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Empiric Combination Therapy for Gram-Negative Bacteremia

Existing data do not demonstrate a need for combination therapy after antimicrobial susceptibility data indicate adequate in vitro activity with β-lactam monotherapy. However, the role of empirical combination therapy for the treatment of Gram-negative bacteremia in children remains unsettled.

We conducted a retrospective, propensity-score matched study demonstrating no improvement in 10-day mortality of children who have Gram-negative bacteremia receiving empirical β-lactam and aminoglycoside combination therapy compared with β-lactam monotherapy, unless the bacteremic episode was attributable to a multidrug-resistant organism. (Read the full article)




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Variations in Measurement of Sexual Activity Based on EHR Definitions

The use of electronic health record systems to measure adolescent health care quality requires an operational definition of sexual activity for measuring recommended health promotion activities such as Chlamydia screening and others related to reproductive health.

This study is the first to compare operational definitions of sexual activity by using information electronically abstracted from electronic health records of adolescent females. Our research supports the use of broader operational definitions of sexual activity for health quality measurement. (Read the full article)




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Postmarketing Trials and Pediatric Device Approvals

Medical devices approved for adults can be used to treat children despite the lack of rigorous evidence. In 2007, Congress passed the Pediatric Medical Device Safety and Improvement Act to stimulate pediatric device development.

Most pediatric devices approved since the legislative change have had limited premarket study in children, with pediatric patients representing <10% of trial participants. Postmarketing studies required by the US Food and Drug Administration also yielded limited additional pediatric data. (Read the full article)




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Infant Self-Regulation and Early Childhood Media Exposure

Several studies suggest that excessive media use in early childhood predicts poorer developmental outcomes. It has not been studied whether infants with self-regulation problems, who may be at higher developmental risk, develop excessive media use habits.

This study shows that infants and toddlers with self-regulation difficulties (ie, problems with self-soothing, sleep, emotional regulation, and attention) view more media at 2 years of age, independent of other important confounders. (Read the full article)




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Outpatient Course and Complications Associated With Home Oxygen Therapy for Mild Bronchiolitis

Home oxygen has been safely incorporated into emergency department management of bronchiolitis in certain populations. After discharge, a small proportion of patients (2.7%–6%) require subsequent admission. For patients managed successfully as outpatients, pediatricians report variable practice styles and comfort levels.

Our results define the clinical course and outpatient burden associated with discharge on home oxygen. By using an integrated health care system, we captured slightly higher rates (9.4%) of subsequent admission and found fever to be associated with this outcome. (Read the full article)




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Unmet Needs of Siblings of Pediatric Stem Cell Transplant Recipients

The American Academy of Pediatrics has recommended that sibling donors should have an independent advocate. Defining the need for and role of this advocate is hampered by a lack of empirical data.

This study provides prospective family data regarding siblings’ experiences during HLA typing and donation pre- and posttransplantation. Most family members, including the siblings, perceive no choice in typing or donation, yet have few concerns and report positive aspects to participating. (Read the full article)




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Neonatal Outcomes of Prenatally Diagnosed Congenital Pulmonary Malformations

Congenital pulmonary malformations are mostly identified prenatally. At birth, some children develop respiratory distress, which may be sufficiently severe to require mechanical ventilation and immediate surgery. The factors predictive of neonatal respiratory distress are not well defined.

Malformation volume and prenatal signs of intrathoracic compression are significant risk factors for respiratory complications at birth in fetuses with pulmonary malformations. In such situations, the delivery should take place in a tertiary care center. (Read the full article)




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Xenon Ventilation During Therapeutic Hypothermia in Neonatal Encephalopathy: A Feasibility Study

Hypothermia treatment of neonatal encephalopathy reduces death and disability from 66% to 50%; additional neuroprotective therapies are needed. We previously found in animal models that adding 50% xenon to the breathing gas during cooling doubled neuroprotection.

