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Extreme Neonatal Hyperbilirubinemia and a Specific Genotype: A Population-Based Case-Control Study

For newborn infants, extreme hyperbilirubinemia (≥24.5 mg/dL) is associated with risk for severe bilirubin encephalopathy. The causal factor of extreme hyperbilirubinemia is often not established. The genotype of Gilbert syndrome, the UGT1A1*28 allele, is considered a potential risk factor.

The UGT1A1*28 allele was not associated with risk for developing extreme hyperbilirubinemia. (Read the full article)




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In Situ Simulation Training for Neonatal Resuscitation: An RCT

High-fidelity simulation improves individual skills in neonatal resuscitation. Usually, training is performed in a simulation center. Little is known about the impact of in situ training on overall team performance.

In situ high-fidelity simulation training of 80% of a maternity’s staff significantly improved overall team performance in neonatal resuscitation (technical skills and teamwork). Fewer hazardous events occurred, and delay in improving the heart rate was shorter. (Read the full article)




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Variation in Emergency Department Admission Rates in US Children's Hospitals

There is substantial variation in the medical care provided to pediatric patients across diverse clinical settings. This variation raises concerns about whether every patient is receiving optimal care and whether more standardized approaches around clinical decisions are needed.

We observed wide variation in admission rates for common pediatric conditions across US children’s hospitals. Our findings highlight the need for greater focus on the standardization of decisions regarding hospitalization of patients presenting to the emergency department. (Read the full article)




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Hospitalizations for Severe Lower Respiratory Tract Infections

Lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs), including pneumonia, are in the top 10 causes of death among children in the United States. In high-income countries, 3% to 14% of LRTI hospitalizations have been reported to require admission to an ICU.

During 2007–2011, approximately 31 289 hospitalizations for severe LRTI occurred in children each year in the United States. Children <1 year of age had the highest rates of severe LRTI and accounted for 30% of severe LRTI hospitalizations. (Read the full article)




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Herpes PCR Testing and Empiric Acyclovir Use Beyond the Neonatal Period

Herpes encephalitis outside the neonatal period is typically severe and recognizable to clinicians. Excessive testing for herpes encephalitis is associated with increased medical costs and hospital length of stay, and risks patient harm.

Herpes testing and empirical acyclovir treatment in older and less unwell patients has been increasing in US pediatric hospitals over the past decade, which may reflect a more fundamental problem in current approaches to clinical decision-making. (Read the full article)




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Pre- and Postnatal Exposure to Parental Smoking and Allergic Disease Through Adolescence

Exposure to second-hand tobacco smoke during pregnancy and infancy has been linked to development of asthma, rhinitis, and eczema in young children. It is unclear whether these risks persist into adolescence.

Exposure to second-hand smoke in utero or during infancy influences the development of allergic disease up to adolescence. Excess risks for asthma and rhinitis were seen primarily in early childhood, whereas those for eczema occurred at later ages. (Read the full article)




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Establishing Benchmarks for the Hospitalized Care of Children With Asthma, Bronchiolitis, and Pneumonia

With the publication of evidence-based guidelines for asthma, bronchiolitis, and pneumonia, numerous efforts have been made to standardize and improve the quality of care. However, despite these guidelines, variation in care exists.

This study establishes clinically achievable benchmarks of care for asthma, bronchiolitis, and pneumonia. Using a published method for achievable benchmarks of care, we calculated average utilization among the high-performers, which can serve as achievable goals for local quality improvement. (Read the full article)




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Neonatal Vitamin K Refusal and Nonimmunization

Vitamin K prophylaxis at birth is an effective intervention for preventing vitamin K deficiency bleeding.

Refusal of vitamin K is not common, but those who refuse are more likely to have a birth attended by a midwife, and deliver at home or in a birth center. They are also less likely to immunize their child. (Read the full article)




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Generational Shift in Parental Perceptions of Overweight Among School-Aged Children

There is a generational shift in social norms related to body weight among adult population; little is known about the secular change of paternal perceptions of their child’s weight.

