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Association of National Guidelines With Tonsillectomy Perioperative Care and Outcomes

Tonsillectomy guidelines make evidence-based recommendations for the perioperative use of dexamethasone, no routine use of antibiotics, and discharge education of families and for surgeons to monitor bleeding complication rates. The impact of the guidelines on processes and outcomes is unknown.

The guidelines were associated with improvement in perioperative care processes but no improvement in outcomes. Perioperative dexamethasone use increased slightly, and antibiotic use decreased substantially. Bleeding rates were stable, but revisit rates for complications increased because of revisits for pain. (Read the full article)




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Effects of Physician-Based Preventive Oral Health Services on Dental Caries

The US Preventive Services Task Force recommends primary care clinicians apply fluoride varnish to the teeth of all young children, but no studies have examined the effect of comprehensive preventive oral health services on children’s clinical oral health status.

Comprehensive preventive oral health services delivered by primary care clinicians can help improve the oral health of Medicaid-enrolled children, but more work is needed to link medical and dental offices to ensure the continuity of dental care for these children. (Read the full article)




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Statewide Medicaid Enhanced Prenatal Care Programs and Infant Mortality

Medicaid made substantial investments in enhanced prenatal and postnatal care programs to address maternal and infant health, including infant mortality. Evaluations of population-based programs are few, and although some have reported reductions in infant mortality, they have methodological limitations.

A population-based home visitation program can be a successful approach to reduce infant mortality. The reduced risk of infant death is consistent with previous findings on the effects of the program on health care utilization and birth outcomes. (Read the full article)




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Integrating a Parenting Intervention With Routine Primary Health Care: A Cluster Randomized Trial

More than 200 million children <5 years are not reaching their developmental potential. Lack of stimulating caregiving is a major cause, and effective scalable interventions are needed. Integrating parenting with health services has been recommended, but there are few evaluations.

An innovative parenting intervention can be delivered at routine visits for primary health care, with benefits to child cognitive development and parenting knowledge. This approach using films, discussion, and practice has the potential for delivery at scale. (Read the full article)




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Trends in Hospitalization for Pediatric Pulmonary Hypertension

Although existing analyses of inpatient pediatric pulmonary hypertension (PH) care have established an association with substantial morbidity and mortality, these investigations have been limited to small single-institution series or focused registries representative of selected patient subgroups.

This study provides the first contemporary, national trend analysis of inpatient care for children with PH. Pediatric PH is associated with a rapidly increasing number of hospital discharges and magnitude of resource utilization, and the makeup of this population is changing. (Read the full article)




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Identifying Priorities for Mental Health Interventions in War-Affected Youth: A Longitudinal Study

War-affected youth often suffer from multiple co-occurring mental health problems. The relationship of these conditions to later mental health has yet to be thoroughly investigated. There is a need to explore potential targets for mental health interventions.

After controlling for preexisting conditions and contemporary confounders, internalizing (depression and anxiety) remained the major predictor of future mental health symptoms (internalizing symptoms, prosocial attitudes/behaviors, and posttraumatic stress symptoms). Interventions targeting internalizing in war-affected youth hold promise. (Read the full article)




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Late Diagnosis of Coarctation Despite Prenatal Ultrasound and Postnatal Pulse Oximetry

Neonatal coarctation of the aorta (CoA) is a life-threatening cardiac defect, but because symptoms may be lacking initially, newborns with this defect are frequently discharged from the hospital undiagnosed. Delayed diagnosis of CoA is associated with increased morbidity and mortality.

This population-based study analyzes the contribution of prenatal ultrasound and postnatal pulse oximetry screening to the timely diagnosis of neonatal CoA. Both screening methods had low sensitivity for CoA. Nearly half of all newborns with isolated CoA were discharged undiagnosed. (Read the full article)




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Use of Temporary Names for Newborns and Associated Risks

Because there can be no delay in providing newborns with identification wristbands, some hospitals assign newborns temporary first names such as Babyboy or Babygirl. These nondistinct naming conventions result in a large number of patients with similar identifiers in NICUs.

