dia

Racial Differences in Antibiotic Prescribing by Primary Care Pediatricians

Racial disparities in health care have been reported in multiple settings, but not thoroughly examined at the clinician level. The frequent occurrence of respiratory tract infections allows the evaluation of differences in the management of children seen by the same clinician.

Racial differences in the management of common pediatric infections occur among children treated by the same clinician. Given persistent concerns about nonjudicious antibiotic use, examining racial differences may inform our understanding of prescribing practices and identify opportunities for intervention. (Read the full article)




dia

Quality of Reporting and Evidence in American Academy of Pediatrics Guidelines

In the only previous cross-sectional study, the quality of pediatric guidelines was rated low on the AGREE-II (Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation II) scale. The levels of evidence used in pediatric clinical practice guidelines have never been described.

American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines score low on the AGREE-II scale. Approximately one-quarter of recommendations are based on expert opinion or no reference. These findings support the adoption of standards for guideline development and research targeted toward unsupported recommendations. (Read the full article)




dia

Transition From Pediatric to Adult Care for Youth Diagnosed With Type 1 Diabetes in Adolescence

Most children with type 1 diabetes get care from pediatric-trained providers, and must transfer care to adult providers once in adulthood. The timing of this change in providers and its relationship to glycemic control is not well understood.

In this cohort, the estimated median age to transition to adult care was 20.1 years and 77% had left pediatric care by age 21. Leaving pediatric care was associated with a 2.5-fold increase in odds of having poor glycemic control. (Read the full article)




dia

Guided Self-Help for the Treatment of Pediatric Obesity

Clinic-based weight control programs for pediatric obesity are time and personnel intensive and not accessible to a large proportion of the population.

This is the first study to reveal the efficacy of a low-intensity, 5-month, guided self-help treatment of childhood obesity with effects on the target child’s weight immediately posttreatment and 6 months later. (Read the full article)




dia

Characteristics of Screen Media Use Associated With Higher BMI in Young Adolescents

Rates of screen media use have risen in parallel with rates of obesity among young people. Identifying the specific characteristics of media use that are associated with obesity can help elucidate the explanatory processes and inform effective interventions.

This study examines the associations between BMI and characteristics of media use including the type of device, duration of use, and attention to the medium. The more that participants paid primary attention to television, the higher their BMI. (Read the full article)




dia

Patterns of Inpatient Care for Newly Diagnosed Immune Thrombocytopenia in US Children's Hospitals

Clinically significant bleeding in pediatric immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) is rare. Evidence-based guidelines for the management of pediatric ITP recommend that patients with mild or no bleeding be followed with observation alone.

Many pediatric patients with newly diagnosed ITP continue to be managed in the inpatient setting. Bleeding events are rare in this setting. Although geographic variability exists, intravenous immunoglobulin is the most commonly used inpatient ITP treatment in the United States. (Read the full article)




dia

Benefits of Universal Gloving on Hospital-Acquired Infections in Acute Care Pediatric Units

Health care–associated infections cause considerable morbidity and mortality among hospitalized children. Simple barrier precautions such as universal gloving of health care workers’ hands may reduce transmission of infectious agents between patients.

Mandatory use of gloves during respiratory syncytial virus season in pediatric units prevented other health care–associated infections such as central line–associated bloodstream infections, particularly in intensive care settings. These secondary benefits suggest continuing mandatory gloving throughout the year. (Read the full article)




dia

Association of Procalcitonin With Acute Pyelonephritis and Renal Scars in Pediatric UTI

Prompt, high-quality diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis and later identification of children with scarring are important to prevent future complications. Examination by dimercaptosuccinic acid scan is the current clinical gold standard but is not routinely performed.

Procalcitonin demonstrated a more robust predictive ability, compared with C-reactive protein or white blood cell count, to selectively identify both children who had acute pyelonephritis during the early stage of urinary tract infections, as well as those with late scarring. (Read the full article)




dia

Analysis of Pediatric Clinical Drug Trials for Neuropsychiatric Conditions

Neuropsychiatric conditions comprise a substantial and growing disease burden among children. Pharmacotherapy represents an important treatment option for these conditions, although most drugs are not approved for use in children.