A shift in body norms toward heavier weight statuses exists among parents of children, presenting a vast challenge to family-based childhood obesity prevention. Primary care providers can play a more active role in identifying the children with increased weight. (Read the full article)




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Subdural Hemorrhage and Hypoxia in Infants With Congenital Heart Disease

Asymptomatic neonatal subdural hemorrhage (SDH) is common, resolves within 4 weeks, and is typically infratentorial or posterior when supratentorial. Subdural hemorrhages may occur after cardiac surgery in infancy. Some hypothesize a causal relationship between hypoxia and SDH in infancy.

Asymptomatic neonatal SDH is often supratentorial and over the convexities. Small infratentorial SDHs may persist for ≤90 days. In young infants with congenital heart disease, an association between hypoxia and SDH could not be demonstrated. (Read the full article)




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Use of Neonatal Chest Ultrasound to Predict Noninvasive Ventilation Failure

Lung ultrasound outperforms conventional radiology in the emergency diagnosis of pneumothorax and pleural effusions. In the pediatric age, lung ultrasound has been also successfully applied to the fluid-to-air transition after birth and to rapid pneumonia diagnosis.

Nasal ventilation has dramatically decreased the need for invasive mechanical respiratory support. This study demonstrates that, after a short trial on nasal continuous positive airway pressure, lung ultrasonography reliably predicts the failure of noninvasive ventilation unlike the conventional chest radiogram. (Read the full article)




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Parental Tdap Boosters and Infant Pertussis: A Case-Control Study

Parental reduced antigen diphtheria-tetanus-acellular pertussis (Tdap) vaccination is difficult to implement, and empirical data on its impact is limited to a single hospital-based study in Texas, which found no reduction in infant pertussis hospitalization.

In New South Wales, Australia, a case-control study found both parents receiving Tdap ≥4 weeks before disease onset was associated with a significant reduction in risk of early infant pertussis and suggestive of persistent protection in subsequent pregnancies. (Read the full article)




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Emergency Hospitalizations for Unsupervised Prescription Medication Ingestions by Young Children

Despite child-resistant packaging requirements for most medications and safe storage education for all medicines, tens of thousands of young children are brought to emergency departments and thousands are hospitalized annually after ingesting prescription medications. Targeted prevention efforts may be needed.

Twelve medications were implicated in nearly half of hospitalizations for prescription medication ingestions. Buprenorphine and clonidine were most commonly implicated and had the highest hospitalization rates when accounting for outpatient use. Prevention efforts should focus on most commonly implicated medications. (Read the full article)




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Parental Awareness and Use of Online Physician Rating Sites

Public awareness and usage of physician-rating Web sites have been increasing over the last few years. Such ratings can influence adults’ decisions about choosing a physician, but their influence on decisions for children’s physicians has not been characterized.

In this nationally representative survey of parents, we found that the majority (74%) are aware of rating Web sites and slightly more than one-quarter (28%) had sought information on rating Web sites when choosing a primary care physician for their children. (Read the full article)




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Early Neonatal Bilirubin, Hematocrit, and Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Status

Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency is an important risk factor for neonatal jaundice in Nigeria. It is associated with severe hyperbilirubinemia among infants exposed to icterogenic agents. Elevated bilirubin levels have occasionally been demonstrated in G6PD-deficient infants without exposure to icterogenic agents.

Even without exposure to known icterogens, G6PD-deficient infants have a more rapid hematocrit decline and higher bilirubin levels than their G6PD-intermediate and G6PD-normal counterparts throughout the first week of life. (Read the full article)




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Off-Hours Admission to Pediatric Intensive Care and Mortality

Admissions to the ICU during off-hours (nights and weekends) have been variably associated with increased mortality in both adults and children. Changes in staffing patterns, patient characteristics, or other factors may have influenced this relationship over time.

This study demonstrates in a large, current, multicenter database sample that off-hours admissions to PICUs are not associated with increased risk-adjusted mortality. Admissions in the morning from 6:00 am to 10:59 am are associated with increased mortality and warrant further attention. (Read the full article)




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Prenatal and Newborn Screening for Critical Congenital Heart Disease: Findings From a Nursery

The detection of critical congenital heart disease by fetal echocardiography or neonatal physical examination can have limitations. The addition of pulse oximetry screening in the newborn nursery increases the rate of diagnosis of these conditions before hospital discharge.

