Punishment and Mental Disorders: Results From a Nationally Representative US Sample

Physical punishment is associated with aggression, delinquency, and internalizing conditions in childhood, as well as a range of Axis I mental disorders in adulthood. More research is needed on the possible long-term relationship between physical punishment and mental health.

To our knowledge, this is the first nationally representative examination of physical punishment and a range of Axis I and II disorders, gender interactions, and proportion of mental disorders in the general population that may be attributable to physical punishment. (Read the full article)




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Prevalence of Abusive Injuries in Siblings and Household Contacts of Physically Abused Children

Siblings and other contacts of abused children, especially twins, are thought to be at higher risk for abuse than other children. However, the rate at which screening tests identify injuries in contacts is currently unknown.

Contacts of abused children with serious injuries have fractures identified on skeletal survey at significant rates. Twins are at substantially increased risk for fracture. Physical examination findings were not sensitive for fractures. (Read the full article)




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Influence of Sports, Physical Education, and Active Commuting to School on Adolescent Weight Status

Among adolescents, weight status has been inversely associated with sports participation but not active commuting or physical education. Studies of each form of physical activity have not included adequate adjustments for other physical activities, previous body weight, or diet quality.

Estimates indicate overweight/obesity and obesity prevalence would decrease by 11% and 26%, respectively, if adolescents played on at least 2 sports teams per year; obesity prevalence would decrease by 22% if adolescents walked/biked to school 4–5 days per week. (Read the full article)




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Long-term Clinical Outcome After Lyme Neuroborreliosis in Childhood

Persistent facial nerve palsy is a well-described neurologic deficit after Lyme neuroborreliosis and occurs in 13% to 20% of children. Other neurologic deficits are less closely described. Nonspecific subjective symptoms are reported as often among patients as controls in previous short-term follow-up studies.

Persistent neurologic deficits, other than facial nerve palsy, were found in 14% of patients, causing impaired fine motor skills, poor balance, or persistent pain. Nonspecific subjective symptoms were reported as often among patients as controls in this long-term follow-up study and should not be considered as sequelae after Lyme neuroborreliosis. (Read the full article)




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Vitamin D Deficiency in Critically Ill Children

Vitamin D is essential for bone health and for cardiovascular and immune function. In critically ill adults, vitamin D deficiency is common and associated with sepsis and with higher critical illness severity. The influence on pediatric critical illness is unclear.

We found a high prevalence of vitamin D deficiency in critically ill children, which was associated with higher critical illness severity. Vitamin D deficiency was less common in younger patients, in non-Hispanic white patients, in patients admitted over the summer, and in children taking supplemental vitamin D, with increasing amounts being more protective. (Read the full article)




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Maternal HIV Infection and Vertical Transmission of Pathogenic Bacteria

Neonatal sepsis is an important cause of under-5 childhood mortality. Infants born to HIV-infected mothers are at increased risk of morbidity and mortality, even if not having acquired HIV. This association needs further study during the neonatal period.

Maternal HIV infection was associated with increased vaginal colonization by Escherichia ecoli but not group B Streptococcus. Neonates born to HIV-infected mothers were only at increased risk of sepsis if they had acquired HIV-infection, but not if HIV-uninfected. (Read the full article)




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The Association of Vitamin D Status With Pediatric Critical Illness

Vitamin D is a pleiotropic hormone important for proper functioning of multiple organs. Adult critical care studies have suggested vitamin D as a modifiable risk factor. No studies have investigated the prevalence, risk factors, or role in pediatric critical illness.

This study provides evidence that the majority of critically ill children have vitamin D deficiency at the time of PICU admission, and that lower levels are associated with hypocalcemia, catecholamine administration, significant fluid bolus requirements, and longer PICU admissions. (Read the full article)




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Prospective Multicenter Study of Children With Bronchiolitis Requiring Mechanical Ventilation

Bronchiolitis is one of the most common infectious respiratory conditions of early childhood, and most children have a mild clinical course. Unfortunately, the small subgroup of children requiring continuous positive airway pressure and/or intubation remains ill-defined.

In children with bronchiolitis, we found several demographic, historical, and clinical factors that predicted the need for mechanical respiratory support including in utero smoke exposure. We also found a novel subgroup of children with bronchiolitis who have a rapid respiratory decline. (Read the full article)




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Mortality and Clinical Outcomes in HIV-Infected Children on Antiretroviral Therapy in Malawi, Lesotho, and Swaziland

There is evidence from both developed and developing countries that antiretroviral treatment significantly reduces mortality in HIV-infected children. However, in sub-Saharan Africa, numerous health system, financial, and human resource obstacles make delivering quality pediatric HIV care a challenge.