Very few drug trials studying neuropsychiatric conditions focus on children. Furthermore, these trials examine and provide pediatric evidence for only a fraction of all available drugs in the treatment of common neuropsychiatric conditions. (Read the full article)




dia

Honey Pacifier Use Among an Indigent Pediatric Population

Botulinum spores are ubiquitous, found in the soil of most countries worldwide, and also in honey. It is well established that ingestion of honey by children aged <1 year can lead to infant botulism.

This study examines the prevalence of honey pacifier use among a pediatric population aged <1 year. We also assessed parental knowledge of the dangers of giving honey to children in this age group. (Read the full article)




dia

Pediatric Hydrocarbon-Related Injuries in the United States: 2000-2009

Hydrocarbons are dangerous household products commonly found in homes with young children. Unintentional ingestion continues to be a problem despite existing prevention efforts. Aspiration is often associated with ingestion of hydrocarbons by children.

The National Poison Database System and National Electronic Injury Surveillance System data sets demonstrate similar rates of hydrocarbon-related injuries in children. Rates of hydrocarbon exposure were highest in summer. Gasoline was the product most associated with hydrocarbon injuries. (Read the full article)




dia

Malpractice Risk Among US Pediatricians

Despite evidence on how malpractice risk varies according to physician specialty, there is growing but still limited evidence about malpractice among US pediatricians. The frequency of malpractice claims against pediatricians is low among specialties, but payments are among the highest.

This study describes malpractice risk among US pediatricians using data from a nationwide liability insurer covering 1630 pediatricians from 1991 to 2005. It compares pediatric malpractice experience with other specialties and studies patient factors associated with pediatric malpractice claims. (Read the full article)




dia

Accuracy of Point-of-Care Ultrasound for Diagnosis of Skull Fractures in Children

Head injuries and concern for skull fracture are common in pediatrics. Point-of-care ultrasound is an imaging tool that can be used to diagnose fractures. However, there are scant data regarding the accuracy of point-of-care ultrasound in skull fracture diagnosis.

Clinicians with focused point-of-care ultrasound training are able to diagnose skull fractures in children with high specificity. Ultrasound may be valuable to diagnose skull fractures in children at the point of care. (Read the full article)




dia

Pediatric Organ Donation and Transplantation

The gap between organ availability and need continues to grow, and infants are among the most vulnerable candidates on the wait-list. The scarcity of donor organs has led the transplant community to look for alternative donor sources.

Children are receiving more grafts from pediatric donors, but they also continue to receive adult donor grafts. Donation after circulatory determination of death increases organ availability. Allocation changes have also helped increase pediatric transplantation and decrease wait-list deaths. (Read the full article)




dia

Race and Acute Abdominal Pain in a Pediatric Emergency Department

Abdominal pain is a frequent complaint in pediatric emergency departments, with a broad differential diagnosis. The impact of demographic and clinical characteristics of patients on the evaluation and management of these children is not well known.

The most common cause of abdominal pain is constipation, which rarely requires hospital admission. Demographic factors, in particular race, do not seem to affect evaluation and management. (Read the full article)




dia

General Pediatric Attending Physicians' and Residents' Knowledge of Inpatient Hospital Finances

Physicians have little knowledge of health care costs and charges. Studies suggest that education and awareness of hospital finances can decrease unnecessary utilization of resources. Little is known about pediatricians’ awareness of the economics of health care delivery in the inpatient setting.

Both general pediatric attending physicians and trainees acknowledged a limited understanding of hospital finances, and they demonstrated a lack of awareness of costs, charges, and reimbursements for inpatient care. (Read the full article)




dia

Adult Prescription Drug Use and Pediatric Medication Exposures and Poisonings

Medication ingestions are increasing among children despite a number of public health interventions. The majority of these poisonings are related to prescription as opposed to over-the-counter medications.