We performed an intervention study to determine if assigning distinct first names at birth would result in a reduction in wrong-patient errors. We used the Retract-and-Reorder tool, an established, automated tool to detect the outcome measure of wrong-patient electronic orders. (Read the full article)




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Maternal Consequences of the Detection of Fragile X Carriers in Newborn Screening

Parents generally adapt well to newborn screening results, but reactions to carrier status for X-linked conditions are unknown.

Results suggest that detection and disclosure of FMR1 newborn carrier status may not result in significant adverse events for mothers. (Read the full article)




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Recognizing Differences in Hospital Quality Performance for Pediatric Inpatient Care

Hospital quality-of-care measures are publicly reported to inform consumer choice and stimulate quality improvement. The number of hospitals and states with a sufficient number of pediatric hospital discharges to detect worse-than-average pediatric inpatient care quality remains unknown.

Most children are admitted to hospitals in which all-condition measures of inpatient quality are powered to show differences in performance from average, but most condition-specific measures are not. Policy on incentives for pediatric inpatient quality should take these findings into account. (Read the full article)




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Antibiotic Exposure and Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis: A Case-Control Study

The etiology of juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is poorly understood. A recent study suggested a link between antibiotics and JIA but did not examine the potential for confounding from infections or the role of antibiotic timing.

Antibiotics were associated with newly diagnosed JIA in a dose- and time-dependent manner after adjusting for infection and other confounders. Antibiotics may play a role in the pathogenesis of JIA. (Read the full article)




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Prevalence of Parental Misconceptions About Antibiotic Use

Attitudes and knowledge about appropriate management of common childhood illnesses may lead parents to mistakenly believe antibiotics are needed. Differences existed in antibiotic knowledge and attitudes between parents of Medicaid- and commercially insured children and according to other sociodemographic variables.

Despite efforts to decrease unnecessary antibiotic use, misconceptions about antibiotic use persist and continue to be more prevalent among parents of Medicaid-insured children. Tailored efforts for socioeconomically disadvantaged populations remain warranted to decrease parental drivers of unnecessary antibiotic prescribing. (Read the full article)




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Use of Serum Bicarbonate to Substitute for Venous pH in New-Onset Diabetes

Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) is a common and serious first manifestation of diabetes mellitus in children. During initial evaluation, the venous blood pH is frequently used to make the diagnosis and classify the severity of DKA.

This study demonstrates that the serum bicarbonate concentration is a simple and accurate predictor of DKA and its severity and can be used in lieu of venous pH measurement, especially in resource-poor settings where access to pH measurement is limited. (Read the full article)




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Maternal Report of Advice Received for Infant Care

Parental adherence to recommended infant care practices (eg, breastfeeding; safe sleep) is below targeted goals. Adherence to practice recommendations increases when parents receive appropriate advice from multiple sources such as family and physicians.

Using a nationally representative sample, this study explores the advice mothers receive about safe sleep, immunization, breastfeeding, and pacifier use; the findings suggest infant care practices about which mothers receive little or inappropriate advice, suggesting possible targets for intervention. (Read the full article)




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Psychosocial Factors Associated With Adolescent Electronic Cigarette and Cigarette Use

Electronic cigarette (e-cigarette) use in adolescence is increasing. E-cigarette use has been associated with cigarette use, but there has been little study of other psychosocial risk factors for e-cigarette use and their relationship with cigarette use.

Approval and use of e-cigarettes and cigarettes among friends and family were strongly associated with cigarette and e-cigarette use in a cohort of adolescents in southern California. (Read the full article)




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Predicting Discharge Dates From the NICU Using Progress Note Data

Discharge from the NICU requires coordination and may be delayed for nonmedical reasons. Predicting when patients will be medically ready for discharge can avoid these delays and result in cost savings for the hospital.

We developed a supervised machine learning approach using real-time patient data from the daily neonatology progress note to predict when patients will be medically ready for discharge. (Read the full article)




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Variation in Prenatal Diagnosis of Congenital Heart Disease in Infants

Prenatal diagnosis may lead to benefits in outcomes for certain forms of critical congenital heart disease. Despite recognized benefits, single-center studies and focused regional efforts suggest that prenatal detection rates for congenital heart disease remain low in the United States.