This clinical feasibility study used 50% xenon for 3 to 18 hours in 14 cooled infants with cardiovascular, respiratory, and amplitude-integrated EEG monitoring. This depressed seizures, with no blood pressure reduction. Xenon is ready for randomized clinical trials in newborns. (Read the full article)




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Factors Associated With Dental Care Utilization in Early Childhood

Early preventive dental care is cost-effective and can reduce subsequent restorative or emergency visits. Little is known about the factors distinguishing families who receive dental care in early childhood and those who do not.

Our results suggest that among healthy children seen by primary care providers, those most in need of dental care are least likely to receive it. This highlights the importance of promoting early preventive dental care in the primary care setting. (Read the full article)




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Attributable Cost and Length of Stay for Central Line-Associated Bloodstream Infections

Central line–associated bloodstream infections (CLABSI) are common types of hospital-acquired infections associated with high morbidity and cost. In recent years, quality improvement initiatives have demonstrated how to reduce the incidence of CLABSI.

This study presents nationally representative estimates of the cost and length of stay attributable to pediatric CLABSI. We make the business case to justify quality improvement prevention initiatives and the adoption of strategies for cost-effective management of CLABSI. (Read the full article)




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Respiratory Syncytial Virus Prophylaxis in Down Syndrome: A Prospective Cohort Study

Down syndrome is an independent risk factor for severe respiratory syncytial virus infection and subsequent hospitalization.

This observational study suggests that immunoprophylaxis may reduce respiratory syncytial virus-related hospitalization by 3.6-fold (95% confidence interval, 1.5–8.7) in children with Down syndrome overall. (Read the full article)




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Supply and Utilization of Pediatric Subspecialists in the United States

There is wide variation in pediatric subspecialty supply in the United States. The impact of this variation in supply on utilization and child and family disease burden is not known.

Among children with special health care needs, living in a county with lower subspecialty supply was associated with lower perceived need for subspecialty care, lower subspecialty utilization, and no meaningful differences in examined measures of child and family disease burden. (Read the full article)




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Portrayal of Alcohol Consumption in Movies and Drinking Initiation in Low-Risk Adolescents

Several experimental and observational studies reveal an association between exposure to alcohol consumption in movies and youth drinking, but little is known about the effect of such exposure on drinking onset among low-risk adolescents.

In a longitudinal study, exposure to alcohol consumption in movies was associated with drinking initiation in a sample of adolescents from 6 European countries who had never drunk alcohol and were attitudinally nonsusceptible to future use at the time of exposure. (Read the full article)




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Practice-Tailored Facilitation to Improve Pediatric Preventive Care Delivery: A Randomized Trial

Children receive only half of recommended health care; disadvantaged children have higher risk of unmet needs. Practice coaching combined with quality improvement using rapid-cycle feedback has potential to help practices meet quality standards and improve pediatric health care delivery.

The Practice-tailored Facilitation Intervention led to large and sustained improvements in preventive service delivery, including substantial numbers of disadvantaged children, and in multiple simultaneous health care domains. Practice-tailored facilitation holds promise as a method to advance pediatric preventive care delivery. (Read the full article)




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Peer Mentoring for Type 2 Diabetes Prevention in First Nations Children

Type 2 diabetes mellitus is one of the fastest growing pediatric chronic illnesses worldwide and disproportionately affects indigenous people from all continents.

These data support the growing body of evidence that peer mentoring is an attractive strategy for teaching health behaviors and improving health outcomes in children. (Read the full article)




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Pediatric Medical Complexity Algorithm: A New Method to Stratify Children by Medical Complexity

Quality measures developed by the Pediatric Quality Measures Program are required to assess disparities in performance according to special health care need status. Methods are needed to identify children according to level of medical complexity in administrative data.

The Pediatric Medical Complexity Algorithm is a new, publicly available algorithm that identifies the small proportion of children with complex chronic disease in Medicaid claims and hospital discharge data with good sensitivity and good to excellent specificity. (Read the full article)




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Common Genetic Variants and Risk of Brain Injury After Preterm Birth

Preterm birth is strongly associated with alterations in brain development and long-term neurocognitive impairment that are not fully explained by environmental factors.