Rising rates of poisonings in children are strongly correlated with rising use of hypoglycemics, antihyperlipidemics, β-blockers, and opioids among adults. These events are associated with considerable health care utilization, both in terms of emergency department visits and hospital admissions. (Read the full article)




dia

Short-Course Prophylactic Zinc Supplementation for Diarrhea Morbidity in Infants of 6 to 11 Months

Randomized controlled trials have shown that zinc supplementation during diarrhea substantially reduces the incidence and severity. However, the effect of short-course prophylactic zinc supplementation has been observed only in children >12 months of age.

The current study was able to show that short-course prophylactic zinc supplementation significantly reduced diarrhea morbidity in apparently healthy infants of 6 to 11 months even after 5 months of follow-up. (Read the full article)




dia

Association of Fitness With Vascular Intima-Media Thickness and Elasticity in Adolescence

Atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases are rooted in childhood. Vascular intima-media thickness (IMT) and elasticity are early surrogate markers of atherosclerosis. In adults, cardiorespiratory fitness is associated with enhanced arterial elasticity and decreased IMT.

Fitness was favorably associated with aortic IMT and elasticity in adolescents. The association was independent of several cardiometabolic risk factors. In fit adolescents, the increase in IMT during the preceding 6 years was smaller compared with low-fit peers. (Read the full article)




dia

Access to Digital Technology Among Families Coming to Urban Pediatric Primary Care Clinics

Internet, smartphones, and online social media offer new platforms for health promotion and disease management. Few studies have evaluated the use of digital technology among families receiving care in an urban pediatric primary care setting.

Caregivers in an urban pediatric primary care setting have access to and frequently use the Internet, smartphones, and online social media. These technologies may help reach a traditionally hard-to-reach population. (Read the full article)




dia

Simplified Definitions of Elevated Pediatric Blood Pressure and High Adult Arterial Stiffness

Elevated blood pressure (BP) has long-term influence on the atherosclerotic process. The relative predictive ability of the standard BP definition endorsed by the National High Blood Pressure Education Program and the recently proposed 2 simplified definitions has not been studied.

Simplified pediatric BP tables predict risk of high adult arterial stiffness as well as the complex table does. These simple screening tools could be used for identifying pediatric subjects at risk and for intervening to improve adult cardiovascular outcomes. (Read the full article)




dia

Childhood Obesity: Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices of European Pediatric Care Providers

Health care professionals face problems managing obesity and often fail to follow guidelines for its management in practice. Only a few single-country reports are available describing delivery of primary care to children with obesity.

Nearly all primary pediatric care providers from 4 European countries recognize the importance of obesity in pediatric practice, but only half use BMI clinically, and many lack the confidence and the infrastructure needed for providing care to patients with obesity. (Read the full article)




dia

Implementation of a Parental Tobacco Control Intervention in Pediatric Practice

Young adult smokers frequently encounter the health care system as parents coming in for their child’s medical visit. Child health care clinicians, however, do not typically provide smoking cessation assistance to parents.

This national cluster-randomized trial demonstrates that a tobacco dependence intervention for parents can be effectively implemented in routine pediatric outpatient practice. (Read the full article)




dia

CT Scan Utilization Patterns in Pediatric Patients With Recurrent Headache

Although unnecessary for children with headache and normal history, computed tomography (CT) scans are widely used. Fewer than 1% of pediatric brain abnormalities present with headache as the only symptom. Furthermore, repeated CT scans may increase lifetime risk of cancer.

CT scans continue to be used to diagnose isolated pediatric headaches despite existing practice parameters. Although emergency department visits were correlated with greater likelihood of CT scan use, these scans were widely used across a variety of clinical settings. (Read the full article)




dia

Racial and Ethnic Disparities in ADHD Diagnosis From Kindergarten to Eighth Grade

Minority children are less likely than white children to be diagnosed and treated with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. However, diagnosis patterns over time in early and middle childhood and whether confounding factors explain these disparities are not currently well understood.

