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Medical-Legal Strategies to Improve Infant Health Care: A Randomized Trial

US parents trust the health care system and bring their infant children in for preventive care. Previous studies have demonstrated the ability of health care systems to identify, and sometimes address, the economic needs of low-income families.

Families of newborns at a safety-net primary care center have high levels of economic hardship. Compared with controls, Developmental Understanding and Legal Collaboration for Everyone families had accelerated access to concrete supports, improved rates of on-time immunization and preventive care, and decreased emergency department utilization. (Read the full article)




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Physician Communication Training and Parental Vaccine Hesitancy: A Randomized Trial

Parental hesitancy about childhood vaccines is prevalent and related to delay or refusal of immunizations. Physicians are highly influential in parental vaccine decision-making, but may lack confidence in addressing parents’ vaccine concerns.

A physician-targeted communications intervention designed to reduce maternal vaccine hesitancy through the parent-physician relationship did not affect maternal hesitancy or physician confidence communicating with parents. Further research should determine the most effective approaches to addressing vaccine hesitancy. (Read the full article)




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Prenatal Hemoglobin Levels and Early Cognitive and Motor Functions of One-Year-Old Children

Studies on the consequences of abnormal prenatal hemoglobin (Hb) concentration have focused on maternal morbidities and adverse birth outcomes. To date, very little is known about the association between prenatal Hb concentration and infant cognitive and motor functions.

There is an inverted U-shaped relationship between maternal Hb concentration and infant gross motor function. Hb concentration between 90 and 110 g/L appears to be optimal for early gross motor function of children. (Read the full article)




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Risk Factors for Recurrent Urinary Tract Infection and Renal Scarring

Vesicoureteral reflux is recognized as an important risk factor for recurrent urinary tract infection and renal scarring. Less is known about the contribution of other risk factors to these outcomes.

This study found that information about vesicoureteral reflux and bladder and bowel dysfunction can be used to identify children at low, medium, and high risk of recurrent urinary tract infection, information that clinicians could use to select children for specific preventive therapies. (Read the full article)




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Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine and Clinically Suspected Invasive Pneumococcal Disease

Conventional invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) definition using laboratory confirmation lacks sensitivity. Using a vaccine-probe design, the FinIP trial showed that IPD disease burden and vaccine-preventable disease incidence were fourfold higher when a more sensitive outcome, clinically suspected IPD, was used.

Vaccine-preventable disease incidence (ie, absolute reduction due to PCV10 vaccination) during routine vaccination program was threefold with the more sensitive outcome of clinically suspected IPD compared with the conventional IPD definition. This has major implications for cost-effectiveness of PCVs. (Read the full article)




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Unrecognized Celiac Disease in Children Presenting for Rheumatology Evaluation

Associations have been reported between celiac disease (CD) and numerous autoimmune conditions in adults and children. However, current screening guidelines do not consider patients with rheumatic diseases to be at high risk for CD.

The prevalence of CD in children presenting for rheumatology evaluation was found to be 2% by routine serologic screening. The majority of screening-detected CD cases had no CD-associated symptoms. Gluten restriction was found to relieve some musculoskeletal complaints. (Read the full article)




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Exclusive Breastfeeding and Risk of Dental Malocclusion

Breastfeeding provides a protective effect against some malocclusions, and there is a strong inverse correlation between the duration of breastfeeding and the duration of pacifier use.

The protective effects of predominant and exclusive breastfeeding against malocclusion are distinct: exclusive breastfeeding reduces the risk of malocclusions regardless of pacifier use, whereas the effect of predominant breastfeeding depends on the duration of the pacifier use. (Read the full article)




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Weight Growth Velocity and Postnatal Growth Failure in Infants 501 to 1500 Grams: 2000-2013

Postnatal growth failure is common for very low birth weight infants. Although many of the major morbidities experienced by these infants during their initial NICU stays have decreased in recent years, it is unclear whether growth has improved.

For infants weighing 501 to 1500 g, average growth velocity increased and postnatal growth failure decreased from 2000 to 2013. Still, in 2013, half were discharged with a weight below the 10th percentile for postmenstrual age. (Read the full article)




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Association of National Guidelines With Tonsillectomy Perioperative Care and Outcomes

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

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




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Critical Elements in the Medical Evaluation of Suspected Child Physical Abuse

Previous research has described important variability in the medical evaluation of suspected child physical abuse. This variability may contribute to bias and reduce reliability in the medical diagnosis of abuse.