Common genetic variation in genes associated with schizophrenia and lipid metabolism modulates the risk for preterm brain injury; known susceptibilities to neurologic disease in later life may be exposed by the stress of preterm birth. (Read the full article)




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Adverse Drug Event-Related Emergency Department Visits Associated With Complex Chronic Conditions

Children who experience outpatient adverse drug events represent 0.5% of pediatric emergency department visits. The subset of children with complex chronic conditions often take multiple medications, but the incidence and severity of adverse drug events in these children is unknown.

Children with complex chronic conditions have a higher risk of emergency department visits related to adverse drug events, compared with other children. The implicated drugs with the highest rates include psychotropic agents, antimicrobial agents, anticonvulsants, hormones/steroids, and analgesics. (Read the full article)




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The Pediatric AIDS Corps: A 5-Year Evaluation

Demographic data concerning health care providers working long-term in resource-limited areas with religious groups or other government or nongovernment organizations are limited. Health outcomes from these programs vary with the focus of the individual program.

This study describes the composition and evaluation of a long-term global health corps program. Other groups interested in long-term physician placement in resource-limited areas will be able to use these data while developing their program. (Read the full article)




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Care Coordination and Unmet Specialty Care Among Children With Special Health Care Needs

Parents of children with special health care needs and low-income children report more unmet specialty care needs. Care coordination is associated with increased and decreased referrals to specialty care, but whether care coordination is related to unmet needs is unknown.

Among children with special health care needs, care coordination is associated with lower odds of unmet specialty care needs regardless of whether care coordination was received within a medical home. This association was independent of household income. (Read the full article)




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Variation in Outcomes of Quality Measurement by Data Source

Administrative health insurance claims have limitations when measuring care quality.

Children’s care quality measures assessed using administrative claims alone may not accurately reflect care quality. Use of electronic health record data in combination with administrative claims data provides an opportunity for more complete measurement. (Read the full article)




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Youth Ice Hockey Injuries Over 16 Years at a Pediatric Trauma Center

Participation in youth ice hockey is increasing. Players are prone to injury because of the nature of the game. Injury patterns vary based on age, gender, and degree of contact permitted.

This study adds an updated description of injuries sustained by youth ice hockey players and associated demographic patterns, with emphasis on seriously injured children. It also evaluates health care utilization and outcomes related to youth ice hockey injuries. (Read the full article)




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The Transition to ICD-10-CM: Challenges for Pediatric Practice

The US health care system transition to the ICD-10-CM will occur in October 2015. The logistical and financial impact of the transition for billing codes frequently used by pediatricians has not been studied.

The findings of this study evaluate the government-provided mappings from ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM for accuracy and provide the diagnostic codes used by pediatricians, which may be adversely affected by the transition to ICD-10-CM. (Read the full article)




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Comparison of Rapid Cranial MRI to CT for Ventricular Shunt Malfunction

Rapid cranial MRI is a radiation-free method to assess children with possible ventricular shunt malfunction. However, the test performance of rapid cranial MRI has never been compared with that of cranial CT, the current reference standard.

The accuracy of rapid cranial MRI was not inferior to that of CT for diagnosing ventricular shunt malfunction. Rapid cranial MRI is an important radiation-sparing diagnostic alternative for children presenting emergently with possible ventricular shunt malfunction. (Read the full article)




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Rotavirus Vaccines and Health Care Utilization for Diarrhea in the United States (2007-2011)

Since the introduction of rotavirus vaccines, diarrhea-associated health care utilization among US children has decreased substantially. Moreover, indirect benefits from rotavirus vaccination have been observed in unvaccinated children and in adults.