In a tertiary-care center with comprehensive fetal echocardiography, nearly all newborns with critical congenital heart disease are diagnosed prenatally. Pulse oximetry will identify more infants from settings with lower prenatal detection. Improving access to and training in fetal echocardiography should also improve detection of these conditions. (Read the full article)




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Sofas and Infant Mortality

Sleeping on a sofa increases the risk of sudden and unexpected infant death.

Infant deaths on sofas are associated with nonsupine placement, being found in side position, surface sharing, changing sleep location, and experiencing prenatal tobacco exposure. These results may help explain why sofa sleeping is hazardous for infants. (Read the full article)




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Parental Desensitization to Violence and Sex in Movies

Movie ratings designed to warn parents about violence and sexual content have permitted increasing amounts of each in popular films. One potential explanation for this "ratings creep" is parental desensitization to this content as it becomes more prevalent in movies.

This study adds experimental evidence that parents become desensitized to movie violence and sex and are more willing to allow children to view such content. (Read the full article)




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Sustainability of a Parental Tobacco Control Intervention in Pediatric Practice

Parental smoking cessation helps eliminate children’s exposure to tobacco smoke. A child’s visit to the doctor provides a teachable moment for parental smoking cessation. Effective strategies to help parents quit smoking are available for implementation.

Evidence-based outpatient intervention for parents who smoke can be delivered successfully after the initial implementation. Maximizing parental quit rates in the pediatric context will require more complete and sustained systems-level integration. (Read the full article)




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Out-of-Hospital Medication Errors Among Young Children in the United States, 2002-2012

Medication errors involving children represent a frequently occurring public health problem. Since 2003, >200 000 out-of-hospital medication errors have been reported to US poison control centers annually, and ~30% of these involve children <6 years of age.

During 2002–2012, an average of 63 358 children <6 years experienced out-of-hospital medication errors annually, or 1 child every 8 minutes. There was a significant increase in the number and rate of non–cough and cold medication errors during the study period. (Read the full article)




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Perinatal Complications and Aging Indicators by Midlife

Perinatal complications predict increased risk for morbidity and early mortality. Evidence of perinatal programming of adult mortality raises the question of what mechanisms embed this long-term effect. Telomere length and perceived facial age are 2 indicators of accelerated aging.

Perinatal complications predicted greater signs of accelerated aging "inside," as measured objectively by leukocyte telomere length, an indicator of cellular aging, and "outside," as measured subjectively by perceived age, an indicator of declining integrity of tissues. (Read the full article)




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Prevalence and Characteristics of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders

Most studies of fetal alcohol syndrome and fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD) prevalence in the general population of the United States have been carried out using passive methods (surveillance or clinic-based studies), which underestimate rates of FASD.

Using active case ascertainment methods among children in a representative middle class community, rates of fetal alcohol syndrome and total FASD are found to be substantially higher than most often cited estimates for the general US population. (Read the full article)




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Early Developmental Outcomes of Children With Congenital HHV-6 Infection

Neurodevelopment can be adversely affected by viral infections. Human herpesvirus-6 (HHV-6) is similar to cytomegalovirus and can cause central nervous system disease. Congenital HHV-6 infection occurs in ~1% of live births, with unknown neurodevelopmental consequences.

HHV-6 congenital infection is associated with lower scores on the Bayley Scales of Infant Development II Mental Development Index compared with control infants at 12 months of age and may have a detrimental effect on neurodevelopment. (Read the full article)




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Changes in Child Mortality Over Time Across the Wealth Gradient in Less-Developed Countries

In developed countries, child health disparities across wealth gradients are commonly widening; at the same time, child mortality in low- and middle-income countries is declining. Whether these declines are associated with widening or narrowing disparities is unknown.

