tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

Modifying Media Content for Preschool Children: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Children have been shown to imitate behaviors they see on screen.

Modifying what children watch can improve their observed behavior. (Read the full article)




tri

Retrospective Evaluation of a New Neonatal Trigger Score

Trigger scores and early warning systems provide an objective measure of a patient’s condition, allowing earlier recognition of severe illness and adaptation of care. Such scores are established in adult and pediatric populations but remain unevaluated and rarely used in neonates.

This newly designed Neonatal Trigger Score provides an objective adjunct to multidisciplinary clinical assessment in detecting unwell neonates. It is more sensitive and specific than previously validated pediatric early warning system scores. (Read the full article)




tri

Chest Compression Quality Over Time in Pediatric Resuscitations

Rapid initiation of effective chest compressions (CCs) for patients in cardiac arrest improves outcomes, yet even trained rescuers fail to provide consistently effective CCs. Pediatric data on CC quality and objective measures of CC work are limited.

CC quality deteriorates similarly in pediatric and adult models, and overall work done to compress the pediatric chest is similar to that in adults. Power output during CC performance is analogous to that generated during intense exercise such as running. (Read the full article)




tri

Computer-Generated Reminders and Quality of Pediatric HIV Care in a Resource-Limited Setting

Of more than 2 million children infected with HIV, almost 90% live in resource-limited settings where pediatric HIV care is often suboptimal. Implementing electronic health records with computerized decision support offers a potential tool for improving care.

This randomized, controlled trial demonstrates that computer-generated clinical reminders can significantly improve clinician compliance with HIV care guidelines for children in a resource-limited setting. This intervention is scalable as developing countries implement electronic health record systems. (Read the full article)




tri

Chronic Acetaminophen Exposure in Pediatric Acute Liver Failure

Children with acute liver failure due to a single-dose acetaminophen exposure have a characteristic liver biochemistry profile of low conjugated bilirubin and high alanine aminotransferase, which is associated with a favorable clinical outcome when treated with N-acetylcysteine.

Children with acute liver failure associated with chronic acetaminophen exposure also have a similar liver biochemistry profile, but for unknown reasons, they have a poorer clinical outcome than patients with single-dose acetaminophen exposure. (Read the full article)




tri

Triglyceride to HDL-C Ratio and Increased Arterial Stiffness in Children, Adolescents, and Young Adults

The triglyceride to high-density lipoprotein cholesterol ratio (TG/HDL-C) estimates atherogenic small, dense low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and predicts arterial stiffness and hard cardiovascular events in adults. Whether TG/HDL-C predicts intermediate noninvasive end points (arterial stiffness) in youth is not known.

This study is the first to document stiffer vessels in youth with higher cardiovascular risk factor–adjusted TG/HDL-C, with the effect especially strong in obese subjects. Evaluating TG/HDL-C may be helpful in identifying young subjects at risk for obesity-related atherosclerosis. (Read the full article)




tri

A Parent-Focused Intervention to Reduce Infant Obesity Risk Behaviors: A Randomized Trial

While obesity-promoting eating, sedentary and physical activity behaviors, and increased prevalence of adiposity are evident from early life, few high-quality studies have evaluated interventions that seek to influence the development of these behaviors in very early childhood.

This study highlights the receptivity of first-time parents to interventions focused on their new infant’s eating and active play and provides evidence of effectiveness on some obesity-promoting behaviors in very early childhood. (Read the full article)




tri

Heliox Therapy in Bronchiolitis: Phase III Multicenter Double-Blind Randomized Controlled Trial

Bronchiolitis, a leading cause of infant hospitalization, has few proven treatments. A few small studies have reported the beneficial effects of a mixture of 21% oxygen + 79% helium (Heliox). The 2010 Cochrane Review concluded that additional large randomized controlled trials were needed to determine the therapeutic role of Heliox in bronchiolitis.

The Bronchiolitis Randomized Controlled Trial Emergency-Assisted Therapy with Heliox—An Evaluation (BREATHE) trial is the largest multicenter randomized controlled trial to date to investigate the efficacy of Heliox in acute bronchiolitis. The delivery method for Heliox therapy was found to be crucial to its efficacy. (Read the full article)




tri

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)




tri

Pacifier Restriction and Exclusive Breastfeeding

Pacifiers may interfere with breastfeeding and thus are discouraged until 3 to 4 weeks of life, when they are recommended for sudden infant death syndrome risk reduction. Hospitals are restricting pacifier distribution as part of the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative.

We describe a temporal association between reduced exclusive breastfeeding and pacifier restriction. This observation encourages research on breastfeeding promotion and the effects of pacifiers and pacifier restriction on breastfeeding. (Read the full article)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

Parental Perceptions of Forgoing Artificial Nutrition and Hydration During End-of-Life Care

Forgoing artificial nutrition and hydration in children at the end of life is an acceptable practice under some circumstances. However, there is a paucity of pediatric evidence to guide health care providers’ and parents’ decision-making around this practice.

This study describes experiences of parents whose children died after forgoing artificial nutrition and hydration. All parents were satisfied with their decision and believed their child’s death was peaceful. This study adds to the limited evidence to guide clinical practice. (Read the full article)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

The RIVUR Trial: Profile and Baseline Clinical Associations of Children With Vesicoureteral Reflux

The ideal management of children with vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) remains a source of debate. There is little evidence to support many of the current management practices for children with VUR who have had 1 or 2 urinary tract infections.

