403 results on '"Older child"'
Search Results
2. Head excursion in frontal impacts is lower in high back booster seats than in forward facing child seats with internal harnesses designed for children up to 8 years of age.
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Bilston, Lynne E., Mills, Elizabeth, Kent, Nicholas, Brown, Julie, and Whyte, Tom
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BOOSTER vaccines ,CHILD welfare ,HEAD injuries ,SEAT belts ,SPACE vehicles ,FACE - Abstract
It is often assumed that a child restraint with a five or six-point internal harness provides greater protection for children in frontal crashes than a booster seat with a lap-sash seat belt. However, most research comparing these restraint types has focused on protection for children aged up to approximately 3–4 years of age. Recently, harnessed child restraints for older children up to approximately 8 years of age have become available, but there is little data on their performance compared to booster seats for children over 4 years of age. This study aimed to compare frontal crash performance of a series of harnessed child restraints for children aged 4–8 years to booster seats. Four large harnessed child restraints (Type G in the Australian Standard, AS/NZS 1754:2013) and six high back booster seats (Type E in AS/NZS 1754:2013) were tested in frontal impact on a deceleration sled. Head and pelvis accelerations were recorded and head excursions were measured from high speed video. Head excursion was an average of 92 mm greater in the large harnessed child restraints than the high back booster seats. The initial position of the head in Type G restraints, an average of 58 mm further forward compared to Type E boosters, was the main contributor to the larger head excursion during impact. Conversely, peak head accelerations in the impact phase were, on average, 37.2 g lower in the large harnessed child restraints than the high back booster seats. These data suggest that recommendations for harnessed restraints and booster seats for children aged 4–8 years is not as obvious as is sometimes assumed. Harnessed restraints allow greater head excursion in frontal impacts, potentially increasing the chances of head impacts, especially in vehicles with limited clearance between the restraint and the seat in front. The likelihood, and types of, incorrect use that occur in each restraint type, the vehicle occupant space, and the restraint's crash performance under ideal conditions should be considered in recommending restraints for these older children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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3. Displaced Supracondylar Humerus Fractures in Children – Are They All Identical?
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Gera SK, Tan MCH, Lim YG, and Lim KBL
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humerus supracondylar fracture ,elbow fracture ,paediatric ,older child ,adolescent ,Orthopedic surgery ,RD701-811 - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: This study aims to ascertain if there are any differences in supracondylar fractures between children under seven years of age and those above 7 years of age. MATERIALS AND METHODS: All cases of displaced humerus supracondylar fractures that required surgical stabilization were identified and retrospectively reviewed. Demographic data, mode of injury, associated neurovascular injuries and details of surgery performed were obtained from clinical records. The Gartland classification and the extent of comminution of fractures were also documented from review of radiographs. RESULTS: One hundred and twelve children were included in this study, of whom 61 (54.46%) were younger than seven years of age while 51 (45.5%) were aged seven years or older. Children aged seven or older had a greater incidence of associated neurological deficit at presentation (p=0.046). Of the six patients with nerve injury in the older age group, one patient (16.7%) had a radial nerve injury, two patients (33.3%) had ulnar nerve injuries while another two patients (33.3%) had median nerve injuries. There was one patient (16.7%) with both median and ulnar nerve injuries. Comminuted fractures were also more common in the older children (p=0.004). No significant differences were demonstrated between the groups with regard to age, gender and mechanism of injury, laterality, incidence of open fracture, vascular injuries and operative time. CONCLUSION: Children aged seven years or older who sustain supracondylar humeral fractures tend to get more comminuted fractures. There is also a higher incidence of associated neurological injury. These cases must be carefully examined for at presentation and parents need to be appropriately counselled about them.