A systematic analysis of the evidence on child mortality gradients by wealth in less-developed countries shows that mortality is declining fastest among the poorest in most countries, leading to declining disparities in this important indicator of child health. (Read the full article)




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Sinusitis and Pneumonia Hospitalization After Introduction of Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine

Pneumococcal conjugated vaccines (PCVs) are known to decrease invasive pneumococcal disease in children, but their effect on pneumonia necessitating hospitalization is more variable across study sites, and effects on hospitalization for sinusitis have not been shown previously.

There was a significant decrease in hospitalizations for sinusitis in children <2 years of age, and hospitalization for pneumonia decreased in children aged <5 years after sequential introduction of PCV7 and PCV13. (Read the full article)




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Postnatal Growth Following Prenatal Lead Exposure and Calcium Intake

Lead is an ubiquitous environmental pollutant, and no safe threshold for blood lead level in children has been discovered yet. Prenatal lead exposure affects growth of children.

Low level of prenatal lead exposure of <5.0 μg/dL affects postnatal children’s growth, which was further intensified by low calcium intake. (Read the full article)




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Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia and Neonatal Respiratory Distress

Primary ciliary dyskinesia presents in infancy with unexplained neonatal respiratory distress, yet diagnosis is often delayed until late childhood. Earlier diagnosis facilitates earlier onset of therapy, which may help to reduce long-term pulmonary morbidity and mortality.

A diagnostic workup for primary ciliary dyskinesia should be considered in a term infant presenting with unexplained respiratory distress and either lobar collapse, situs inversus, or a prolonged oxygen therapy requirement (>2 days). (Read the full article)




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Age-Based Risk Factors for Pediatric ATV-Related Fatalities

Younger age has been identified as an independent risk factor for all-terrain vehicle (ATV)-related injuries. Since the mid-1980s, one-third of ATV-related deaths have involved children younger than 18 years of age.

Using national data, we found both similarities and differences between pediatric age groups in the contribution of known risk factors to ATV-related deaths. The observed differences suggest the importance of targeting injury prevention approaches to specific age ranges. (Read the full article)




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Neuroimaging and Neurodevelopmental Outcome in Extremely Preterm Infants

White matter abnormality (WMA) on neuroimaging is considered a crucial link with adverse neurodevelopmental outcome in preterm infants. Brain MRI is more sensitive in detecting WMA than cranial ultrasound (CUS), but questions remain about timing and prognostic value of modalities.

Near-term CUS and MRI abnormalities were associated with adverse 18- to 22-month outcomes, independent of early CUS and other factors, underscoring the relative prognostic value of later neuroimaging in this large, extremely preterm cohort surviving to near-term. (Read the full article)




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Respiratory Syncytial Virus-Associated Mortality in Hospitalized Infants and Young Children

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection is a common cause of pediatric hospitalizations. Mortality rates associated with RSV hospitalizations are based on estimates from studies conducted decades ago. Accurate understanding of mortality is required for identifying high-risk infants and children.

Mortality associated with RSV is uncommon in the 21st century, with annual deaths far lower than previous estimates. The majority of deaths occurred in infants with complex chronic conditions or in those with life-threatening conditions in addition to RSV infection. (Read the full article)




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Antimicrobial Stewardship Programs in Freestanding Children's Hospitals

Antibiotic overuse is common and is a major public health threat. The prevalence of antimicrobial stewardship programs in children’s hospitals is growing. Single-center studies reveal that antimicrobial stewardship programs are effective in reducing unnecessary antibiotic use. Multicenter evaluations are needed.

Antibiotic use is declining overall across a large network of freestanding children’s hospitals. Hospitals with formalized antimicrobial stewardship programs experienced greater reductions in antibiotic use than other hospitals, suggesting that these interventions are an effective strategy to address antibiotic overuse. (Read the full article)




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Influenza-Related Hospitalization and ED Visits in Children Less Than 5 Years: 2000-2011

Influenza represents a leading cause of morbidity and a rare cause of death in children. Annual influenza vaccination was gradually expanded to include all children ≥6 months in 2008. The impact of these recommendations on disease burden is unclear.