We describe prenatal detection rates for a large cohort of neonates and infants undergoing heart surgery across a range of congenital heart defects. Additionally, this study adds new information by demonstrating geographic variability of prenatal detection rates across the United States. (Read the full article)




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Positive Parenting Practices, Health Disparities, and Developmental Progress

Interactive activities and routines promote early childhood language skills and subsequent educational achievement. Population studies describing parent-child participation in interactive activities and their associations with early child development among vulnerable populations are needed.

Significant disparities exist in parenting practices that promote child development between economically advantaged and disadvantaged parents. Participating in less interactive activities was associated with increased risk of developmental delay among low-income families, suggesting a need to enrich parenting practices. (Read the full article)




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Costs of Venous Thromboembolism, Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infection, and Pressure Ulcer

In adults, there is significant increased length of stay, cost, and/or resource use associated with hospital-acquired conditions. Less is known about the epidemiology and impact of many hospital-acquired conditions in pediatric populations.

We find increased pediatric length of stay and costs due to venous thromboembolism and catheter-associated urinary tract infections. This is essential information for hospital administrators and safety departments who are planning interventions to reduce harm associated with these hospital-acquired conditions. (Read the full article)




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Late Preterm Infants and Neurodevelopmental Outcomes at Kindergarten

Late preterm infants, compared with full-term infants, have less proficiency in reading and math at school age, with increased need for individualized educational plans and special education services. They also have lower cognitive performance on standardized IQ exams.

Late preterm infants have worse outcomes at school entry, and development is variable during the preschool years, so socioeconomic status, language spoken in the home, maternal education, maternal race, and being a late preterm infant have a large impact. (Read the full article)




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Congenital Heart Defects and Receipt of Special Education Services

Poor neurocognitive outcomes are associated with some types of congenital heart defects (CHDs). Guidelines for developmental screening for children with CHDs have been published. Population-based information on special education services needed among children with CHDs is limited.

Children in metropolitan Atlanta with congenital heart defects (CHDs) received special education services more often than children without birth defects. These findings highlight the need for special education services and the importance of developmental screening for all children with CHDs. (Read the full article)




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Unmet Health Care Need in US Adolescents and Adult Health Outcomes

Unmet health care need in adolescence is associated with poor contemporaneous health outcomes. Adolescence is increasingly recognized as an important stage of the life-course, when there may be a significant opportunity for health care interventions to improve later health outcomes.

The odds of adverse adult health outcomes were 13% to 52% higher among subjects who had reported unmet health care need in adolescence, compared with subjects with similar adolescent health outcomes, insurance coverage, and sociodemographic background but no unmet need. (Read the full article)




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Risk of Sensorineural Hearing Loss and Bilirubin Exchange Transfusion Thresholds

High bilirubin levels are associated with sensorineural hearing loss. Exchange transfusions are recommended when bilirubin levels reach certain thresholds. However, the relative and excess risks of hearing loss in infants with bilirubin levels at/above exchange transfusion thresholds are unknown.

In this Northern California population of term and late preterm infants, elevated bilirubin levels were not associated with an increased risk of sensorineural hearing loss unless the levels were at least 10 mg/dL above exchange transfusion thresholds. (Read the full article)




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Parent/Adolescent Weight Status Concordance and Parent Feeding Practices

Research has shown that parent feeding practices are associated with adolescent weight status and dietary intake. It is unknown whether certain factors such as parent and child weight status concordance or discordance influence parents’ use of specific feeding practices.

Findings from the current study suggest that parents use the highest levels of pressure-to-eat feeding practices when parents and adolescents are both nonoverweight and the highest levels of food restriction when parents and adolescents are both overweight/obese. (Read the full article)




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Outcome of Patients Initiating Chronic Peritoneal Dialysis During the First Year of Life

Historically, children with end-stage renal disease who initiated chronic dialysis during the first year of life were far less likely to survive or successfully receive a kidney transplant compared with those who initiated chronic dialysis at older ages.

