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Electronic Cigarette Use Among Teenagers and Young Adults in Poland

Electronic cigarettes are battery-powered devices that simulate tobacco cigarettes by vaporizing nicotine and other chemicals into an inhalable mist. They have gained popularity around the world, but little is known about their safety and addictive properties.

Among Polish youth, electronic cigarettes are the fourth most common source of nicotine after cigarettes, waterpipes, and snuff. For those aged between 15 and 24 years, ever use of an electronic cigarette was 20.9%, and 30-day use was 6.9%. (Read the full article)


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Pediatric Residents' Knowledge, Use, and Comfort With Expedited Partner Therapy for STIs

Expedited partner therapy (EPT) is an effective method of partner treatment of sexually transmitted infections but is not used frequently. There are limited data on provider knowledge, practices, and comfort with EPT use in adolescents.

California pediatric residents have knowledge gaps and discomfort providing EPT and presence of an adolescent medicine fellowship is associated with increased EPT knowledge, use, and comfort among residents. Our findings support the need to improve EPT education in pediatric residencies. (Read the full article)


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Hypertension Screening During Ambulatory Pediatric Visits in the United States, 2000-2009

The American Academy of Pediatrics and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute recommend routine blood pressure measurement in children. Little is known about the frequency with which blood pressure is currently measured in ambulatory pediatric settings in the United States.

Between 2000 and 2009, providers measured blood pressure during only one-third of ambulatory pediatric visits and two-thirds of pediatric preventive visits. The current rate of screening is especially low for children aged 3 to 7 years. (Read the full article)


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A New Liquid Human Milk Fortifier and Linear Growth in Preterm Infants

Current human milk fortifiers fail to provide the higher protein intake that is now recommended for feeding human milk–fed infants. There is a desire to avoid the use of powdered products when feeding these infants.

A new ultraconcentrated liquid human milk fortifier that provides more protein than current powdered fortifiers is safe and supports better growth in human milk–fed infants than a powdered fortifier. (Read the full article)


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Efficacy of Family-Based Weight Control Program for Preschool Children in Primary Care

Overweight children are at risk for becoming obese adults, especially if they have an obese parent. Family-based behavioral interventions, largely implemented in specialized settings, have shown efficacy in weight control in youth aged ≥8 years.

This study demonstrates the efficacy of a family-based behavioral weight control program translated to be implemented in the primary care setting. The work underscores the importance of pediatricians intervening early and shifting their focus from the child to the family. (Read the full article)


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Trends in Venous Thromboembolism-Related Hospitalizations, 1994-2009

Findings from 3 studies suggest that the diagnosis of venous thromboembolism in hospitalized US children has increased in recent years.

This study provides additional evidence of an increasing trend in the rate of venous thromboembolism-associated hospitalization in US children, as well as a concurrent increase in the prevalence of venous catheter procedures. (Read the full article)


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Feasibility and Preliminary Outcomes of a Scalable, Community-based Treatment of Childhood Obesity

Pediatric obesity is a prevalent public health issue that is associated with medical and physical consequences. Clinic-based interventions for pediatric obesity are effective, but they have limited reach and are costly.

This is the first examination of an empirically informed, scalable treatment of pediatric overweight and obesity delivered in YMCAs. The results indicate that a scalable, community-based pediatric obesity intervention can produce clinically meaningful changes in weight and quality of life. (Read the full article)


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Sexually Explicit Cell Phone Messaging Associated With Sexual Risk Among Adolescents

Sending and receiving sexually explicit picture and text messages via cell phone (ie, "sexting") among adolescents is publicized as a societal and public health concern, yet it is unknown whether sexting is associated with physical sexual activity or sexual risk behavior.

This study is the first to examine sexting among a probability sample of adolescents and found that sexting is associated with sexual activity, sexual risk behavior, and knowing other person(s) who have sent a sext. (Read the full article)


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Impact of Maternal Depressive Symptoms on Growth of Preschool- and School-Aged Children

Few longitudinal studies from developing countries have assessed the relation between early maternal depressive symptoms and child growth beyond age 2. The results of these studies have been inconclusive.