We assessed the burden of influenza-related health care encounters in children aged 6 to 59 months from 2000 to 2011. In this ecologic exploration, influenza vaccination and influenza-related emergency department visits increased over time, whereas hospitalizations decreased. Influenza-related health care encounters were greater when A(H3N2) circulated. (Read the full article)




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Potential Drug-Drug Interactions in Infant, Child, and Adolescent Patients in Children's Hospitals

Hospitalized pediatric patients are often exposed to many medications during an inpatient admission. Drug–drug interactions may increase the risk of developing medication-related adverse drug events, leading to serious clinical morbidity and mortality.

Exposure to "major" potential drug–drug interactions occurs in 41% of pediatric hospitalizations in children’s hospitals. One-half of all these exposures were due to less common specific drug pairs (≤3% of patients exposed per hospital day) and thus may be less clinically familiar. (Read the full article)




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Psychosocial Outcomes of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome in Adulthood

Prenatal alcohol exposure can cause congenital neuropsychological and behavioral disabilities in later life. These usually lead to secondary disabilities (adverse outcome when the individual interacts with environmental settings), such as problems with school, the law, alcohol, or drugs.

This was a 30-year psychosocial register–based follow-up on adults with fetal alcohol syndrome and state care comparison group. The FAS-group had lower education and higher rates of unemployment, social welfare, and mental health problems than peers. Rates of criminality did not differ. (Read the full article)




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Validity of Self-Assessment of Pubertal Maturation

Many population-based studies including pubertal children are based on self-assessment of pubertal maturation, the reliability of which is uncertain.

Self-assessment is not reliable for precise pubertal staging. Simple distinctions between prepuberty and puberty showed moderate agreement with clinical examinations. Parents and girls tended to underestimate and boys to overestimate pubertal development by up to 50% and 30%, respectively. (Read the full article)




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Talking With Parents About End-of-Life Decisions for Their Children

Retrospective studies have shown that the majority of parents, independent of their country of origin, prefer a shared approach over a paternalistic approach or an informed approach when an end-of-life decision must be made for their children.

In actual conversations parents act in line with their preference for a shared approach. This behavior contrasts with the "some sharing" approach of physicians who carefully prepare parents for an end-of-life decision already being made by the medical team. (Read the full article)




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Paternal Depression in the Postnatal Period and Child Development: Mediators and Moderators

Parental depression is associated with adverse child outcomes. It is important to understand possible mediators and moderators. Several studies suggest that the family environment or parenting style may be potential pathways for transmission of risk from parents to children.

Paternal depression appears to exert its influence on children’s outcomes through an effect on family functioning (couple conflict and maternal depression), whereas maternal postnatal depression appears to affect children through other mechanisms, potentially including direct mother-infant interaction and care. (Read the full article)




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Misdiagnosis and Missed Diagnoses in Foster and Adopted Children With Prenatal Alcohol Exposure

Researchers speculate that children with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders often are not recognized or diagnosed correctly.

This is the first study to assess the rate of missed diagnoses and misdiagnosis in foster and adopted children with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders. (Read the full article)




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Development of Hospital-Based Guidelines for Skeletal Survey in Young Children With Bruises

Bruising is common in young victims of physical abuse as well as in cases of accidental trauma. There is uncertainty regarding which young children with bruising require evaluation with skeletal survey for possible abuse.

The results of this study provide guidelines, based on the literature and knowledge of experts, for identifying children <24 months presenting for care in the hospital setting with bruises, who should and should not undergo skeletal survey. (Read the full article)




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Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Children After Repeat Doses of Antenatal Glucocorticoids: An RCT

Administration of repeat doses of antenatal glucocorticoids to women at risk for preterm birth after an initial course reduces neonatal morbidity, without affecting rates of neurologic disability in early childhood. However, data on long-term effects on cardiometabolic health are limited.

Exposure to repeat doses of antenatal betamethasone did not increase cardiovascular risk factors at early school age. Clinicians wishing to use repeat antenatal glucocorticoids can be reassured that the risk of future cardiometabolic disease from this therapy is low. (Read the full article)




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Regional Variation in Antenatal Corticosteroid Use: A Network-Level Quality Improvement Study

Application of antenatal corticosteroids to mothers before delivery is highly beneficial to very low birth weight infants. Yet despite widespread quality improvement efforts, many eligible infants fail to receive this therapy.