A panel of child abuse pediatricians participated in a Delphi Process, defining critical elements for the medical evaluation of suspected physical abuse in children. Results can be used to reduce practice variability that may contribute to potential bias in evaluation. (Read the full article)




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Immunogenicity and Safety of a 9-Valent HPV Vaccine

Prophylactic vaccination of young women 16 to 26 years of age with the 9-valent human papillomavirus (HPV)–like particle (9vHPV) vaccine prevents infection and disease with vaccine HPV types.

These data support bridging the efficacy findings with 9vHPV vaccine in young women 16 to 26 years of age to girls and boys 9 to 15 years of age and implementation of gender-neutral HPV vaccination programs in preadolescents and adolescents. (Read the full article)




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Antibiotic Choice for Children Hospitalized With Pneumonia and Adherence to National Guidelines

The 2011 national guidelines for the management of pediatric community-acquired pneumonia recommended narrow-spectrum antibiotic therapy (eg, ampicillin) for most children hospitalized with pneumonia. Before the release of the guidelines, the use of broader-spectrum antibiotics (eg, third-generation cephalosporins) was much more common.

After release of the guidelines, third-generation cephalosporin use declined and penicillin/ampicillin use increased among children hospitalized with pneumonia. Changes were most apparent among institutions that proactively disseminated the guidelines, underscoring the importance of local efforts for timely guideline implementation. (Read the full article)




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Umbilical Cord Milking Versus Delayed Cord Clamping in Preterm Infants

Delayed cord clamping is recommended for all premature births, despite some studies suggesting a decreased placental transfusion at cesarean delivery.

Umbilical cord milking appears to improve systemic blood flow and perfusion in preterm infants delivered by cesarean delivery more efficiently than delayed cord clamping. (Read the full article)




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

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

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




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Statewide Medicaid Enhanced Prenatal Care Programs and Infant Mortality

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

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




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

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

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




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Trends in Hospitalization for Pediatric Pulmonary Hypertension

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

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




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

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

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




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Late Diagnosis of Coarctation Despite Prenatal Ultrasound and Postnatal Pulse Oximetry

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

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




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

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

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




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Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of a National Newborn Screening Program for Biotinidase Deficiency

Biotinidase deficiency (BD) might cause severe and permanent consequences. Cases detected through newborn screening and under treatment are shown to remain asymptomatic. However, some countries, including Spain, do not provide universal BD screening within their national newborn screening programs.

It provides a first estimate of the lifetime costs and health outcomes of a Spanish birth cohort with and without neonatal screening for BD. It shows that newborn screening for BD is likely to be a cost-effective use of resources. (Read the full article)




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Recognizing Differences in Hospital Quality Performance for Pediatric Inpatient Care

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

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




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Evaluation for Occult Fractures in Injured Children

Screening for occult fractures is a key component of the medical evaluation for young victims of suspected physical abuse. Little is known about adherence to occult fracture evaluation guidelines in children with suspected abuse cared for at non-pediatric-focused hospitals.

Occult fracture evaluations were performed in half of young children diagnosed with abuse or injuries concerning for abuse in a large cohort of hospitals. Evaluations were more common at hospitals caring for higher volumes of young, injured children. (Read the full article)




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Trends in Morbidity and Mortality of Extremely Preterm Multiple Gestation Newborns

Studies on the risk of mortality and morbidities of extremely preterm infants of multiple gestation births have shown inconsistent results. Perinatal antecedents, admission status and severity of illness after birth can adversely affect outcomes of the extremely premature infants.

Preterm multiple gestation infants have increased risk of mortality but similar risk of major morbidities compared with singletons. Outcomes improved over time and all adverse outcomes, including mortality, were comparable between multiples and singletons in the most recent 5-year epoch. (Read the full article)




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Prevalence of Parental Misconceptions About Antibiotic Use

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

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




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A Tailored Family-Based Obesity Intervention: A Randomized Trial

Although treatment programs for childhood obesity can demonstrate success, long-term outcomes have seldom been evaluated. The benefit of intervention when overweight is identified in a screening assessment and parental recognition of the problem is minimal is understudied.

