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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)




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Incidental Findings in Children With Blunt Head Trauma Evaluated With Cranial CT Scans

The evaluation of blunt head trauma in children who undergo cranial computed tomography will occasionally reveal incidental findings. These findings may require further evaluation or intervention. The prevalence of incidental findings has previously been described using small cohorts, limiting generalizability.

This study is the largest pediatric multicenter description of the prevalence of incidental findings on cranial computed tomography. Incidental findings are categorized by urgency to describe the spectrum of abnormalities, providing a context for clinicians faced with these unexpected results. (Read the full article)




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Neonatal Infection and 5-year Neurodevelopmental Outcome of Very Preterm Infants

Neonatal infections are frequent complications in very preterm infants, already at high risk of neurologic and cognitive disabilities. Few studies have linked neonatal infections and neurodevelopmental outcomes. Those that did evaluated children only to the age of 22 months.

This study assessed the respective effects of early- and late-onset sepsis and their association with 5-year neurodevelopmental outcomes. We identified a significant and cumulative risk of cerebral palsy when episodes of early- and late-onset sepsis were associated. (Read the full article)




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Nonfatal Choking on Food Among Children 14 Years or Younger in the United States, 2001-2009

In 2001, an estimated 10 438 children were treated in US emergency departments for nonfatal choking on food. The foods most frequently associated with pediatric fatal choking are hot dogs, seeds, nuts, candy, and certain types of fruits and vegetables.

From 2001 through 2009, an estimated annual average of 12 435 children ages 0 to 14 years were treated in US emergency departments for nonfatal choking on food; 0- to 4-year-olds accounted for 61.7% of episodes. Foods most frequently involved were candy, meat, bone, and fruits/vegetables. (Read the full article)




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Cost-Effectiveness of Routine Screening for Critical Congenital Heart Disease in US Newborns

Critical congenital heart disease (CCHD) was recently added to the US Recommended Uniform Screening Panel for newborns.

Routine screening could cost an estimated additional $6.28 per newborn and $40 385 per life-year gained. The incremental cost of screening might be approximately $0.50 per newborn with reusable sensors. Future analysis of newborn screening programs may help refine these projections. (Read the full article)




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Risk-Adjusted Hospital Outcomes for Children's Surgery

The American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program-Pediatric has examined 30-day risk-adjusted outcomes in children’s surgery. Because of low event rates, initial efforts yielded valid models that did not meaningfully discriminate outcomes among over 20 participating institutions.

Programmatic growth, sampling algorithm refinement, and hierarchical modeling use have resulted in the ability to reliably discriminate performance among hospitals in multiple domains. We report the first actionable peer-reviewed risk-adjusted, multiinstitutional outcome data in children’s surgery. (Read the full article)




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Factors Associated With Late Detection of Critical Congenital Heart Disease in Newborns

Newborns with critical congenital heart disease (CCHD) are at risk for cardiovascular collapse or death if discharged from the birth hospital without a diagnosis. Newborn screening aims to identify CCHD missed in prenatal and postnatal examinations.

Birth hospital nursery level and CCHD type were found to be associated with late CCHD detection. Routine newborn screening could conceivably reduce differences in the frequency of late diagnosis between birth hospital facilities. (Read the full article)




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Unexpected Relationship Between Tympanometry and Mortality in Children With Nontraumatic Coma

Tympanometry provides a measure of middle ear function. There has been no description of the relationship between measurements of middle ear function in the absence of gross anatomic defects and clinical outcome among children with acute nontraumatic coma.

This study reveals an unexpected association between abnormal middle ear function and death in childhood acute coma. These findings call for more investigations on the relationship between middle and inner ear anatomy and function and intracranial dynamics and clinical outcomes. (Read the full article)




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Implementation of Critical Congenital Heart Disease Screening in Minnesota

Pulse oximetry screening at 24 hours of age improves detection of critical congenital heart disease in asymptomatic newborns.

This study describes an initial experience with pulse oximetry screening for critical congenital heart disease and provides a strategy for preparing for state implementation of recent federal newborn screening recommendations. (Read the full article)




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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)




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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)




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Parental Preferences and Goals Regarding ADHD Treatment

Shared decision-making involves the assessment of preferences and goals and has been prioritized in new attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder treatment guidelines, yet no studies have examined the impact of both preferences and goals on treatment initiation.

Supporting the clinical utility of preference and goal assessment, we found that parental treatment preferences are associated with treatment initiation, and those with distinct goals select different treatments. (Read the full article)




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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)




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Antepartum and Intrapartum Factors Preceding Neonatal Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy

Etiology and timing of onset of neonatal hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy continue to be controversial. Previous studies suggest antepartum events are the main contributing factors, but have used a broad definition of encephalopathy and included infants with genetic, congenital, and developmental abnormalities.