Early maternal depressive symptoms were related to higher odds of deficits in stature but not to deficits in weight among preschool- and school-aged children. Well-child care provides opportunities to identify maternal depressive symptoms to prevent future child growth delays. (Read the full article)


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Five-Year Follow-up of Harms and Benefits of Behavioral Infant Sleep Intervention: Randomized Trial

Behavioral techniques effectively reduce infant sleep problems and associated maternal depression in the short- to medium-term (4–16 months’ postintervention). Despite their effectiveness, theoretical concerns persist about long-term harm on children’s emotional development, stress regulation, mental health, and the child-parent relationship.

Behavioral sleep techniques did not cause long-lasting harms or benefits to child, child-parent, or maternal outcomes. Parents and health professionals can feel comfortable about using these techniques to reduce the population burden of infant sleep problems and maternal depression. (Read the full article)


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Medical Errors in US Pediatric Inpatients With Chronic Conditions

Iatrogenic medical errors are an important medical care issue in the United States. Errors may be particularly important in children with chronic health conditions, especially as the prevalence of chronic conditions is increasing in children.

In a nationally representative sample, we found that pediatric inpatients with chronic conditions were at a significantly higher risk for medical errors than inpatient children without chronic conditions, controlling for severity of illness, length of stay, and other potential confounders. (Read the full article)


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Beliefs and Expectations of Canadian Parents Who Bring Febrile Children for Medical Care

Fever phobia is a ubiquitous problem throughout the world. As a result, fever is pharmacologically overtreated, and medical attention is frequently sought by worried parents.

Most Canadian parents fear their child’s fever, resulting in aggressive surveillance and treatment. Parents expect information about fever etiology and how to care for their ill child. Few parents expect antibiotics and satisfaction with care is high. (Read the full article)


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Pediatric Residency Training Director Tobacco Survey II

A 2001 survey of pediatric residency training directors indicated that few programs prepared residents to intervene on tobacco. A decade later, it is not known whether programs are doing more to prepare residents to intervene effectively with patients and parents.

Despite the need for pediatricians to play a leadership role in tobacco prevention and control, most pediatric residency training programs focus more on health effects of tobacco use and smoke exposure than on how to intervene with patients and parents. (Read the full article)


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Comparison of Mortality and Morbidity of Very Low Birth Weight Infants Between Canada and Japan

Mortality of very low birth weight infants varies widely between regions and countries; however, the variation in morbidities after adjusting for confounders has not been adequately studied.

Composite outcome of mortality or short-term morbidity for very low birth weight infants was lower in Japan than in Canada. However, marked variations in mortality and individual morbidity exist, revealing areas for improvement in each country. (Read the full article)


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Incidence of Chronic Bilirubin Encephalopathy in Canada, 2007-2008

Severe neonatal hyperbilirubinemia can lead to acute bilirubin encephalopathy and, subsequently, chronic bilirubin encephalopathy (CBE). This condition is preventable through routine identification and proper treatment; therefore, it is rare for permanent neurologic complications to occur.

This article describes the incidence of CBE in Canada, which is higher than previously reported in the literature. Furthermore, it describes the underlying causes of CBE and the spectrum of neurologic disease. (Read the full article)


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Acute Bacterial Osteoarticular Infections: Eight-Year Analysis of C-Reactive Protein for Oral Step-Down Therapy

Pediatric osteoarticular infections can be treated with successful microbiologic and clinical outcomes with a transition from parenteral to oral therapy. The best way to determine the timing of this transition is neither well studied nor standardized.

A total of 193 (99.5%) of 194 pediatric patients with acute bacterial osteoarticular infections were successfully transitioned to oral therapy, determined by using a combination of clinical findings and C-reactive protein levels, representing the largest single-center data set analyzed. (Read the full article)


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Resident Work Hour Changes in Children's Hospitals: Impact on Staffing Patterns and Workforce Needs

Changes in resident work hours are believed to have an impact on resident education and patient safety.

This study provides an understanding of the impact of changes in resident work hours on the staffing strategies of children’s hospitals. (Read the full article)


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Self-Reported Energy Intake by Age in Overweight and Healthy-Weight Children in NHANES, 2001-2008

The relationship between energy intake and obesity in children has yielded inconsistent results. Efforts to improve dietary intake as a means of improving weight status have largely yielded disappointing results.