Baseline associations, including bladder and bowel dysfunction and imaging studies, from the largest randomized, controlled trial conducted to date aimed at assessing the value of antimicrobial prophylaxis in children with urinary tract infection and VUR are presented. (Read the full article)




tri

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)




tri

A Randomized Trial of Exothermic Mattresses for Preterm Newborns in Polyethylene Bags

Wrapping very preterm newborns in polyethylene bags in the delivery room reduces hypothermia on admission to the NICU, but many infants remain cold despite their use. Placing polyethylene-wrapped infants on exothermic mattresses may reduce hypothermia but increase hyperthermia.

Placing polyethylene-wrapped very preterm infants on exothermic mattresses in the delivery room results in more infants with abnormal temperature and more hyperthermia on admission to the NICU. (Read the full article)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

Obstetric and Neonatal Care Practices for Infants 501 to 1500 g From 2000 to 2009

Among infants with birth weights of 501 to 1500 g born between 2000 and 2009, mortality and major morbidities among survivors declined.

Obstetrical and neonatal care practices for infants 501 to 1500 g changed significantly from 2000 and 2009, particularly decreased conventional ventilation and use of steroids for chronic lung disease and increased nasal continuous positive airway pressure and surfactant treatment after delivery. (Read the full article)




tri

Randomized Controlled Trial of a Car Safety Seat Insert to Reduce Hypoxia in Term Infants

Brief periods of low oxygen saturation are common in infants while restrained in car safety seats. There is some evidence that an insert that allows the infant head to rest in a neutral position in sleep may reduce hypoxic episodes.

This randomized controlled study shows that the insert reduced numbers of obstructive apneas and the severity of desaturation events but did not significantly reduce the overall rate of moderate desaturations. (Read the full article)




tri

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)




tri

Mask Versus Nasal Tube for Stabilization of Preterm Infants at Birth: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Effective ventilation is fundamental to successful resuscitation of newborns, but face mask leak and airway obstruction are common during manual positive-pressure ventilation in the delivery room, which may compromise resuscitation.

Compared with a soft, round silicone face mask, using a nasal tube to provide respiratory support in the delivery room does not reduce the rate of intubation but may be a suitable alternative with equivocal efficacy. (Read the full article)




tri

A Randomized Trial of Nasal Prong or Face Mask for Respiratory Support for Preterm Newborns

Respiratory support is commonly given to newborn infants via a face mask in the delivery room. Respiratory support given to preterm infants via a single nasal prong may be more effective.

Compared with a face mask, using a single nasal prong to deliver respiratory support to preterm newborns did not result in less intubation and ventilation in the delivery room. (Read the full article)




tri

Two-Year Outcomes of a Randomized Controlled Trial of Inhaled Nitric Oxide in Premature Infants

Bronchopulmonary dysplasia is associated with increased long-term neurodevelopmental and respiratory morbidity. Inhaled nitric oxide given to reduce morbidity in very preterm infants does not reduce the prevalence of bronchopulmonary dysplasia and has uncertain effects on long-term outcome.

Inhaled nitric oxide (5 ppm) given early in the course of respiratory illness in infants born before 29 weeks of gestation is not associated with changes in developmental or respiratory outcomes at 2 years of age corrected for prematurity. (Read the full article)




tri

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)




tri

Screening Strategies for Hip Dysplasia: Long-term Outcome of a Randomized Controlled Trial

Only 2 randomized controlled trials have addressed effects of ultrasound screening for developmental hip dysplasia. Both concluded that adding universal or selective ultrasound to routine clinical examination gave a nonsignificant reduction in rates of late presenting cases, but higher treatment rates.

This maturity review assesses long-term outcome of one of these trials. Rates of radiographic findings indicating acetabular dysplasia and degenerative change were similar across the 3 screening groups in young adulthood. Increased treatment rates were not associated with avascular necrosis. (Read the full article)




tri

Probiotic Administration in Early Life, Atopy, and Asthma: A Meta-analysis of Clinical Trials

The intestinal microbiome may play a role in immune system maturation, and it has been postulated that early-life probiotic administration may reduce the risk of allergies and asthma in childhood. To date, however, results from clinical trials have been inconsistent.

In this meta-analysis, administration of probiotics in early life may reduce total immunoglobulin E level and protect against atopic sensitization but do not seem to protect against asthma/wheezing. Future trials should carefully select probiotic strains and include longer follow-up. (Read the full article)




tri

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)




tri

Randomized Trial of Plastic Bags to Prevent Term Neonatal Hypothermia in a Resource-Poor Setting

Term neonates in resource-poor settings frequently develop hypothermia. Plastic bags or wraps are a low-cost intervention for the prevention of hypothermia in preterm and low birth weight infants that may also be effective in term infants.

For term neonates born in a resource-poor health facility, placement in a plastic bag at birth can reduce the incidence of hypothermia at 1 hour after birth. (Read the full article)




tri

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)




tri

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)




tri

Prevention of Traumatic Stress in Mothers With Preterm Infants: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Parents of premature infants are susceptible to developing trauma symptoms related to their NICU experience. There are no current well-established interventions that simultaneously address both parental trauma as well as redefinition of the parenting experience.

A brief, cost-effective, and feasible manualized intervention for NICU parents was effective in reducing both parental trauma and depression. Implementation of this intervention in the NICU setting has the potential to improve maternal well-being and infant outcomes. (Read the full article)




tri

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)