In recent years, survival has improved markedly among children who initiate chronic peritoneal dialysis at <1 year of age. Among those infants who initiate dialysis after the neonatal period and later undergo kidney transplantation, graft survival has improved as well. (Read the full article)




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Alcohol and Marijuana Use and Treatment Nonadherence Among Medically Vulnerable Youth

Increasing percentages of youth are living with chronic medical conditions. Although adolescents face peak risks for onset and intensification of alcohol and marijuana use, we know little about these behaviors and their associations with treatment adherence among chronically ill youth.

This study quantifies alcohol and marijuana use behaviors among a heterogeneous sample of chronically ill youth in aggregate and by condition, and measures associations between alcohol use/binge drinking and knowledge about alcohol interactions with medications/laboratory tests and also treatment nonadherence. (Read the full article)




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Sensitivity of the Automated Auditory Brainstem Response in Neonatal Hearing Screening

Adding second-stage automated auditory brainstem response (ABR) testing for infants who failed the initial OAE test in a two-stage neonatal hearing screening has been shown to reduce false referrals to the hearing clinic.

Infants with hearing loss may be missed by a 2-stage hearing screening because they pass the automated ABR test. In our study, a significant number of infants with hearing loss >45 decibel hearing level passed screening with automated ABR. (Read the full article)




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High School Students' Use of Electronic Cigarettes to Vaporize Cannabis

Electronic cigarette use among youth is rising exponentially. Among other concerns, modified electronic cigarettes can be used to vaporize cannabis. However, no scientific data have been published on the rates of using electronic cigarettes to vaporize cannabis among youth.

This study presents rates of vaporizing cannabis among a sample of high school students (N = 3847). Rates of vaporizing cannabis were high among lifetime e-cigarette users (18.0%), lifetime cannabis users (18.4%), and lifetime dual cannabis and e-cigarette users (26.5%). (Read the full article)




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Two-Year Outcomes of a Population-Based Intervention for Preschool Language Delay: An RCT

Preschool language delay predicts poorer academic performance, employment opportunities, and social relationships. Language for Learning, a systematic, population-based intervention for 4-year-olds with low language, is feasible, acceptable and has short-term benefits, but long-term benefits are unknown.

Population ascertainment at age 4 followed by a yearlong, one-on-one home program benefited phonological skills (an important literacy determinant) at age 6, but not the primary language outcomes. To be cost-effective, future follow-up would need to demonstrate lasting academic benefits. (Read the full article)




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Trends in Emergency Department Visits for Unsupervised Pediatric Medication Exposures, 2004-2013

Unsupervised medication exposures increased during the previous decade, despite child-resistant packaging and caregiver education. To achieve the Healthy People 2020 objective of reducing emergency department visits for unintentional pediatric medication overdoses, targeted interventions including improved safety packaging may be needed.

Since 2010, emergency department visits for unsupervised medication exposures started to decrease. Most visits involved solid dose medications, typically for adult use. Most liquid medication exposure visits involved 4 over-the-counter pediatric products and may be more readily amenable for interventions. (Read the full article)




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Early Career Experiences of Pediatricians Pursuing or Not Pursuing Fellowship Training

Choosing career paths can be a difficult decision for residents contemplating fellowship training. Limited resources are available to residents to help guide their choices.

This article provides additional descriptions and insight into actual lifestyle and workplace environments for pediatric residents who choose fellowship training compared with those who do not. (Read the full article)




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Dexamethasone Therapy for Septic Arthritis in Children

Two prospective studies of children with septic arthritis have shown that the addition of dexamethasone to antibiotic therapy contributes to clinical and laboratory improvement. Nevertheless, the mainstay of treatment remains antibiotics alone.

This study, which was conducted outside a randomized controlled trial, demonstrates that children with septic arthritis treated early with a short course of adjuvant dexamethasone show earlier improvement in clinical and laboratory parameters than children treated with antibiotics alone. (Read the full article)




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Tricycle Injuries Presenting to US Emergency Departments, 2012-2013

Tricycle riding is a common activity in children. In calendar year 2012, tricycle accidents were the most common cause of reported toy-related deaths in children. Little research has been conducted regarding tricycle-related injuries and how to counsel parents appropriately.