A low-dose (sessions every 1–3 months), but long-term (2 years), family-based intervention was effective at reducing BMI compared with usual care in children recruited via a weight screening initiative in which many parents had been unaware their child was overweight. (Read the full article)




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Prevalence of and Risk Factors for Intracranial Abnormalities in Unprovoked Seizures

Weak recommendations exist to guide emergent neuroimaging decisions in children with first, unprovoked seizures. The prevalence of and risk factors associated with clinically relevant abnormalities on neuroimaging have not been well defined in prospective studies.

Clinically relevant intracranial abnormalities on neuroimaging occur in 11% of children with first, unprovoked seizures. Emergent/urgent abnormalities, however, occur in <1%, suggesting that most of these children do not require emergent neuroimaging. Specific clinical findings identify patients at higher risk. (Read the full article)




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Maternal Report of Advice Received for Infant Care

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

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




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Psychosocial Factors Associated With Adolescent Electronic Cigarette and Cigarette Use

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

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




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Variation in Prenatal Diagnosis of Congenital Heart Disease in Infants

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

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




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Positive Parenting Practices, Health Disparities, and Developmental Progress

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

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




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Immunogenicity, Safety, and Tolerability of a Hexavalent Vaccine in Infants

The routine childhood immunization schedule is crowded during the first 2 years, leading to deferred doses and limiting the addition of new vaccines. Combination vaccines can reduce the "shot burden" and improve coverage rates and timeliness.

Antibody response rates to antigens contained in an investigational hexavalent vaccine (DTaP5-IPV-Hib-HepB) were noninferior to licensed comparator vaccines when given as a 3-dose infant series. The safety profile was similar to control except for increased rates of mild-to-moderate, self-limited fever. (Read the full article)




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Validation of a Prediction Tool for Abusive Head Trauma

A previous multivariable statistical model, using individual patient data, estimated the probability of abusive head trauma based on the presence or absence of 6 clinical features: rib fracture, long-bone fracture, apnea, seizures, retinal hemorrhage, and head or neck bruising.

The model performed well in this validation, with a sensitivity of 72.3%, specificity of 85.7%, and area under the curve of 0.88. In children <3 years old with intracranial injury plus ≥3 features, the estimated probability of abuse is >81.5%. (Read the full article)




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Thrombocytopenia in Small-for-Gestational-Age Infants

Small-for-gestational-age neonates are at risk for thrombocytopenia during the first days and weeks after birth. However, the incidence, duration, severity, responsible mechanism, value of platelet transfusions, and risk of death from this variety of neonatal thrombocytopenia are unknown.

Ten percent of thrombocytopenic small-for-gestational-age neonates have a recognized cause for low platelets (aneuploidy, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, disseminated intravascular coagulation); they have a high mortality rate (65%). Ninety percent have a moderate, transient (2 weeks), hyporegenerative thrombocytopenia with a low mortality rate (2%). (Read the full article)




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Suicide Attempts and Childhood Maltreatment Among Street Youth: A Prospective Cohort Study

Street youth demonstrate elevated mortality compared with the general adolescent and young adult population. Suicide is a leading cause of death among street youth. Many street youth have experienced childhood maltreatment, including abuse and neglect.

In this prospective cohort of street youth, self-reported attempted suicide and history of childhood maltreatment were common. Individuals who experienced childhood physical abuse, emotional abuse, or emotional neglect were at highest risk of attempting suicide. (Read the full article)




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Pediatric Professional Medical Associations and Industry Guideline Compliance

There has been increasing legislative and regulatory focus on the relationships of pediatric prescribers and industry. Pediatric professional medical association (PMA) and industry relationships, however, are relatively unstudied and lack a systematic method of assessment.

This cross-sectional study used a new quantitative scale, the industry relationship index, to systematically rate 9 pediatric PMAs with respect to best practice guidelines on interactions with the biomedical industry, revealing significant variation in PMA practices. (Read the full article)




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Coadministration of a 9-Valent Human Papillomavirus Vaccine With Meningococcal and Tdap Vaccines

Previous studies have shown that concomitant administration of the quadrivalent human papillomavirus vaccine with MCV4 and Tdap was generally well tolerated and did not interfere with the immune responses to the respective vaccines.