We describe the experience of the Baylor International Pediatrics AIDS Initiative in Malawi, Lesotho, and Swaziland. Despite challenges delivering pediatric treatment in these countries, mortality and clinical outcomes approaching those from developed countries are feasible. (Read the full article)




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Views of Adolescents and Parents on Pediatric Research Without the Potential for Clinical Benefit

Critics argue that pediatric research without the potential for clinical benefit treats children as mere means to benefit others. Yet, there are no data to assess whether adolescents who participate in research, or their parents, agree with this view.

Respondents felt that by participating in research the adolescents were making important contributions to help others, and the adolescents felt proud to be doing so. These findings support the view that nonbeneficial pediatric research involves a type of charitable activity. (Read the full article)




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Beliefs and Expectations of Canadian Parents Who Bring Febrile Children for Medical Care

Fever phobia is a ubiquitous problem throughout the world. As a result, fever is pharmacologically overtreated, and medical attention is frequently sought by worried parents.

Most Canadian parents fear their child’s fever, resulting in aggressive surveillance and treatment. Parents expect information about fever etiology and how to care for their ill child. Few parents expect antibiotics and satisfaction with care is high. (Read the full article)




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Medical Errors in US Pediatric Inpatients With Chronic Conditions

Iatrogenic medical errors are an important medical care issue in the United States. Errors may be particularly important in children with chronic health conditions, especially as the prevalence of chronic conditions is increasing in children.

In a nationally representative sample, we found that pediatric inpatients with chronic conditions were at a significantly higher risk for medical errors than inpatient children without chronic conditions, controlling for severity of illness, length of stay, and other potential confounders. (Read the full article)




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Incidence of Serious Injuries Due to Physical Abuse in the United States: 1997 to 2009

National data from child protective services agencies have shown a 55% decrease in the incidence of substantiated cases of physical abuse from 1992 to 2009, but no study has tracked the occurrence of serious injuries due to physical abuse.

Using national data from hospitalized children, we found a statistically significant increase in the incidence of serious injuries due to physical abuse from 1997 to 2009. These results are in sharp contrast to data from child protective services. (Read the full article)




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Status of the Pediatric Clinical Trials Enterprise: An Analysis of the US ClinicalTrials.gov Registry

There are limited data regarding the current status of the pediatric clinical trial enterprise.

Evaluation of the ClinicalTrials.gov data set allows description of the overall portfolio of clinical trials relevant to US children, which was previously not possible. (Read the full article)




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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)




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Identifying and Treating a Substandard Housing Cluster Using a Medical-Legal Partnership

Social and environmental risks related to substandard housing contribute to adverse health outcomes. Partnerships between the health care and legal systems can help families address such risks and help clinicians understand the legal context of health.

A medical-legal partnership colocated in a pediatric primary care setting identified and treated a large cluster of poor quality, substandard housing. Housing improvements were possible because of strong collaboration between clinicians, attorneys, community partners, and families. (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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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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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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Physical Activity During School in Urban Minority Kindergarten and First-Grade Students

Physical inactivity is one of the major modifiable factors contributing to the growing national epidemic of childhood obesity. There is lack of literature on pedometer-determined physical activity (PA) during the school day in US minority kindergarten and first-grade students.

This is the first study to assess school-day PA in US urban minority kindergarten and first-grade students. Higher grade level, participation in physical education class, and outdoor recess were found to be independent predictors of PA. (Read the full article)




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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)




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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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Adolescent ADHD and Adult Physical and Mental Health, Work Performance, and Financial Stress

There are a few longitudinal studies that suggest that attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in adolescence is associated with later psychiatric disorders, substance use disorders, and impaired work performance.

Adolescent ADHD is associated with a variety of internal and external stresses in adulthood. Consequently, it is essential to focus intervention efforts on adolescents with ADHD to prevent or alleviate adult difficulties in functioning. (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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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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Physical Activity and 3-Year BMI Change in Overweight and Obese Children

Effective interventions are still elusive for the large numbers of children affected by overweight/obesity. The value of targeting physical activity (PA) remains unclear because its predictive relationship with improved BMI is still surprisingly poorly quantified.

In overweight and mildly obese children presenting to primary care, 3-year changes in PA (especially the moderate-vigorous component) predicted BMI outcomes. However, the effect was small, possibly explaining the disappointing BMI outcomes of brief primary care interventions targeting PA. (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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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)




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A Novel Multispecialty Surgical Risk Score for Children

Current measures of risk stratification in the pediatric surgical literature are specialty specific. Although these risk scores have been validated as useful predictors of adverse outcomes, no measures currently exist to assess the full spectrum of pediatric surgery.