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- 2017
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4. Intestinal malrotation in the older child: A call for vigilance
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Oluwafunmilayo Funke Adeniyi, Elizabeth O Ajayi, Olumide A Elebute, and Mary A Lawal
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Intestinal malrotation ,older child ,recurrent abdominal pain ,vomiting ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Context: Most cases of gut malrotation are diagnosed in the 1st year of life, but in minority of cases, the patient becomes symptomatic only in adolescence or adulthood. Aims: The aim of this study was to remind physicians to include intestinal malrotation in the differential diagnosis of children who present with recurrent abdominal pain, especially when it is associated with vomiting and other gastrointestinal symptoms. Settings and Design: This was an audit of the older children with gut Malrotation who presented to the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH). Subjects and Methods: The clinical records of children above the age of 1 year who presented with recurrent abdominal pain and/or vomiting between January 2013 and October 2015 at the LUTH were reviewed. Clinical features, radiological findings, and operation findings were documented. Statistical Analysis: Data were analyzed using the SPSS version 21 (SPSS Statistics for Windows, version 21.0, IBM Corp., USA). Data were presented in frequency and percentages. Results: Five patients with gut malrotation were seen during the study period. The median age was 7.0 years (range: 15 months–10 years). The most common complaint was intermittent colicky abdominal pain and recurrent vomiting in 5 (100%). Preoperative diagnosis was possible in 3 patients, with the use of abdominal computerized tomography scan. Operative findings included obstructing bands of Ladd, volvulus with situs inversus. Symptoms were relieved satisfactorily with surgical intervention. Conclusions: There is a need for a high index of suspicion for intestinal malrotation in children who present with a prolonged history of recurrent abdominal pain and vomiting irrespective of the age. Imaging enables accurate diagnosis and most effective treatment is surgical.
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- 2017
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5. Venäjänkielinen alakoululainen suomen rakenteiden oppijana: omistuslauseen ja kieltolauseen kehittyminen oppimisen alkuvaiheessa
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Marjo Yli-Piipari
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Structure (mathematical logic) ,4. Education ,First language ,education ,suomi toisena kielenä ,Younger child ,venäjän kieli ,Possessive ,Linguistics ,alakoulu ,valmistava luokka ,General Energy ,Conversation analysis ,morfosyntaktinen rakenne ,Negation ,Older child ,Artikkelit ,Psychology ,Sentence - Abstract
This article examines, how two Russian-speaking children (ages 9 and 11) learn Finnish morpho-syntactic structures in interaction in a transitional classroom at primary school. It also discusses whether the influence of the mother tongue is observable in the learning process. The study focuses on the development of prototypical possessive structure and standard negation. The data consist of 15 lessons, video-recorded during one school year. The episodes, including the structures used by the children, are analysed by drawing on the principles of conversation analysis. The analyses show that for both children the possessive structure appears to be more complex to learn than the standard negation. However, the children’s acquisition of these structures follows different paths. At the end of the semester, the younger child’s possessive has not become established in Finnish, whereas the older child has begun to use it in accordance with the target language norms. The negation, however, follows the target language norms, in both children’s speech.
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- 2021
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6. Anne-Çocuk Çiftlerinin Değer Benzerliği: Orta Çocukluk Döneminde Bir İnceleme
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Ayşe Ünal, Zeynep Çakmak, Dilek Sarıtaş Atalar, and Zehra Uçanok
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Monthly income ,Negatively associated ,Similarity (psychology) ,Older child ,Context (language use) ,General Medicine ,Psychology ,Middle childhood ,Value (mathematics) ,Curriculum ,Demography - Abstract
Recent developmental psychology studies conducted within the context of values and children’s value acquisition have shown that even during the early years of middle childhood, children’s value priorities can occur. Parents, who are the primary actors in the socialization process, play an important role in the value development of their children. In this study, the similarities between mother–child dyads in terms of the 10 value types of Schwartz were examined. For this aim, a total of 172 mothers and their children between ages 6–11 years attending 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th grade in primary schools in Ankara were included in this study. The Portrait Value Questionnaire was used to assess mothers’ values, and the Picture-Based Value Survey was used to assess children’s values. The findings showed that mothers gave priority to the values of achievement, security, and self-direction and high-order values of self-enhancement and conservation. In contrast, it was found that children gave priority to the values of tradition, benevolence, and universality and higher order values of self-transcendence and conservation. Furthermore, it was seen that the values of the mother–child dyads had lower similarities, and the order of the priority of the value types differed from each other. In addition, our findings revealed that there were significant relationships among the mother’s education, total monthly income, and mother–child value similarity, which varied according to the age of the child. While the mothers’ education and total monthly income were not associated with the mother–younger child value similarity, these were negatively associated with the mother– older child value similarity. Similarly, it was observed that the relationship among the mothers’ education, total monthly income, and mother–child value similarity also varied according to the gender of the child. While the mothers’ education and total monthly income were not associated with the mother–son value similarity, these were negatively associated with the mother–daughter value similarity. In conclusion, it is thought that these findings can provide information about the intergenerational transfer of values and provide guiding clues for the regulation of curriculum related to value education in schools.