Our study suggests that when strict criteria defining hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy are applied with supporting neuroimaging evidence of an acute hypoxic-ischemic insult, intrapartum events are the final and necessary pathway leading to this condition. (Read the full article)




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Developmental Trajectories of Daily Activities in Children and Adolescents With Cerebral Palsy

Rehabilitation of people with cerebral palsy aims to achieve and maintain optimal performance in mobility and daily activities. Although insight into the developmental trajectories of activities from childhood into adulthood is important, little is known about long-term development.

The gross motor function of children with cerebral palsy determines the developmental trajectories of mobility performance but not of daily activities, where intellectual disability was shown to be the determining factor. (Read the full article)




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Treatment Outcomes of Infants With Cyanotic Congenital Heart Disease Treated With Synbiotics

Several studies have suggested that probiotics may prevent necrotizing enterocolitis and death in preterm infants. However, there are no data on the preventive effect of probiotics in infants with cyanotic congenital heart disease.

Although duration of hospitalization was not significantly decreased, Bifidobacterium lactis plus inulin appears to decrease the rate of nosocomial infection, necrotizing enterocolitis, and death in infants with cyanotic congenital heart disease. (Read the full article)




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Evaluation of an Early Risk Screener for PTSD in Preschool Children After Accidental Injury

Unintentional injuries lead to a significant number of children suffering from long-lasting posttraumatic stress symptoms. Therefore, early identification of individuals at risk is crucial to provide preventative interventions. However, currently, no early screener has been evaluated in preschool-aged children.

Good sensitivity (85%) and acceptable specificity (63%) were found for an early screening measure for preschool-aged children after accidental injury. Hence, the 21-item Pediatric Emotional Distress Scale–Early Screener, a reliable and valid early screening instrument, is suggested for use within a stepped-care model. (Read the full article)




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Prediction of Neonatal Outcomes in Extremely Preterm Neonates

Extremely preterm infants are at high risk of neonatal mortality or morbidities. Existing prediction models focus on mortality, specific morbidities, or composite mortality and morbidity outcomes and ignore differences in outcome severity.

A simple and practical statistical model was developed that can be applied on the first day after NICU admission to predict outcome severity spanning from no morbidity to mortality. The model is highly discriminative (C-statistic = 90%) and internally valid. (Read the full article)




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Apnea in Children Hospitalized With Bronchiolitis

Apnea is a life-threatening complication of bronchiolitis and has been associated with younger age, prematurity, and a parental report of apnea. Apnea is classically attributed to the respiratory syncytial virus, but little is known about the role of other viruses.

Among hospitalized children, low or high respiratory rates or low oxygen saturation on presentation were associated with subsequent apnea in the hospital. Several bronchiolitis pathogens were associated with apnea, with similar apnea risk across the major viral pathogens. (Read the full article)




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Prenatal Exposure to Air Pollution, Maternal Psychological Distress, and Child Behavior

Prenatal exposures to diverse pollutants and psychosocial stressors have been shown independently to adversely affect child development. Less is known about the potential interactions between these factors, although they commonly co-occur, especially in disadvantaged populations.

The combination of high prenatal exposure to environmental polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and maternal demoralization adversely affects child behavior, and maternal demoralization has a greater effect among children with high prenatal polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon exposure for a majority of behavioral symptoms. (Read the full article)




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Higher-Hazard, No Benefit Research Involving Children: Parental Perspectives

Higher-hazard, no-benefit research involving children may be approved by local institutional review boards only when the protocol enrolls children with the medical condition under study. The ethics of this distinction have been debated, but parental opinions have not been explored.

We found that parental opinions support federal regulations. We discuss parental motivations for and against research participation and the extent to which enrolling a child in higher-hazard, no-benefit research reflects appropriate surrogate decision-making. (Read the full article)




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Infant Hospitalizations for Pertussis Before and After Tdap Recommendations for Adolescents

Pertussis rates are on the rise in the United States. Infants often require hospitalization for pertussis. Vaccination can change hospitalization patterns for vaccine-preventable diseases. It is unknown if vaccinating adolescents for pertussis (recommended in 2006) might change infant hospitalization utilization.

Universal vaccination policy among adolescents against pertussis appears to have been effective in 3 of the 4 years we examined postvaccination. Further vaccination efforts among adolescents and adults are needed to prevent infantile hospitalization on a more consistent basis. (Read the full article)




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Active Versus Passive Cooling During Neonatal Transport

Cooling infants with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy shortly after birth improves survival and neurodevelopmental outcome. The optimal way to cool infants during transfer to regional NICUs is unclear.