Racial/ethnic disparities in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder diagnosis occur by kindergarten and continue until eighth grade. Racial/ethnic disparities among diagnosed children in medication use occur in both fifth and eighth grades. These disparities are not attributable to confounding factors. (Read the full article)




dia

Changes in Language Services Use by US Pediatricians

Language barriers adversely affect health care access, utilization, outcomes, and patient safety. Trained formal interpreters can improve care quality and safety, but many patients and families with limited English proficiency do not receive appropriate language services during health care encounters.

Despite continued growth of the US population with limited English proficiency, federal language use standards, and enhanced education about appropriate use of language services, there has been only modest improvement over time in pediatricians’ use of language services. (Read the full article)




dia

Variation in Emergency Department Diagnostic Testing and Disposition Outcomes in Pneumonia

There is wide variation in testing and treatment of children hospitalized with pneumonia. Limited data are available on diagnostic testing patterns and the association of test utilization with disposition outcomes for children with pneumonia evaluated in the emergency department (ED).

Significant variation exists in testing for pediatric pneumonia. EDs that use more testing have higher hospitalization rates. However, ED revisit rates were not significantly different between high- and low-utilizing EDs, suggesting an opportunity to reduce testing without negatively affecting outcomes. (Read the full article)




dia

Use of Ecallantide in Pediatric Hereditary Angioedema

Patients with hereditary angioedema (HAE) have recurrent episodes of painful swelling. Several new therapies to prevent and treat HAE attacks are approved by the Food and Drug Administration, but their safety and efficacy in children are largely unknown.

Ecallantide appears effective for treatment of HAE attacks in pediatric patients age 10 to 17 years with an acceptable safety profile. It represents a potential treatment option for adolescents with HAE. (Read the full article)




dia

Variation in Resource Use and Readmission for Diabetic Ketoacidosis in Children's Hospitals

Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) is a short-term complication of type 1 diabetes and is a major cause of preventable hospitalization in children. Hospital resource utilization and readmission rates for DKA across the US are not known.

Readmission for DKA within a year of hospitalization is common, accounting for one-fifth of all DKA admissions. Resource use, hospital length of stay, and readmission rates vary widely across major US children’s hospitals, even after adjusting for hospital differences in patients. (Read the full article)




dia

Diaper Need and Its Impact on Child Health

Although studies have examined family socioeconomic status as income and educational and employment status, emerging research suggests indicators of material hardship, such as diaper need, are increasingly important to child health. Diaper need has not been examined in the scientific literature.

This study quantifies diaper need, proposes a method to measure diaper need, and explores psychosocial and demographic variables associated with diaper need in a large sample of low-income families. (Read the full article)




dia

Use of a Computerized Decision Aid for ADHD Diagnosis: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Despite the existence of authoritative guidelines to assist primary care physicians in identifying and managing attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), ample evidence demonstrates that they continue to diagnose and treat this disorder suboptimally.

The introduction of a clinical decision support module resulted in higher quality of care with respect to ADHD diagnosis including a prospect for higher quality of ADHD management in children. (Read the full article)




dia

Pediatrician Identification of Latino Children at Risk for Autism Spectrum Disorder

Latino children are diagnosed with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) less often and later than white children. Primary care pediatricians (PCPs) may play an important role in early ASD identification for Latinos.

PCPs find it more difficult to assess for ASDs in Latinos with Spanish primary language, view Latino parents as less knowledgeable about ASDs, and experience frequent barriers to ASD diagnosis in Latino patients. Many PCPs do not offer recommended screenings in Spanish. (Read the full article)




dia

Measuring Hospital Quality Using Pediatric Readmission and Revisit Rates

Readmissions have been identified as a priority area for pediatric inpatient quality measurement nationally. However, it is unknown whether readmission rates vary meaningfully across hospitals and how many hospitals would be identified as high- or low-performers.

