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Articles Tagged With: Pediatrics

  • Engaging Seamlessly with Patients and Families

    Case managers and other medical professionals are daily tasked with communicating with patients and their families. The reality is exceptional communication skills are often hard wrought. However, it is important to the patient and their families that the care can seamlessly engage with them in ways they can understand and appreciate.

  • Kindergarten Vaccine Rates: Post-COVID

    The COVID-19 pandemic caused disruption in healthcare delivery for everyone. Schools continue to struggle to meet the Healthy People 2030 Nationwide target of ≥ 95% coverage for measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) vaccination in kindergarteners, and COVID-19 did not help. Remarkably, the nationwide vaccine rate for children entering kindergarten in the 2020-2021 school year was decreased by only 1% for all vaccines compared with the previous year.

  • Button Battery Ingestions Leading to More Pediatric ED Visits

    Children are eating these tiny disks; researchers call for better laws and regulations.

  • Updated Recommendations on Pediatric End-of-Life Care

    A report includes a review of essential elements of care for patients and families. The authors covered discussions on goals of care, how to establish end-of-life care goals, advance care planning, and palliative and hospice involvement.

  • An Overview of Parasites in Pediatric Patients

    As we have learned from the recent COVID-19 pandemic, we are susceptible to infections from a diversity of locations. Awareness of infections that may travel to our emergency departments is critical to making an accurate diagnosis and institute appropriate treatment.

  • Promote Safety Helmet Use Among Children

    The American Academy of Pediatrics encourages precautionary measures to prevent sports-related head injuries.

  • Testing a Self-Guided Mindfulness Regimen on Pediatric Interns

    This randomized clinical trial involving pediatric interns and a mindfulness intervention modified to fit into clinical schedules did not show an advantage over an active control in reducing symptoms of burnout.

  • New Details Emerge About Acute Flaccid Myelitis, Cases Could Surge This Year

    Researchers uncovered evidence indicating enterovirus D68 directly infects neurons in the spinal cord, prompting an immune response that leads to the limb weakness that is characteristic of acute flaccid myelitis. Investigators shed important light on the disease process that takes place in children who develop this polio-like illness. This is progress that can help lead to better treatments.

  • Work on Improving the Care of Children with Medical Complexity

    Emergency physicians identified significant challenges in providing high-quality emergency care to these patients. These include time constraints, the need to adequately review the expansive medical record for key information, and the need to contact known physicians when making treatment and disposition decisions. Respondents indicated communication with known providers and use of emergency information forms summarizing the child’s medical history were helpful.

  • Text Messages Boosted Pediatric Flu Vaccination Rates

    Personalized, interactive, educational reminders led parents to bring children for the second shot faster and at a higher rate.