Data from a regional neonatal transfer team, using first passive and subsequently active cooling for these infants, suggest that active cooling results in improved thermal control and a reduction in stabilization time. (Read the full article)




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Neonatal ECMO Study of Temperature (NEST): A Randomized Controlled Trial

Although providing improved survival for infants with very severe cardiorespiratory problems, the use of neonatal extracorporeal membrane oxygenation has high rates of disability in survivors. Mild hypothermia has been shown to limit brain injury in a range of patient groups, including newborns.

Infants who received extracorporeal membrane oxygenation and mild hypothermia did not show an improved neurodevelopmental outcome, and nonsignificant trends in the data suggested a small adverse effect. Use of hypothermia in other potential patient groups should be thoroughly tested. (Read the full article)




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Fetal Growth and Childhood Cancer: A Population-Based Study

The etiology of childhood cancers is largely unknown. However, excessive fetal growth has been associated with some childhood cancers. One of the most consistent findings is that high birth weight is associated with an increased risk of childhood leukemia.

Examining large, population-based birth and cancer registry data from 4 Nordic countries, high birth weight was the most strongly associated with risk of many childhood cancers among several measures of fetal growth that have not previously been extensively assessed. (Read the full article)




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Association of Hospital and Provider Types on Sickle Cell Disease Outcomes

As more children with sickle cell disease survive into adulthood, they are increasingly hospitalized in both children’s and general hospitals and managed by different provider specialists. But it is unknown if hospital type and provider specialty affect patient outcomes.

Using a large national administrative dataset, this study revealed that general hospitals were associated with higher rates of intubation and longer lengths of stay compared with children’s hospitals for adolescents and young adults with SCD admitted with acute chest syndrome. (Read the full article)




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Maternal Prenatal Weight Gain and Autism Spectrum Disorders

Previous studies have found links between prepregnancy BMI and/or pregnancy weight gain and autism spectrum disorders (ASD) risk. Several contributing factors to BMI and pregnancy weight gain (ie, prematurity, advanced maternal age, parental education, and parity) overlap with established ASD risk factors.

This study identifies an association between ASD risk and prenatal weight gain, but not prepregnancy BMI, and accounts for important confounding variables excluded in previous analyses. It provides the first within-mother comparison of these factors by including unaffected sibling controls. (Read the full article)




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Narrow Vs Broad-spectrum Antimicrobial Therapy for Children Hospitalized With Pneumonia

Recent guidelines for the management of childhood pneumonia recommend narrow-spectrum antimicrobial agents (eg, ampicillin) for most children; however, few studies have directly compared the effectiveness of narrow-spectrum agents to the broader spectrum third-generation cephalosporins commonly used among children hospitalized with pneumonia.

By using data from 43 children’s hospitals in the United States, we demonstrate equivalent outcomes and costs for children hospitalized with pneumonia and treated empirically with either narrow- (ampicillin/penicillin) or broad-spectrum (ceftriaxone/cefotaxime) antimicrobial therapy. (Read the full article)




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Child Exposure to Parental Violence and Psychological Distress Associated With Delayed Milestones

It has previously been shown that exposure to intimate partner violence and/or parental depression or anxiety may increase a child’s risk for specific adverse health outcomes.

By using a large pediatric primary care sample, this study examined associations of child exposure to intimate partner violence and parental psychological distress with developmental milestone attainment by analyzing their combined and separate effects while adjusting for other family factors. (Read the full article)




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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)




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Gestational Age, Birth Weight, and Risk of Respiratory Hospital Admission in Childhood

Preterm birth is associated with increased morbidity during childhood. Many studies have focused on outcomes for preterm births before 32 weeks’ gestation, but there are few follow-up data for late preterm infants (34–36 weeks’ gestation).

The risk of respiratory admission during childhood decreased with each successive week in gestation up to 40 to 42 weeks. The increased risk is small for late preterm infants, but the number affected is large and has an impact on health care services. (Read the full article)




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Environmental Risk Factors by Gender Associated With Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder

Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is the most common mental health condition diagnosed in childhood, is highly heritable, and more common in boys. Although studies have identified perinatal risk factors, no one has investigated perinatal risk factors separately in boys and girls.

Contrary to other studies, low birth weight, postterm pregnancy, low Apgar scores, and fetal distress were not risk factors for ADHD irrespective of gender. Early term deliveries increased the risk of ADHD, and oxytocin augmentation in girls may be protective. (Read the full article)




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School Violence, Mental Health, and Educational Performance in Uganda

Violence from school staff toward children is anecdotally widespread, but there are few empirical data on prevalence and health consequences, especially in low-income settings.