Our study generates a multispecialty mortality risk score for pediatric surgical patients that can be used by physicians to identify high-risk patients as well as provide a measure of risk adjustment for surgical outcomes. (Read the full article)




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Practical Community Photoscreening in Very Young Children

Amblyopia affects 2% to 4% of the US population and is preventable In January 2011, the US Preventive Services Task Force concluded there is insufficient evidence to support vision screening in children younger than age 3 years.

Results of the Iowa photoscreening program in 210 695 children older than 11 years suggest photoscreening reliably detects amblyogenic risk factors in children 1 to 3 years of age, and we recommend photoscreening children starting at 1 year of age. (Read the full article)




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Sedentary Behavior and Physical Activity in Youth With Recent Onset of Type 2 Diabetes

The rise in type 2 diabetes in youth is a major public health concern thought to be partially due to decreasing activity levels and increasing obesity. The role of sedentary time as a possible contributor also needs to be examined.

Measured objectively, obese youth, with or without type 2 diabetes, spend little time in moderate to vigorous physical activity. Those with type 2 diabetes, however, were significantly more sedentary than their obese counterparts, identifying an important area for future intervention efforts. (Read the full article)




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Interns' Success With Clinical Procedures in Infants After Simulation Training

Pediatric training programs use simulation for procedural skills training. Research demonstrates student satisfaction with simulation training, improved confidence, and improved skills when retested on a simulator. Few studies, however, have investigated the clinical impact of simulation education.

This is the first multicenter, randomized trial to evaluate the impact of simulation-based mastery learning on clinical procedural performance in pediatrics. A single simulation-based training session was not sufficient to improve interns’ clinical procedural performance. (Read the full article)




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Sentinel Injuries in Infants Evaluated for Child Physical Abuse

Although it is known that relatively minor abusive injuries sometimes precede more severe physical abuse, the prevalence of these previous injuries in infants evaluated for abuse was not known.

A history of bruising or oral injury in a precruising infant evaluated for abuse should heighten the level of suspicion because these injuries are common in abused infants and rare in infants found not to be abused. (Read the full article)




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Biochemical Characteristics and Risk Factors for Insulin Resistance at Different Levels of Obesity

Although the metabolic syndrome is associated with obesity, not all obese children have insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome, and nonobese children may develop these abnormalities. Associated factors have not been well described.

There was a 6.6% prevalence of nonobese children who were insulin-resistant, associated with a family history of hypertension. There was a 21.3% prevalence of obese who were not insulin-resistant, associated with a low waist circumference. (Read the full article)




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Improving Adherence to Otitis Media Guidelines With Clinical Decision Support and Physician Feedback

Expectations are high that electronic health record–based clinical decision support and performance feedback will improve adherence to guidelines by delivering relevant and actionable information to clinicians. Few studies have evaluated these assertions or examined the combined effects of decision support and feedback.

Clinical decision support customized to a patient’s history and presentation and performance feedback are both effective for improving adherence to guidelines for otitis media. However, the combination of the 2 interventions is no better than either delivered alone. (Read the full article)




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The Impact of Parental Incarceration on the Physical and Mental Health of Young Adults

Although a growing body of literature suggests links between parental incarceration and negative child outcomes, research that uses representative US samples and focuses on health outcomes is limited.

Using a nationally representative US sample, we examined the association between parental incarceration and young adult mental and physical health outcomes. Results suggest childhood exposure to parental incarceration is associated with increased risk of long-term health problems. (Read the full article)




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Chlorhexidine Cleansing of the Umbilical Cord and Separation Time: A Cluster-Randomized Trial

Chlorhexidine cleansing of the cord can reduce mortality in high-risk settings. Time to separation may increase with topical applications of chlorhexidine; 1 previous community trial quantified this increase and did not measure whether caretakers perceived the delay.

Single and multiple cleansing of the umbilical cord increases time to separation by ~50%, or an average of 2 to 2.5 days. Caretakers were able to detect this difference and expressed dissatisfaction, while still accepting the intervention. (Read the full article)




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Neuropsychological Effects of Konzo: A Neuromotor Disease Associated With Poorly Processed Cassava

Konzo is an irreversible sudden-onset upper-motor neuron disorder affecting children dependent on bitter cassava for food. The neuroepidemiology of konzo is well characterized. Children subsisting on poorly processed bitter cassava without adequate dietary sulfur-based amino acids are especially at risk.

We found a pervasive subclinical neurocognitive effect in children with konzo. This study provides the first evidence we are aware of that a motor proficiency examination can effectively characterize konzo severity. (Read the full article)