This study uses nationally representative data to investigate various characteristics of tricycle-related injuries in children to better counsel parents. This study highlights the importance of helmet and elbow pad use and parental supervision. (Read the full article)




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Chronic Neuromotor Disability After Complex Cardiac Surgery in Early Life

Neurodevelopmental outcomes after cardiac surgery in early life provide critical information for understanding and improving care. Studies show these children are at risk for arterial ischemic stroke and acquired brain injury; further characterization of motor impairment is needed.

This study focuses on the presence of chronic neuromotor disabilities including cerebral palsy and motor impairments after acquired brain injury in children surviving early complex cardiac surgery, providing information on the frequency, characteristics, and predictors that may assist in prevention. (Read the full article)




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Parental Supervision and Alcohol Abuse Among Adolescent Girls

Minimal parent supervision and early pubertal maturation independently forecast alcohol misuse among adolescent girls. It is not known if pubertal timing amplifies risks associated with inadequate supervision during the formative years when youth are first exposed to alcohol.

Early maturing girls who enter secondary school with high levels of behavioral autonomy report a dramatic increase in alcohol abuse. The etiology of their problems with alcohol can be traced, in part, to heightened risks arising from low parent supervision. (Read the full article)




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Survival of Children With Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome

Hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) is a critical congenital heart defect with high mortality. With advances in surgical intervention in recent years, survival of infants with HLHS has improved, but information on long-term survival using population-based data is limited.

In this population-based study, survival to adolescence of children with HLHS has significantly improved in recent years. Among infant survivors, >90% survived up to 18 years. Gestational age, birth weight, and neighborhood poverty may affect survival. (Read the full article)




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Effectiveness and Cost of Bidirectional Text Messaging for Adolescent Vaccines and Well Care

Adolescent vaccination rates lag behind other childhood vaccines. Text messaging to improve uptake of adolescent vaccines has been shown to be effective in academic centers but has not been studied in other settings.

This study, done in 5 private and 2 safety-net practices, used a bidirectional text message as a behavioral prompt and showed text messaging was effective at increasing uptake of all adolescent vaccines. Costs were similar to other reminder/recall methods. (Read the full article)




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Hospital Use in the Last Year of Life for Children With Life-Threatening Complex Chronic Conditions

Children with life-threatening complex chronic conditions (LT-CCCs) experience high hospital use.

Hospital use in the last year of life for these children varies by type and number of LT-CCCs. Most children with ≥3 LT-CCCs are admitted to the hospital for more than 2 months in the last year of life. (Read the full article)




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Deferred Consent for Randomized Controlled Trials in Emergency Care Settings

Deferral of consent avoids delaying emergency interventions while ensuring consent to ongoing participation and use of data. Deferred consent is particularly important for enabling trials in pediatric settings, where many medicines and devices are unlicensed and untested for use.

Approaches for seeking deferred consent should balance the potential burden of obtaining consent against risk of bias due to outcome-related attrition. Ethics committees could consider approving data use when best efforts to obtain deferred consent are met with no response. (Read the full article)




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Early Substance Use and Subsequent DUI in Adolescents

Research demonstrates that substance use, beliefs about use, and influence from family and friends can put young adults at risk for DUI and RWDD. Much of this research is cross-sectional and focuses on risk factors identified in young adults.

This longitudinal study emphasizes the importance of prevention efforts in early adolescence at multiple levels to reduce high school DUI/RWDD, because marijuana beliefs and marijuana use by peers and family members during middle school were associated with high school DUI/RWDD. (Read the full article)




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Hospital Variation in Health Care Utilization by Children With Medical Complexity

Children with medical complexity require a disproportionate amount of health services due to a multitude of chronic severe illness, and their impact on the health care system appears to be increasing.

This study provides one of the first comparisons of health care utilization patterns for children with medical complexity between medical centers in a population-based cohort. (Read the full article)




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Stigma and Parenting Children Conceived From Sexual Violence

Maternal–child relationships among women raising children from sexual violence-related pregnancies (SVRPs) are not well understood. Limited case reports suggest widely varied and complex relationships. The determinants of these relationships are unknown.