Despite a ban on corporal punishment, just over 52% of children in Luwero District experienced physical violence from school staff members in the previous week. This was associated with poor mental health in boys and girls and poor educational performance in girls. (Read the full article)




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Perceptions of 24/7 In-Hospital Intensivist Coverage on Pediatric Housestaff Education

Increasing numbers of hospitals are instituting 24/7 in-hospital pediatric intensivist coverage. Data regarding patient outcomes are mixed and the impact on housestaff education remains unknown.

This study quantifies the perceived impact of in-hospital attending coverage on pediatric resident and critical care fellow education and also investigates the growing concern that increasing supervision may contribute to housestaff being less well prepared for independent clinical practice. (Read the full article)




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Antenatal and Postnatal Growth and 5-Year Cognitive Outcome in Very Preterm Infants

Better postnatal growth, especially head growth, associates with better cognitive development in preterm infants. Suboptimal postnatal growth is more common in infants with poor antenatal growth than in infants with normal growth.

Good weight gain and head circumference growth until 2 years was associated with better 5-year cognitive outcome in non–small for gestational age infants. Good head circumference growth around term age benefits the cognitive outcome of small for gestational age infants. (Read the full article)




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Postnatal Head Growth in Preterm Infants: A Randomized Controlled Parenteral Nutrition Study

Preterm infants dependent on parenteral nutrition are vulnerable to deficits in early postnatal nutritional intake. This coincides with a period of suboptimal head growth. Observational studies indicate that poor nutritional intake is associated with suboptimal head growth and neurodevelopmental outcome.

This study provides randomized controlled trial evidence that head growth failure in the first 4 weeks of life can be ameliorated with early nutritional intervention. Early macronutrient intake can be enhanced by optimizing a standardized, concentrated neonatal parenteral nutrition regimen. (Read the full article)




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Intraventricular Hemorrhage and Neurodevelopmental Outcomes in Extreme Preterm Infants

Cranial ultrasound is routinely used in identifying cerebral abnormalities in premature infants. Grade III and IV intraventricular hemorrhages, cystic periventricular leukomalacia, and late ventriculomegaly are all known predictors of adverse neurodevelopmental sequelae in these infants.

We reviewed neurodevelopmental outcomes among 2414 extreme preterm infants. Infants with grades I and II intraventricular hemorrhage had increased rates of neurosensory impairment, developmental delay, cerebral palsy, and deafness at 2 to 3 years’ corrected age. (Read the full article)




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Outcomes in Hospitalized Pediatric Patients With Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

Systematic health disparities in adults with systemic lupus erythematosus are well documented and are likely driven by biologic as well as modifiable factors. Sociodemographic factors and health care delivery characteristics have been associated with poor outcomes.

In hospitalized children with systemic lupus erythematosus, race and ethnicity were associated with increased risk for ICU admissions, end-stage renal disease, and death. Identification of sociodemographic factors associated with outcomes is important to address the needs of these vulnerable patients. (Read the full article)




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Cost-effectiveness Analysis of the National Perinatal Hepatitis B Prevention Program

Infant postexposure prophylaxis prevents perinatal hepatitis B (HepB) virus transmission and mortality and morbidity caused by chronic HepB virus infection. The US Perinatal Hepatitis B Prevention Program (PHBPP) identifies and manages infants born to HepB surface antigen–positive women.

It presents the first estimates of the long-term costs and outcomes of postexposure prophylaxis with the PHBPP. It analyzes the effects of the PHBPP, and alternative immunization scenarios, on health and economic outcomes for the 2009 US birth cohort. (Read the full article)




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Preventing Early Infant Sleep and Crying Problems and Postnatal Depression: A Randomized Trial

Infant sleep and crying problems are common and associated with postnatal depression. No programs aiming to prevent all 3 issues have been rigorously evaluated.

A prevention program targeting these issues improves caregiver mental health, behaviors, and cognitions around infant sleep. Implementation at a population level may be best restricted to infants who are frequent feeders because they experience fewer crying and daytime sleep problems. (Read the full article)




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Variation in Quality of Tonsillectomy Perioperative Care and Revisit Rates in Children's Hospitals

Tonsillectomy is one of the most commonly performed surgeries in children and is one of the most cumulatively expensive conditions in pediatric hospital care. Little is known about how the quality of tonsillectomy care varies across hospitals.