Self-reported energy intake for younger, but not older, overweight/obese children is higher than healthy-weight peers. In early childhood, higher (or excessive) energy intake may lead to onset of obesity, but other mechanisms may be important to maintain obesity through adolescence. (Read the full article)


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Trends of Transcutaneous Bilirubin in Neonates Who Develop Significant Hyperbilirubinemia

Although the natural course of bilirubin levels has been extensively studied in general neonatal populations, there is a paucity of data regarding bilirubin trends in neonates before the development of significant hyperbilirubinemia.

This study provides data on the natural course of transcutaneous bilirubin before the development of significant hyperbilirubinemia, and on the effect of different demographic and perinatal risk factors on the rate of bilirubin increase in neonates with borderline bilirubin values. (Read the full article)


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Views of Adolescents and Parents on Pediatric Research Without the Potential for Clinical Benefit

Critics argue that pediatric research without the potential for clinical benefit treats children as mere means to benefit others. Yet, there are no data to assess whether adolescents who participate in research, or their parents, agree with this view.

Respondents felt that by participating in research the adolescents were making important contributions to help others, and the adolescents felt proud to be doing so. These findings support the view that nonbeneficial pediatric research involves a type of charitable activity. (Read the full article)


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Decline in Gastroenteritis-Related Triage Calls After Rotavirus Vaccine Licensure

Rotavirus is a major cause of acute gastroenteritis among children worldwide. Vaccines targeting rotavirus have been demonstrated to be highly efficacious against severe disease in clinical trials and postlicensure studies. Vaccine impact on mild gastroenteritis has not been well studied.

We used a novel surveillance platform consisting of telephone triage data to capture mild gastroenteritis not detected in other surveillance systems. Since rotavirus vaccine licensure, gastroenteritis-related call proportions have declined, and peak gastroenteritis-related calls are correlated with community norovirus circulation. (Read the full article)


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Preterm Birth and Congenital Heart Defects: A Population-based Study

Risk of preterm birth (PTB) has been noted to be higher for newborns with congenital heart defects (CHDs). The role of associated anomalies, whether PTB is spontaneous or medically induced, or specific categories of CHDs have not been elucidated.

By using population-based data, we found that PTB associated with CHDs was due to spontaneous PTB. Associated anomalies accounted for a small part of this increase, and there were specific associations between categories of CHDs and PTB. (Read the full article)


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Postnatal Fish Oil Supplementation in High-Risk Infants to Prevent Allergy: Randomized Controlled Trial

Declining dietary omega 3 polyunsaturated fatty acids has been associated with rising allergy prevalence and fish oil is therefore of interest in allergy prevention. Supplementation during pregnancy, but not after the age of 6 months, has achieved some allergy reductions.

We assessed the effect of fish oil supplementation from birth to 6 months, which has not been investigated previously. Our results, together with previous findings, will likely help define a "window of opportunity" for allergy intervention using fish oil supplements. (Read the full article)


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Functioning of 7-Year-Old Children Born at 32 to 35 Weeks' Gestational Age

Approximately 80% of all preterm children are born moderately preterm (32–36 weeks’ gestation). Moderately preterm children are at increased risk for developmental delays, but the specific neuropsychological functions that may underlie these delays are unknown.

Moderately preterm birth is associated with poorer performance in intelligence, attention, visuospatial reasoning, and executive functioning. Using gender-specific norms, our data suggest that preterm boys catch up, whereas preterm girls lag behind their peers at 7 years of age. (Read the full article)


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Attributable Risks for Childhood Overweight: Evidence for Limited Effectiveness of Prevention

Childhood obesity is a public health concern. Although determinants of childhood overweight have been identified and their effect sizes have been calculated, prevention as well as treatment have had limited success.

We have calculated the population-based relevance of determinants of childhood overweight by using attributable risks, which can be interpreted as maximum success rates of preventive measures. New concepts were applied to estimate the relative contribution of each risk factor. (Read the full article)


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Tanner Stage 4 Breast Development in Adults: Forensic Implications

There are no studies to support the clinical awareness of persistent Tanner stage (TS) 4 breast development in adulthood, and forensic experts continue to use TS 4 as evidence of age <18 years in cases of alleged child pornography.