With its large sample size, this article quantifies and analyzes maternal–child relationships among women raising children from SVRPs, and assesses the impact of stigma, acceptance, and maternal mental health on these relationships. (Read the full article)




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Point-of-Care Quantitative Measure of Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Enzyme Deficiency

Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency remains a global as well as a North American burden for extreme hyperbilirubinemia and kernicterus and is often unpredictable during the first few days after birth. Newborn screening for this enzyme deficiency is not universally available but debated.

Point-of-care screening, using digital microfluidics, provides accurate, low blood volume, and affordable technology for rapid newborn glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase enzyme screening that could guide clinicians before infants’ discharge from well-child nurseries and meet existing American Academy of Pediatrics’ recommendations. (Read the full article)




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Use of a Metronome in Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation: A Simulation Study

The frequency of cardiac arrest is significantly lower in children than in adults, rendering the delivery of high-quality cardiopulmonary resuscitation more difficult. Metronome-based studies in adults showed improvement in adequate compression rate, with a detrimental effect on the depth of chest compressions.

This is the first pediatric study to confirm that the use of a metronome during cardiopulmonary resuscitation significantly improves the delivery of adequate rate without affecting the compression depth. This effect was more prominent among medical students and pediatric residents and fellows than nurses. (Read the full article)




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Childhood Health and Developmental Outcomes After Cesarean Birth in an Australian Cohort

A number of studies have reported an association between birth by cesarean delivery and adverse childhood health outcomes such as obesity, asthma, atopy, and a number of neurodevelopmental abnormalities. However, these studies have had limited capacity to control for confounders.

Using a prospective cohort while controlling for birth factors, social vulnerability, maternal BMI, and breastfeeding, we found few differences between children delivered by cesarean delivery and those born vaginally. Higher child BMI was explained by maternal BMI. (Read the full article)




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Early-Onset Neutropenia in Small-for-Gestational-Age Infants

Small for gestational age neonates (weight <10th percentile) are at risk for neutropenia during the first days after birth. However, the duration, responsible mechanism, and outcomes of this variety of neonatal neutropenia are not precisely known.

Six percent of small for gestational age neonates had neutrophils <1000/μL, with an average neutropenia duration of 7 days. Neutropenia was more closely linked with small for gestational age status than maternal hypertension. This neutropenia is associated with elevated nucleated red blood cell count and increased odds of necrotizing enterocolitis. (Read the full article)




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Lithium in the Acute Treatment of Bipolar I Disorder: A Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Study

Strictly-defined pediatric bipolar I disorder (BP-I) is a serious condition. Although lithium is a benchmark treatment and has shown effectiveness in adults for decades, no definitive efficacy or long-term safety studies had been performed in pediatric patients with BP-I.

This study provides evidence to support the efficacy of lithium in the acute treatment of youths with BP-I who are currently in a manic or mixed state. Lithium had an adverse effect profile that was acceptable for most patients. (Read the full article)




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Polysomnographic Markers in Children With Cystic Fibrosis Lung Disease

Children with cystic fibrosis demonstrate gas exchange abnormalities and increased respiratory loads during sleep independent of lung function, age, and BMI. Assessment of breathing patterns during sleep provides an opportunity for detection of early lung disease progression.

Children with cystic fibrosis demonstrated increased respiratory loads and gas exchange abnormalities during sleep compared with controls. Based on these findings, sleep assessment in this patient population can identify markers for the early detection of lung disease progression. (Read the full article)




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Videolaryngoscopy to Teach Neonatal Intubation: A Randomized Trial

Endotracheal intubation is a mandatory skill for neonatal trainees. It is a difficult skill to acquire, and success rates of junior doctors are low and falling.

Videolaryngoscopy allows the supervisor to share the intubator’s view of the airway and provide more informed guidance. Teaching intubation using a videolaryngoscope with the screen visible to the instructor results in significantly higher success rates for inexperienced doctors. (Read the full article)




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Incidence and Characteristics of Autoimmune Hepatitis

Pediatric autoimmune hepatitis is an uncommon condition; children and youth can present with a diverse and insidious clinical course and biochemical features. Response to treatment is generally good, and transplantation is rarely needed.

This population-based study adds knowledge regarding the incidence of pediatric autoimmune hepatitis in Canada, as well as a description of diagnostic and therapeutic approaches among centers. Long-term outcomes are also described. (Read the full article)