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- 2021
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7. Parent and Child Factors Associated with Household versus Community Adversity among Black and Hispanic Children
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Jewel Davies, Tatum Stewart, Kristen Kenan, Sara Naureckas, Michael McCreary, Kristen R. Choi, Bonnie T. Zima, and Angela L. Venegas-Murillo
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Gerontology ,business.industry ,Psychological intervention ,Clinical settings ,03 medical and health sciences ,Family member ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Older child ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,business ,Adverse Childhood Experiences ,Depression (differential diagnoses) - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to describe exposure to within-household and community adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and to identify child- and parent-level factors associated with exposure to different kinds of ACEs. This cross-sectional study used a clinical sample of 257 Black and Hispanic children ages 3–16 years and their caregivers who were seeking care at two federally qualified health centers in Chicago, Illinois and screened positive for a behavioral health problem. The sample had high levels of within-household ACEs (76% reported at least one) and community ACEs (71% reported at least one). Black children experienced more overall and within-household ACEs than Hispanic children, including forced separation from a caregiver and family member incarceration. Hispanic children experienced more bullying and violent media exposure. Significant associations to all categories of ACEs were observed for depression, child behavioral problems, and older child age. Tailored assessment of ACEs and interventions such as trauma-informed care are needed in pediatric clinical settings, including assessment of ACEs children in experience in communities.
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- 2021
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8. Implications of Social Support and Parenting Self-Efficacy for Food Allergy-Related Parenting Practices
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Maren Hankey and Natalie A. Williams
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Self-efficacy ,business.industry ,Predictor variables ,medicine.disease ,Moderation ,Test (assessment) ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Social support ,0302 clinical medicine ,030228 respiratory system ,Food allergy ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Older child ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,Psychosocial - Abstract
Little is known regarding factors that influence parenting behaviors specific to the management of food allergies in elementary school-aged children. The aim of this study was to identify child characteristics and parent psychosocial factors associated with food allergy-related parenting practices. Participants included 182 parents of food allergic children aged between 5 and 11 years recruited from parent support groups. Data were collected using web-based questionnaires. Multiple regression analyses were conducted to identify predictors of food allergy-related parenting practices. Predictor variables examined included child demographic and allergy characteristics, parent perceived social support, and parenting self-efficacy (ie, parental beliefs specific to their ability to influence their child's behavior and development). The interaction between social support and parenting self-efficacy was examined to test for moderation. Having an older child and more social support were associated with significantly less parental monitoring (
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- 2022
9. Treating Older Children with Clubfoot: Results of a Cross-Sectional Survey of Expert Practitioners.
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Drury G, Nunn TR, Dandena F, Smythe T, and Lavy CBD
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- Humans, Child, Infant, Adolescent, Cross-Sectional Studies, Casts, Surgical, Foot surgery, Treatment Outcome, Clubfoot surgery, Orthopedic Procedures
- Abstract
Treating clubfoot in walking-age children is debated, despite studies showing that using the Ponseti casting principles can correct the midfoot effectively. We aimed to explore techniques and approaches for the management of older children with clubfoot and identify consensus areas. A mixed-methods cross-sectional electronic survey on delayed-presenting clubfoot (DPC) was sent to 88 clubfoot practitioners (response rate 56.8%). We collected data on decision-making, casting, imaging, orthotics, surgery, recurrence, rehabilitation, multidisciplinary care, and contextual factors. The quantitative data were analysed using descriptive statistics. The qualitative data were analysed using conventional content analysis. Many respondents reported using the Pirani score and some used the PAVER score to aid deformity severity assessment and correctability. Respondents consistently applied the Ponseti casting principles with a stepwise approach. Respondents reported economic, social, and other contextual factors that influenced the timing of the treatment, the decision to treat a bilateral deformity simultaneously, and casting intervals. Differences were seen around orthotic usage and surgical approaches, such as the use of tibialis anterior tendon transfer following full correction. In summary, the survey identified consensus areas in the overall principles of management for older children with clubfoot and the implementation of the Ponseti principles. The results indicate these principles are well recognised as a multidisciplinary approach for older children with clubfoot and can be adapted well for different geographical and healthcare contexts.