One-fourth of nonclinical images of women over 18 years of age could be considered by a single forensic expert to represent TS 4. This observation, and substantial discordance in interpretation by pediatric endocrinologists, renders testimony based on this distinction invalid. (Read the full article)


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Bottle-feeding and the Risk of Pyloric Stenosis

Pyloric stenosis is the most common condition requiring surgery in infants. It is typically not present at birth but develops within the first weeks after birth. The etiology is largely unknown, but bottle-feeding has been suggested as a risk factor.

This study demonstrated that bottle-fed infants had a 4.6-fold increased risk of developing pyloric stenosis compared with infants who were not bottle-fed. The result adds to the evidence supporting the advantage of exclusive breastfeeding in the first months after birth. (Read the full article)


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EEG for Predicting Early Neurodevelopment in Preterm Infants: An Observational Cohort Study

Previous studies suggest that abnormal findings on conventional EEG during the neonatal period are associated with death or severe brain injury in preterm infants. However, large cohort studies on preterm EEG for predicting later neurodevelopmental outcome remain scarce.

This study demonstrates precise prognostic values of conventional EEG for predicting neurodevelopmental outcome in the current perinatal care setting. Additionally, its prognostic values are independent of severe injury on neuroimaging and clinical risk factors. (Read the full article)


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Communication During Pediatric Asthma Visits and Self-Reported Asthma Medication Adherence

Little is known about how communication during pediatric asthma visits is associated with child control medication adherence 1 month after the visit.

When providers asked for caregiver input into the asthma treatment plan during the visit, caregivers reported significantly higher child medication adherence to control medications 1 month later. (Read the full article)


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Obesity and Metabolic Syndrome and Functional and Structural Brain Impairments in Adolescence

Despite the dramatic rise in prevalence of metabolic syndrome (MetS) among children and adolescents, and that MetS is associated with cognitive and brain impairments among adults, no data on the impact of MetS on the brain exist in children.

It provides the first data on the impact of MetS on brain in adolescence. We show reductions in cognitive function and brain structural integrity in nondiabetic adolescents with MetS, thus suggesting that even pre-clinical metabolic illness may give rise to brain complications. (Read the full article)


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Pediatric Sleep Disorders and Special Educational Need at 8 Years: A Population-Based Cohort Study

Sleep disordered breathing (SDB) and behavioral sleep problems (BSPs) affect cognitive, behavioral, and language development. No studies have examined associations between SDB and BSPs across early childhood, and later special education need (SEN), on a population basis.

A history of SDB through 5 years of age was associated with ~40% increased odds of SEN at 8 years, among >11 000 children. BSPs were associated with 7% increased odds of SEN, for each additional ~12 months of reported BSPs. (Read the full article)


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Comparison of Children Hospitalized With Seasonal Versus Pandemic Influenza A, 2004-2009

Although several studies have demonstrated increased morbidity and mortality with pH1N1 in children, others have found its clinical course to be similar to seasonal influenza. Moreover, most studies were conducted at single centers, thus raising concerns about generalizability of findings.

This analysis provides national-level active hospital-based surveillance data comparing pH1N1 with 5 previous years of seasonal influenza A and demonstrates differences in risk factors and clinical presentation but not in ICU admission or mortality. (Read the full article)


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Neurologic Disorders Among Pediatric Deaths Associated With the 2009 Pandemic Influenza

The 2009 influenza A (H1N1) pandemic caused illness in all age groups, but children were disproportionately affected. Children with underlying neurologic disorders were at high risk of influenza-related complications, including death.

This study provides the first detailed description of underlying neurologic disorders among children who died of influenza A (H1N1)pdm09 virus infection. (Read the full article)


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Risk Adjustment for Neonatal Surgery: A Method for Comparison of In-Hospital Mortality

Evaluation of neonatal surgical outcomes is necessary to guide improvements in the quality of care. Meaningful comparisons must adjust for factors that alter outcomes independent of the surgical procedures.

Herein is described a method that permits risk adjustment for the broad range of noncardiac neonatal surgery, regardless of gestational age, to permit useful comparisons for quality improvement. (Read the full article)


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Effects of Systematic Screening and Detection of Child Abuse in Emergency Departments

Systematic screening for child abuse of all children presenting at emergency departments might increase the detection rate of child abuse but studies to support this proposal are scarce.