Only a few hospitals that care for children are high- or low-performers when their condition-specific revisit rates are compared with average rates across hospitals. This limits the usefulness of condition-specific readmission or revisit measures in pediatric quality measurement. (Read the full article)




dia

Pulmonary Embolism in the Pediatric Emergency Department

Pulmonary embolism (PE) in the pediatric population is rare but does occur and is underrecognized. In adult emergency medicine, there are validated clinical decision rules derived to provide reliable and reproducible means of determining pretest probability of PE.

There are known risk factors, signs, and symptoms that should raise the clinician’s suspicion of pulmonary embolism, even in the pediatric population. (Read the full article)




dia

Pediatric Mortality in Males Versus Females in the United States, 1999-2008

Adult males are known to have a greater overall likelihood of death than female adults. Among children, excess male mortality is known for specific conditions but not as a general phenomenon.

Males are more likely to die during childhood and adolescence than their female peers from not only injuries but also from a wide variety of medical conditions, suggesting the existence of either a female robustness factor or a male vulnerability factor. (Read the full article)




dia

Clinical Characteristics of Pediatric Myasthenia: A Surveillance Study

Pediatric myasthenia encompasses a group of rare and underdiagnosed conditions affecting the neuromuscular junction. Symptoms include fluctuating skeletal muscle weakness, which can progress to respiratory failure if left untreated. The autoimmune form of this condition, in particular, is treatable.

This study describes the incidence, clinical features, diagnostic testing, and treatment trends of pediatric myasthenia in Canada, which have not been previously reported in the literature. (Read the full article)




dia

Validity of Different Pediatric Early Warning Scores in the Emergency Department

Pediatric early warning scores (PEWS) for hospital inpatients have been developed to identify patients at risk for deterioration. Beyond triage, similar systems that identify ill patients and predict requirements for a higher level of care are needed in the emergency department.

The validity of the different PEWS in pediatric emergency care patients has never been evaluated. This study showed that PEWS are capable of detecting children in need of ICU admission. (Read the full article)




dia

Vitamin D3 Supplementation and Childhood Diarrhea: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Hypovitaminosis D is common among children. Although there is prolific biochemical literature linking vitamin D to enteric immunologic function, there is a paucity of prospective data exploring the role of supplementation in prevention of diarrheal illnesses.

In a high-risk population, quarterly supplementation with 100 000 IU of vitamin D3 did not reduce the risk for first or recurrent diarrheal illnesses in a population of children aged 1 to 29 months in a low-income inner city setting. (Read the full article)




dia

Approval and Perceived Impact of Duty Hour Regulations: Survey of Pediatric Program Directors

Several studies have been published evaluating the impact of 2011 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education duty hour regulations. Although resident quality of life may be improved, it appears that resident education and patient care may be worse.

This is the first study to evaluate pediatric program director approval of 2011 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Common Program Requirements and the perceived impact of the regulations on patient care, resident education, and quality of life. (Read the full article)




dia

End-Stage Kidney Disease After Pediatric Nonrenal Solid Organ Transplantation

End-stage kidney disease (ESKD) causes significant morbidity and mortality after solid organ transplantation. Adults commonly develop advanced kidney disease, particularly after liver and intestinal transplantation. Previous pediatric studies have not compared the relative incidence of ESKD by organ type.

This national cohort study shows the highest risk of ESKD among pediatric lung and intestinal transplant recipients, reflecting unique organ-specific causes of kidney injury. Our findings have implications for screening for and treating early kidney disease in transplant recipients. (Read the full article)




dia

Cognitive Behavior Therapy for Pediatric Functional Abdominal Pain: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Pediatric functional abdominal pain is common and costly. Cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) is a promising treatment for these complaints, but solid evidence for its effectiveness is lacking.

This randomized controlled trial shows that CBT reduces abdominal pain in 60% of children 1 year after treatment. Six sessions of CBT delivered by trained master’s students in psychology were equally effective as 6 visits to an experienced pediatrician. (Read the full article)




dia

Pediatrician-led Motivational Interviewing to Treat Overweight Children: An RCT

Obesity and overweight can seriously affect health outcomes. Many obesity prevention interventions have been proposed, but few have been effective. Motivational interviewing in primary care seems promising, but results in BMI control are controversial and require further investigation.