We demonstrate improvement in antenatal corticosteroid use during the study period. However, significant regional variation persists, which network-level quality improvement efforts might help eliminate. (Read the full article)




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Morphine Versus Clonidine for Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome

Increased central adrenergic activity occurs with opiate withdrawal. Clonidine is an effective drug as an adjunct to morphine in the treatment of neonatal abstinence syndrome. It is unclear whether clonidine is effective as single-drug therapy.

Clonidine, a α2-adrenergic agonist, seems to be as effective as morphine when used as a single-drug therapy for neonatal abstinence syndrome. Its administration results in improvement in neurobehavioral performance. (Read the full article)




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Mental Health of Extremely Low Birth Weight Survivors in Their 30s

Little is known about the mental health of extremely low birth weight survivors in their 30s. It is also unclear whether being born small for gestational age or being exposed to antenatal corticosteroids increases risk in this group.

In their 30s, extremely low birth weight survivors are less likely to have substance problems but are at elevated risk for other psychiatric disorders. Those born small for gestational age are at higher risk, but those exposed to antenatal corticosteroids are at the greatest risk of all. (Read the full article)




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Cognitive Outcomes After Neonatal Encephalopathy

Surviving infants with neonatal encephalopathy treated with hypothermia have lower rates of moderate to severe cerebral palsy and cognitive impairment at 18 to 24 months. Limited data exist on the association between cognitive functioning and neuromotor, behavioral, and school outcomes.

Although the incidence of death or IQ <55 is reduced after therapeutic hypothermia, survivors of neonatal encephalopathy with and without cerebral palsy are at elevated risk for subnormal IQ and the need for specialized educational services at 6 to 7 years. (Read the full article)




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Gestational Age and Developmental Risk in Moderately and Late Preterm and Early Term Infants

There is growing evidence reporting that moderately preterm, late preterm, and early term infants are at increased risk of developmental delay. The characteristics of this association are not well established in the literature.

In a sample of infants born between 32 and 41 weeks, there was an inverse and "dose response" relationship between gestational age and developmental delay risk using the ASQ at 8 and 18 months of corrected postnatal age. (Read the full article)




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Government Health Care Spending and Child Mortality

After the recent economic recession, policy interventions including austerity measures led to reductions in government spending on health care in many countries. However, there is limited research into the effects of changes in government health care spending on child health.

Reductions in government health care spending are associated with long-lasting adverse effects on child health globally, especially in low-income countries. Given pressures to diminish health expenditures, we caution that reduced spending should be achieved through increased efficiency of care delivery. (Read the full article)




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Physician Response to Parental Requests to Spread Out the Recommended Vaccine Schedule

Some parents choose to "spread out" the recommended vaccine schedule for their child by decreasing the number of simultaneous vaccines or delaying certain vaccines until an older age. Epidemiologic studies demonstrate increasing numbers of parents are choosing to delay vaccines.

We demonstrate that almost all providers encounter requests to spread out vaccines in a typical month and, despite concerns, increasing numbers are agreeing to do so. Providers report many strategies in response to requests but think few are effective. (Read the full article)




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Parent-Reported Outcomes of a Shared Decision-Making Portal in Asthma: A Practice-Based RCT

Strategies are needed to engage families of chronically ill children at home in an ongoing process of shared decision-making regarding treatment that is responsive to families’ concerns and goals and children’s evolving symptoms.

This study evaluated a novel patient portal that facilitates shared decision-making in asthma. The portal was feasible and acceptable to families, improved outcomes, and provides a model for improving care through an electronic health record portal. (Read the full article)




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Comorbidity of Physical and Mental Disorders in the Neurodevelopmental Genomics Cohort Study

Although there is evidence regarding comorbidity of physical and mental disorders from clinical samples of specific disorders and treatment registries, there is limited evidence from systematic samples of youth with comprehensive information on the full range of mental and physical disorders.

This report is the first study to investigate the specificity of associations between a broad range of mental and physical conditions by using a large, systematically obtained pediatric sample with enriched information from electronic medical records and direct interviews. (Read the full article)