Systematic screening for child abuse in emergency departments is effective in increasing the detection of suspected child abuse. Training emergency department staff and requiring screening legally at emergency departments increase the extent of screening. (Read the full article)


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Cobedding and Recovery Time After Heel Lance in Preterm Twins: Results of a Randomized Trial

Skin-to-skin contact with mothers and fathers has been associated with lower pain reactivity and enhanced physiologic recovery after heel lance. The effect of skin-to-skin contact between preterm twins during cobedding on pain response has yet to be studied.

We demonstrate that cobedding significantly diminished time to recovery in preterm twins after heel lance but did not lower pain reactivity. (Read the full article)


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Proficiency and Retention of Neonatal Resuscitation Skills by Pediatric Residents

Skills learned in standardized courses are estimated to last only a few months. Neonatal Resuscitation Program certification is mandatory for all pediatric residents and is valid for 2 years. Exact timing of when proficiency is lost is unknown.

Neonatal Resuscitation Program skills deteriorate immediately after certification, whereas knowledge is better retained. Significant skill deficits were seen at baseline raising concerns regarding the efficacy of the current course structure. Discrepancies in knowledge and skill retention may impact caregiver performance. (Read the full article)


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Bone Mineral Density and Vitamin D Status Among African American Children With Forearm Fractures

Forearm fractures are unique injuries which are associated with lower bone mineral density in adults and white children. The relationships among bone mineral density, 25-hydroxyvitamin D status, and risk for forearm fracture have not been investigated in African American children.

Our data support an association between both lower bone mineral density and vitamin D deficiency and increased odds of forearm fracture in African American children. Promotion of bone health is indicated in this population. (Read the full article)


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Neonatal Hyperbilirubinemia in the Low-Intermediate-Risk Category on the Bilirubin Nomogram

The higher the predischarge bilirubin percentile reading on the hour of life–specific nomogram, the higher becomes that infant's risk of developing significant hyperbilirubinemia. Neonates in the low-risk zones (≤75th percentile) have a low risk of developing hyperbilirubinemia.

Thirty-two percent of newborns readmitted for hyperbilirubinemia had low-risk zone predischarge bilirubin percentile values, predominantly in the intermediate low-risk zone (41st–75th percentile). The intermediate low-risk zone may not be as low risk as previously thought. (Read the full article)


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Breastfeeding, Childhood Milk Consumption, and Onset of Puberty

Early life nutrition may program pubertal timing. Limited evidence suggests breastfeeding is associated with later puberty and childhood milk consumption with earlier puberty; whether these observations are biologically mediated or confounded by socioeconomic position is unclear.

In a developed non-Western setting with little socioeconomic patterning of pubertal timing, neither breastfeeding nor childhood milk consumption was associated with pubertal timing, suggesting nutritional exposures during potentially critical periods may not have long-term effects on rates of maturation. (Read the full article)


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Gender and Crime Victimization Modify Neighborhood Effects on Adolescent Mental Health

Adolescents living in lower-poverty neighborhoods have better mental health than youth in high-poverty contexts, but it is unclear if associations are causal. Furthermore, it is unknown why some youth benefit more than others from moving to more advantaged neighborhoods.

Using an experimental study that randomly assigned families to receive vouchers to move to lower-poverty neighborhoods, we found that recent violent crime victimization adversely modified the mental health effects of moving to better neighborhoods. (Read the full article)


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Randomized Trial of Vitamin D Supplementation and Risk of Acute Respiratory Tract Infection in Mongolia

A growing number of epidemiologic studies suggest that individuals with lower vitamin D levels are at higher risk of acute respiratory tract infection. Randomized controlled trials are needed to determine if vitamin D supplementation would decrease this risk.

In a randomized controlled trial of 247 Mongolian children with vitamin D deficiency in winter, with double-blinding and 99% follow-up, vitamin D supplementation significantly reduced the risk of acute respiratory tract infections. (Read the full article)


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The Joint Commission Children's Asthma Care Quality Measures and Asthma Readmissions

Asthma is a major reason for pediatric hospital admission. The Joint Commission requires freestanding children’s hospitals to report compliance with 3 Children’s Asthma Care quality measures. High compliance with these measures should result in decreased admissions and emergency department visits.