With increasing rotavirus vaccine coverage during 2009–2011, we observed continued reductions in diarrhea-associated health care utilization and cost. Both rotavirus vaccines conferred high protection against rotavirus hospitalizations; pentavalent rotavirus vaccine provided durable protection through the fourth year of life. (Read the full article)




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Association of Maternal Hypertension and Chorioamnionitis With Preterm Outcomes

In very preterm infants, outcomes depend not only on the degree of immaturity, but also on the underlying pathologies that trigger preterm delivery. Studies that have addressed this issue have provided unclear results.

Patterns of outcomes differ between maternal hypertension and chorioamnionitis: hypertension is associated with greater risks for bronchopulmonary dysplasia and retinopathy of prematurity, and lower risks for brain injury, necrotizing enterocolitis, early-onset sepsis. For mortality, the effect changes across gestational age weeks. (Read the full article)




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The Association of Telomere Length With Family Violence and Disruption

Poor health in children is associated with exposure to family violence and disruption. Telomere length has been hypothesized to be a lasting biological indicator of exposure to early adversity and potentially predictive of negative health outcomes throughout the life course.

Telomere length reflects exposure to family violence and disruption and may be an early indicator of the biological impact of early adversity. Children exposed to interpersonal violence and family disruptions had significantly shorter telomeres. Gender moderated these associations. (Read the full article)




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Effectiveness of Anti-TNF{alpha} for Crohn Disease: Research in a Pediatric Learning Health System

Studies on adult patients who have Crohn disease have shown a comparative benefit of anti-TNFα versus placebo and thiopurines. These same studies have not been done in children, because of time, cost, and ethical (withholding an efficacious treatment) challenges.

Anti-TNFα therapy administered in routine practice to children with Crohn disease was more effective than usual care at achieving clinical and corticosteroid-free remission. Using data from the ImproveCareNow learning health system for observational research is feasible and produces valuable evidence. (Read the full article)




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Readmissions Among Children Previously Hospitalized With Pneumonia

Pneumonia is a leading cause of hospitalization among children, and readmissions after discharge are common.

Eight percent of children experience a readmission within 30 days after hospital discharge for pneumonia. Readmissions are most common among young children and those with chronic medical conditions, and are associated with substantial costs. (Read the full article)




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Caregiver-Mediated Intervention for Low-Resourced Preschoolers With Autism: An RCT

Mixed results exist regarding the efficacy of caregiver-mediated interventions for children who have ASD. To date, randomized controlled studies have rarely compared 2 active interventions; none have focused on targeting families who are low-resourced in the community.

Significant improvements were found in social communication of children who have autism when caregivers received a hands-on caregiver training intervention in the home. These are the first data from a low-intensity, short-term intervention with low-resourced families. (Read the full article)




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Five-Year Follow-up of Community Pediatrics Training Initiative

Compared with their peers, pediatric residents who report exposure to community settings anticipate greater future community involvement at the end of training. The impact of community pediatrics training on actual future community involvement is not known.

Pediatricians exposed to enhanced community pediatrics training during residency report greater participation in community activities and greater related skills than their peers nationally. (Read the full article)




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Pediatric Advance Directives: Parents' Knowledge, Experience, and Preferences

As the number of chronically ill children grows in the United States, end-of-life discussions and advance directives (AD) will become increasingly important. Although pediatric palliative care is gaining interest, little is known about parental preferences regarding ADs for chronically ill children.

Knowledge about ADs is limited among caregivers of children who have chronic illness. However, interest in creating ADs is high, suggesting an unmet need and opportunity for health care providers to improve the care of children who have chronic illness. (Read the full article)




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Variability in IRBs Regarding Parental Acceptance of Passive Consent

Passive or opt-out consent has been successfully used to recruit subjects in several investigational studies. However, institutional review boards are often inconsistent in their application of federal regulations regarding passive consent.

This study documented the variability among 24 local institutional review boards in their application of federal regulations regarding passive consent and parental acceptance of a passive consent strategy in a multicenter pediatric study. (Read the full article)




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The Association of Generation Status and Health Insurance Among US Children

Immigrant children are more likely to be uninsured versus nonimmigrant children. The extent to which immigrant families are aware of and interested in obtaining insurance is unclear. Obstacles to participation in insurance exchanges and public insurance programs are also unknown.