Concomitant administration of the novel 9-valent human papillomavirus vaccine with MCV4 and Tdap, 2 vaccines that are currently recommended for routine vaccination of adolescents, did not compromise the safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of the individual vaccines. (Read the full article)




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Psychological and Psychosocial Impairment in Preschoolers With Selective Eating

Selective eating is a common, burdensome eating pattern in young children. A significant subset remain selective eaters at least until adolescence and, for some, adulthood. The question is whether selective eating is a serious enough developmental pattern to warrant intervention.

This study examines whether selective eating, at 2 levels of severity, is associated with current and future psychological problems. Because moderate levels of selective eating were associated with impairment, selective eating falls within the diagnosis of avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder. (Read the full article)




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Global Health Education in US Pediatric Residency Programs

In response to growing demand from trainees, many pediatric residency programs offer global health (GH) experiences for their residents. There is diversity in what is offered at programs across the country.

This is the most comprehensive assessment of US pediatric residency training opportunities in GH. These opportunities are prevalent and increasingly formalized as tracks. However there remain gaps in universal pretravel preparation and coordination across GH partnerships nationally. (Read the full article)




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The Impact of Rudeness on Medical Team Performance: A Randomized Trial

Rudeness is routinely experienced by hospital-based medical teams. Individuals exposed to mildly rude behavior perform poorly on cognitive tasks, exhibit reduced creativity and flexibility, and are less helpful and prosocial.

Rudeness had adverse consequences on diagnostic and procedural performance of members of the NICU medical teams. Information-sharing mediated the adverse effect of rudeness on diagnostic performance, and help-seeking mediated the effect of rudeness on procedural performance. (Read the full article)




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Late Preterm Infants and Neurodevelopmental Outcomes at Kindergarten

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

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




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Congenital Heart Defects and Receipt of Special Education Services

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

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




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Unmet Health Care Need in US Adolescents and Adult Health Outcomes

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

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




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Infection-Related Hospitalization in Childhood and Adult Metabolic Outcomes

Childhood inflammatory mediators are associated with adult obesity, but the stimuli that initiate and perpetuate chronic inflammation start in early life are largely unknown.

Childhood infection-related hospitalization was independently associated with adverse adult metabolic variables, which suggests that infections and/or their treatment in childhood may contribute to causal pathways leading to adult cardiometabolic diseases. (Read the full article)




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Risk of Sensorineural Hearing Loss and Bilirubin Exchange Transfusion Thresholds

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

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




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

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

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




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Incidence, Trends, and Survival of Children With Embryonal Tumors

Embryonal tumors occur almost exclusively in children. The group is heterogeneous and includes relatively common pediatric tumors as well as rare tumors. The incidence rate for hepatoblastoma has been increasing in some countries.

This population-based study is the first comprehensive study on embryonal tumors in German children. Incidence rates, trends, and survival for 1991 through 2012 are presented. A statistically significant increasing trend for hepatoblastoma was detected for the first time in Europe. (Read the full article)




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Computed Tomography and Shifts to Alternate Imaging Modalities in Hospitalized Children

Concern of the risk of malignancy from ionizing radiation has prompted many to advocate for judicious use of computed tomography (CT) and as low as necessary radiation doses administered per scan. Recent analysis has shown a decline in CT utilization.

We identified decreases in CT utilization between 2004 and 2012 for the 10 most common diagnostic groups receiving CT. Decreases were typically associated with increases in alternate imaging modalities. We provide a possible reason for the decrease in CT utilization. (Read the full article)




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Preterm Birth and Poor Fetal Growth as Risk Factors of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder

Infants born very prematurely or with a very low birth weight are known to have an increased risk of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Results concerning late preterm children are controversial and studies examining fetal growth represented by weight for gestational age are scarce.

We demonstrate that each declining week of gestation increases the risk of ADHD. Also, late preterm infants have an increased risk. Furthermore, as weight for gestational age becomes smaller than 1 SD below the mean, the risk of ADHD increases. (Read the full article)




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Alcohol and Marijuana Use and Treatment Nonadherence Among Medically Vulnerable Youth

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

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