Implementation of a standardized care process model for hospitalized asthmatic children resulted in high compliance with all 3 measures. Measures 1 and 2 did not provide an opportunity for improvement. Compliance with measure 3 resulted in significant decreases in readmission. (Read the full article)


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Social Inequalities in Mental Health and Health-Related Quality of Life in Children in Spain

The importance of and interest in childhood mental problems have increased worldwide. There are few population studies on child and adolescent mental health and health-related quality of life (HRQoL).

A social gradient was found in childhood mental health according to maternal education level and social class, but none was found in HRQoL, although children from disadvantaged social classes had somewhat lower HRQoL scores than their more advantaged counterparts. (Read the full article)


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Long-term Differences in Language and Cognitive Function After Childhood Exposure to Anesthesia

Immature animals exposed to anesthetics display apoptotic neurodegeneration and long-term cognitive deficiencies. In children, studies of cognitive deficits associated with anesthesia exposure have yielded mixed results. No studies to date have used directly administered neuropsychological assessments as outcome measures.

This study examines the association between exposure to anesthesia in children under age 3 and deficits at age 10 by using a battery of directly administered neuropsychological assessments, with deficits found in language and abstract reasoning associated with exposure. (Read the full article)


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Racial/Ethnic Differences in Infant Mortality Attributable to Birth Defects by Gestational Age

Birth defects are associated with preterm birth and are a major contributor to infant mortality. There are persistent black-white differences in overall infant mortality and infant mortality attributable to birth defects.

Among infants delivered at 37 to 44 weeks, blacks and Hispanics had significantly higher neonatal and postneonatal mortality attributable to birth defects than whites. Among infants delivered at 20 to 33 or 34 to 36 weeks, neonatal mortality attributable to birth defects was significantly lower among blacks. (Read the full article)


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Lower Life Satisfaction Related to Materialism in Children Frequently Exposed to Advertising

Materialism and life satisfaction are known to be associated with each other. Research among adults has shown that materialism and life satisfaction negatively affect each other, leading to a downward spiral.

In contrast to research conducted among adults, no longitudinal effect of materialism on life satisfaction was found for 8- to 11-year-olds. However, life satisfaction did negatively affect materialism, but only for children who were frequently exposed to advertising. (Read the full article)


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Unprovoked Status Epilepticus: The Prognosis for Otherwise Normal Children With Focal Epilepsy

The outcome of status epilepticus in children depends on the etiology. In otherwise normal children who have ≥1 episodes of unprovoked status epilepticus as part of the evolution of their epilepsy, the seizure and intellectual outcome is unclear.

Based on population-based data and 20 to 30 years’ follow-up of normal children with focal epilepsy, one-third with status epilepticus had recurrence of status. Reassuringly, intelligence, seizure control, and rate of remission were not altered compared with those without status epilepticus. (Read the full article)


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Maternal Multiple Micronutrient Supplements and Child Cognition: A Randomized Trial in Indonesia

Micronutrients are essential for brain development during gestation and infancy. Few randomized trials of maternal multiple micronutrient supplementation during pregnancy and postpartum have examined child outcomes beyond the neonatal period or tested which cognitive domains show long-term effects.

Children of undernourished mothers given multiple micronutrients performed as well as children of well-nourished mothers in motor and visual attention/spatial ability at age 42 months; children of undernourished mothers given iron/folic acid showed 4- to 5-month delays in these abilities. (Read the full article)


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One-Year Outcomes of Prenatal Exposure to MDMA and Other Recreational Drugs

3,4-Methylenedioxymetham-phetamine (MDMA, ecstasy) is a widely used recreational drug affecting the serotonergic system. Preclinical studies indicate learning/memory problems with fetal exposure. Human infant prenatal exposure was related to alterations in gender ratio and poorer motor development at 4 months.

This is the first study documenting that heavier prenatal 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine exposure predicts poorer infant mental and motor development at 12 months with significant, persistent neurotoxic effects. Language and emotional regulation were unaffected. (Read the full article)


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