In a large cohort of low-risk children undergoing same-day tonsillectomy, there was substantial variation in quality measures of process, dexamethasone and antibiotic use, and outcome, revisits to the hospital within the first 30 days after surgery. (Read the full article)




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Mortality and Morbidity of VLBW Infants With Trisomy 13 or Trisomy 18

Infants with trisomy 13 (T13) or trisomy 18 (T18) are known to have poor survival. Little is known about how very low birth weight (VLBW) impacts survival and morbidities among infants with T13 or T18.

We examined the risks of mortality and neonatal morbidities for VLBW infants with T13 or T18 compared with VLBW infants with trisomy 21 and VLBW infants without birth defects in a 16-year cohort from the Neonatal Research Network. (Read the full article)




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Changes in the Incidence of Candidiasis in Neonatal Intensive Care Units

The incidence of invasive candidiasis in hospitalized infants is related to postnatal exposures, but large-scale studies relating the incidence of invasive candidiasis to changes in exposures over time are not available.

This study describes the association between the incidence of invasive candidiasis and changes in use of antifungal prophylaxis, empirical antifungal therapy, and broad-spectrum antibacterial antibiotics over time. (Read the full article)




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2010 Perinatal GBS Prevention Guideline and Resource Utilization

An algorithm for neonatal early-onset sepsis risk based on Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2002 guidelines for prevention of perinatal Group B Streptococcus disease results in the evaluation of ~12–15% of well-appearing term and late preterm infants.

A revised algorithm based on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2010 guidelines eliminated 25% of all early-onset sepsis evaluations and resulted in significant cost savings, without short-term evidence of harm. (Read the full article)




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Hospitalizations Due to Firearm Injuries in Children and Adolescents

Firearm injuries are the second leading cause of death among American children. Previous estimates of nonfatal injuries have relied on small samples of emergency department visits and do not allow a detailed understanding of these injuries among children and adolescents.

In 2009, there were 7391 hospitalizations for firearm-related injuries in US children and adolescents; 89% of hospitalizations occurred in males. Hospitalization rates were highest for 15- to 19-year-olds and for black males. Deaths in the hospital occurred in 6.1% of children and adolescents. (Read the full article)




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Risk and Prevalence of Developmental Delay in Young Children With Congenital Heart Disease

Children with congenital heart disease demonstrate a high prevalence of low-severity developmental problems in the areas of language, motor skills, attention, and executive function. Systematic evaluation has been recommended to promote early detection of problems and ensure appropriate intervention.

This study presents results of longitudinal testing in early childhood. Developmental delays were common. Feeding difficulty and medical and genetic comorbidities increased risk for delays. Exposure to risk and prevalence of delay change over time; therefore, repeated evaluations are warranted. (Read the full article)




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Adult Talk in the NICU With Preterm Infants and Developmental Outcomes

It is known that adult language input is important to healthy language development and that preterm infants are at risk for language delay.

This is the first study to provide evidence that preterm infants’ exposure to adult words in the NICU before the mother’s due date are associated with better cognitive and language outcomes at 7 and 18 months’ corrected age. (Read the full article)




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Fertility Rate Trends Among Adolescent Girls With Major Mental Illness: A Population-Based Study

Although fertility rates among adolescents have declined in recent years, certain groups of adolescent girls remain at risk. Whereas adolescents with major mental illness have many risk factors for teenage pregnancy, their fertility rates have not been yet to be examined.

Fertility rates among adolescent girls with major mental illness are almost 3 times higher than among unaffected adolescents and are not decreasing to the same extent. Mental health considerations are highly important for pregnancy prevention and for perinatal interventions targeting adolescents. (Read the full article)




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Ophthalmic Outcomes of Congenital Toxoplasmosis Followed Until Adolescence

In children with congenital toxoplasmosis, ocular lesions can be detected and may relapse after birth despite pre- and postnatal treatment. Long-term ocular outcome beyond puberty and associated prognostic factors are unknown due to limited follow-up.

Our study in 477 patients with treated congenital toxoplasmosis who were followed up to 22 years indicated that new ocular lesions can be detected well into adolescence (with a cumulative probability at 18 years of almost 50%), but they rarely cause severe visual impairment. (Read the full article)




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Need and Unmet Need for Care Coordination Among Children With Mental Health Conditions

Although care coordination has been associated with lower health care costs and improved outcomes for vulnerable children, little is known about the extent of need and factors associated with unmet need for care coordination among children with mental health conditions.

Children with mental health conditions have substantial need and unmet need for care coordination. Unmet need is more likely for families with children with anxiety disorder and less likely for those who report social support and family-centered care. (Read the full article)