This is the first study to demonstrate the effectiveness of pediatrician-led motivational interviewing for BMI control in overweight children aged 4 to 7 years. Nevertheless, no effect was observed in boys or when the mother’s education level was low. (Read the full article)




dia

Health Outcomes Associated With Transition From Pediatric to Adult Cystic Fibrosis Care

Transition from pediatric to adult care is often reported to be unsuccessful. Little evidential research has examined the actual proportion of youth in pediatric versus adult care or impact on health status outcomes after transferring from pediatric to adult care.

Our article extends the literature by providing health transition outcome data, something that has been recognized as a critical gap to developing evidence-based programming and health care transition policy. (Read the full article)




dia

Influenza-Associated Pediatric Deaths in the United States, 2004-2012

Influenza-associated deaths in children occur every year among children of all ages. Young children and those with high-risk medical conditions are at higher risk of influenza-related complications.

This study describes influenza-associated pediatric deaths over 8 influenza seasons in the United States and compares characteristics of deaths in children with high-risk medical conditions with those in children without high-risk medical conditions. (Read the full article)




dia

Hypospadias and Residential Proximity to Pesticide Applications

Some studies suggest a contribution of environmental exposures such as pesticides to risk of hypospadias, whereas others do not. One of the challenges that has limited current knowledge is the lack of detailed exposure data.

This study examined a more detailed assessment of exposure to pesticides than previous studies. Exposure assignments, whether to groups of chemicals, specific chemicals, or a composite involving a number of chemicals, showed a general lack of association with hypospadias. (Read the full article)




dia

Pediatric Palliative Care Programs in Children's Hospitals: A Cross-Sectional National Survey

Over the past 10 years, children’s hospitals increasingly have established pediatric palliative care programs, but little is known about the prevalence of these programs or their geographic distribution, range of services offered, staff composition, or funding.

Among the 162 hospitals that responded to this survey (71.7% response rate), 69% have a pediatric palliative care program, with substantial variation across programs in terms of how they are staffed and funded and what services they provide. (Read the full article)




dia

Media Use and Sleep Among Boys With Autism Spectrum Disorder, ADHD, or Typical Development

Children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) or attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are at increased risk for sleep disturbances and excessive media use. However, the relationship between media use and sleep in children with ASD or ADHD has not been studied.

In-room access to screen-based media and video game hours were associated with less sleep among boys with ASD. The relationships between media use and sleep were much more pronounced among boys with ASD than among boys with ADHD or typical development. (Read the full article)




dia

Pediatricians' Involvement in Community Child Health From 2004 to 2010

Although community engagement is considered an important professional role of physicians, there has been declining involvement of pediatricians in community child health activities. Whether enhanced training is associated with increased involvement is unclear.

This study reveals a continued decline in pediatricians’ involvement in community child health activities and is the first national study to identify a link between formal training and pediatricians’ community involvement. (Read the full article)




dia

Community Household Income and Resource Utilization for Common Inpatient Pediatric Conditions

Socioeconomic status is known to influence health and health care utilization, but few studies have explored the relationship between community-level income and inpatient resource utilization for children.

In a large sample of pediatric hospitalizations, lower community-level household income is associated with higher inpatient costs of care for common conditions. These findings highlight the need to consider socioeconomic status in health care system design and reimbursement. (Read the full article)




dia

Frequency and Variety of Inpatient Pediatric Surgical Procedures in the United States

Pediatric surgery is performed in a variety of hospital types. General surgeons as well as fellowship-trained pediatric surgeons and surgical subspecialists perform inpatient operative procedures on infants and children. The distribution of procedures between specialists is not well characterized.

This study describes the demographics of pediatric surgery: the hospital type, the surgical procedures, and the quantity of inpatient pediatric surgery in the U.S. today. By implication, the data has much to inform health care about hospital and practitioner workforce. (Read the full article)