Barriers for children in immigrant families include awareness of and experience with various health insurance options, perceived costs and benefits of insurance, structural/policy restrictions on eligibility, and the likelihood of working organizations likely to offer employee insurance coverage. (Read the full article)




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Increasing Provision of Adolescent Vaccines in Primary Care: A Randomized Controlled Trial

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that health departments in all 50 states deliver AFIX (Assessment, Feedback, Incentives, and eXchange) consultations to 25% of federally funded vaccine providers each year. AFIX effectively raises vaccination coverage among young children.

AFIX consultations achieved short-term gains in coverage for 11- to 12-year-olds for vaccines in the adolescent platform. No gains occurred for older adolescents or over the long term. Consultations were equally effective when delivered in-person or by webinar. (Read the full article)




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Massachusetts Health Reform and Access for Children With Special Health Care Needs

Massachusetts implemented a major health reform in 2006 to reduce uninsurance, improve access to care, and increase financial protection for its citizens, but little is known about its effect on privately and publicly insured children with special health care needs.

Massachusetts health reform improved access to specialists for privately insured children with special health care needs but did not reduce uninsurance, increase access to primary care, or improve financial protection. National reform may produce similarly modest outcomes for these children. (Read the full article)




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Mortality Associated With Pulmonary Hypertension in Congenital Rubella Syndrome

Few studies have performed precise cardiovascular assessments and regular follow-up of congenital rubella syndrome (CRS) patients’ clinical courses. A few studies have reported mortalities among children who have CRS; however, the causes of death have not been precisely described.

A total of 38 CRS cases in Vietnam were studied after a rubella outbreak in 2011. The mortality associated with pulmonary hypertension was significantly high if untreated. Conducting careful cardiologic assessments and providing continuous follow-up for each patient is required. (Read the full article)




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Socioeconomic Status and Wait Times for Pediatric Surgery in Canada

Socioeconomic status (SES) often influences timeliness of health care delivery, even in publicly funded systems. Children need prompt surgical care for a variety of time-sensitive developmental conditions, and children of lower SES may be especially vulnerable to delays in surgery.

It is unknown whether a publicly funded system’s ability to provide timely pediatric surgical care is related to SES. In 39 327 consecutive surgical cases, we demonstrate that SES need not influence timeliness of surgical care in a publicly funded system. (Read the full article)




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Inhaled Nitric Oxide Use in Neonates With Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia

The role of inhaled nitric oxide (INO) in the treatment of newborns with congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) is poorly defined and not rigorously proven. Contemporary rates of INO use for CDH have not been reported.

INO use in neonates with CDH is widespread, and has increased in many US tertiary pediatric hospitals without associated decrease in extracorporeal membrane oxygenation use or mortality. (Read the full article)




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Weighted Blankets and Sleep in Autistic Children--A Randomized Controlled Trial

Children with autism sleep poorly compared with their peers. Sensory integration, including use of weighted blankets, is proposed as a means to reduce arousal and stress. There is, however, no evidence that weighted blankets can improve sleep for these children.

This is the first robust study to evaluate the impact of weighted blankets and show that they do not improve sleep parameters in children with autism spectrum disorder. (Read the full article)




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A Clinical Prediction Rule for the Severity of Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernias in Newborns

Predicting high-risk populations in congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) can help target care strategies. Prediction rules for infants with CDH often lack validation, are aimed at a prenatal population, and are of limited generalizability. We cannot currently discriminate the highest risk neonates during the crucial period shortly after birth.

This clinical prediction rule was developed and validated on an international database. It discriminates patients and high, intermediate, and low risk of mortality; is easy to apply; and is generalizable to most infants with CDH. (Read the full article)




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Impact of Pediatric Exclusivity on Drug Labeling and Demonstrations of Efficacy

Most therapeutic products used in children have not been studied in that population. There is a need for special incentives and market protection (pediatric exclusivity) to compensate drug sponsors for studying these products in children.

Of 189 products studied under pediatric exclusivity, 173 (92%) received new labeling information. Pediatric efficacy was not established for 78 (42%), including 81% of oncology drugs. Probability of demonstrating efficacy was related to therapeutic area and year exclusivity was granted. (Read the full article)




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Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Sickle Cell Anemia

Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) prevalence in children with sickle cell anemia is not well described. Although these children often experience nocturnal oxygen desaturation, it is unclear whether they are more likely to have OSAS.

Children with sickle cell anemia have a high prevalence of OSAS with typical symptoms, beyond just nocturnal oxyhemoglobin desaturation. This study supports the need for increased efforts to screen for, diagnose, and treat OSAS in this vulnerable population. (Read the full article)




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Reducing Distress in Mothers of Children With Autism and Other Disabilities: A Randomized Trial

Mothers of children with neurodevelopmental disabilities often experience poor health, high stress, anxiety, and depression. Highly stressed parents are less effective in their parenting roles, risking their children's developmental progress.

Evidence-based interventions in mindfulness and positive psychology significantly reduce distress in mothers of children with disabilities. Well-trained peer-mentors are effective interventionists. Adult-oriented services are needed for these mothers to improve their mental health and sustain their caregiving over the long-term. (Read the full article)




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Delayed Diagnosis of Critical Congenital Heart Defects: Trends and Associated Factors

Delayed diagnosis of critical congenital heart defects (CCHDs) is associated with increased morbidity and mortality.

Despite increasing prenatal diagnosis rates, delayed diagnosis of CCHDs continues to occur, with rates highest among isolated cases and those delivered at nontertiary care hospitals. Better understanding of delayed diagnosis could help to improve screening efforts. (Read the full article)




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Mode of Obstetrical Delivery and Type 1 Diabetes: A Sibling Design Study

Several studies have revealed an association between cesarean section (CS) and childhood type 1 diabetes. Most of these studies lacked important information on indication for CS and induction of labor. It is unknown whether the reported associations are causal.

Using a cohort of 2.6 million children we found an association between elective CS and type 1 diabetes. The sibling analysis suggested the association is not causal. The findings are crucial evidence to advise women on mode of delivery choice. (Read the full article)




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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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Incidence, Etiology, and Outcomes of Hazardous Hyperbilirubinemia in Newborns

Total serum bilirubin levels ≥30 mg/dL have been labeled as "hazardous." Levels this high are rare, occurring in 3 to 10 per 100 000 births. Few studies have examined etiologies and long-term outcomes in these infants.

Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency is a major identifiable cause, but is under-assessed. Chronic, bilirubin-induced neurotoxicity is rare and only occurred in the setting of additional risk factors (prematurity, G6PD deficiency, sepsis) and at levels far above recommended exchange transfusion thresholds. (Read the full article)




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Telephone Peer Counseling of Breastfeeding Among WIC Participants: A Randomized Controlled Trial

In-person peer counseling to pregnant and new mothers has been shown to improve breastfeeding modestly in three US RCTs. But this level of support for WIC is unlikely to be scaled up nationally in the current fiscal environment.

We randomly assigned WIC clients to a telephone peer counseling program relative to standard WIC support for breastfeeding. Nonexclusive breastfeeding among Spanish-speakers increased at 1, 3, and 6 months, but the program had much less of an effect on English-speaking clients. (Read the full article)




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Automated Conversation System Before Pediatric Primary Care Visits: A Randomized Trial

A substantial gap exists between what is recommended for effective primary care of children and what takes place. Patient-centered health information technologies have been used to gather information and counsel parents, however, have not been integrated directly with electronic health records nor been speech-based to improve decision-making at the point-of-care.

This study shows that a ubiquitous technology, the telephone, can be successfully used to automatically assess and counsel parents before pediatric primary care visits as well as inform their primary care clinicians in a way that is feasible and effective for multiple important issues. (Read the full article)