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- 2023
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10. A corpus study of child heritage speakers’ Spanish gender agreement
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Naomi Lapidus Shin and Thomas Goebel-Mahrle
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Linguistics and Language ,media_common.quotation_subject ,medicine ,Older child ,Piedra ,medicine.disease ,Psychology ,Neuroscience of multilingualism ,Language and Linguistics ,Agreement ,Education ,media_common ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
Objectives:This study investigates (a) whether child heritage speakers produce more gender mismatches in Spanish ( un piedra “a-masc. stone-fem.”) than monolingual children, (b) whether older child heritage speakers mismatch more than younger ones, and (c) linguistic contexts in which mismatches occur.Methodology:3893 agreement forms were extracted from corpora of Spanish spoken by six monolingual children, ages 5–6 years, and three groups of US child heritage speakers: ten 5–6-year-olds, fifteen 7–8-year-olds, and twenty-one 9–11-year-olds.Data and analysis:Logistic regressions measured the impact of agreement form type, noun gender, noncanonical noun ending, and noun frequency on gender matching. One regression included 5–6-year-olds only (monolingual and heritage); the second included child heritage speakers only (5–11-year-olds).Findings:There were no significant differences between monolingual and heritage 5–6-year-olds; for these children, adjectives, direct object clitics, noncanonical nouns, and feminine nouns increased the likelihood of mismatches. Among the 5–11-year-old heritage speakers, direct object clitics referring to feminine nouns and noncanonical nouns increased the likelihood of mismatches. The 9–11-year-olds produced more gender mismatches referring to feminine nouns than the younger child heritage speakers, especially with direct object clitics.Originality:This corpus study provides evidence for high rates of gender matching and clarifies the contexts that increase the likelihood that children will mismatch.Implications:Gender matching remains an intact part of child heritage speakers’ Spanish grammars. The distribution of mismatches found provides evidence of a strong article–noun association and a weaker noun–direct object clitic association. The oldest child heritage speakers’ use of masculine clitic lo to refer to feminine nouns may reflect an association between English “it” and Spanish lo. More generally, the finding that mismatches tend to involve masculine forms referring to feminine nouns supports the idea that masculine is the default, unmarked form in Spanish.
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- 2020
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11. Schooling Decisions in Indonesia: a Lesson From Indonesian Crisis
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Sutyastie Soemitro Remi, Ferry Hadiyanto, and Bayu Kharisma
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Resource (biology) ,intrahousehold resource allocation ,school’s decision ,lcsh:HB71-74 ,050204 development studies ,05 social sciences ,Logit ,Primary education ,Senior secondary education ,lcsh:Economics as a science ,Fixed effects model ,coping strategies ,language.human_language ,Competition (economics) ,Indonesian ,Political science ,0502 economics and business ,language ,gender ,Older child ,Demographic economics ,income shocks ,050207 economics - Abstract
This research aims to analyze the role of income shocks, gender, and resource competition between siblings against the school's decision at the level of primary and senior secondary education during the economic crisis in Indonesia. Methods in this research were conducted in two phases, fixed effect and conditional logit. Results reveal that no evidence of households' transitory income affected children's education level, both for primary and senior secondary education. Meanwhile, compared to boys, girls have a higher probability of dropping out of school and have lower school enrollment rates in primary education. This paper indicated the existence of resource competition between the younger child and the older child for education, especially for senior secondary education.JEL Classification: I20, I24, I25, J16How to Cite:Kharisma, B., Hadiyanto, F., & Remi, S. S. (2020). Schooling Decision in Indonesia: a Lesson From Indonesian Crisis. Signifikan: Jurnal Ilmu Ekonomi, Vol. 9(1), 81-92. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.15408/sjie.v9i1.12479.
- Published
- 2020
12. A case of posterior urethral valve identified in an older child by straining to void
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Yutaro Hayashi, Hidenori Nishio, Tetsuji Maruyama, Kentaro Mizuno, Taiki Kato, and Takahiro Yasui
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Posterior urethral valve ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,Transurethral incision ,PUV, posterior urethral valve ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Pediatrics ,Straining to void ,Cystourethrography ,VUR - Vesicoureteral Reflux ,VUR, vesicoureteral reflux ,medicine ,Dysuria ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,VCUG, voiding cystourethrography ,Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,Surgery ,Urethral obstruction ,Void (composites) ,Older child ,RC870-923 ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Urethral valve - Abstract
Posterior urethral valves (PUVs) are the most common cause of congenital urethral obstruction. However, the diagnosis of a PUV is sometimes difficult. A 13-year-old Japanese boy and his mother visited our hospital, and his mother complained that he frequently strained to void although he had no complaint. Uroflowmetry revealed a plateau-shaped curve and a voiding cystourethrography (VCUG) revealed a PUV. Thus, we performed a transurethral incision of the PUV, and his voiding status improved. Because some patients with mild PUV may not notice their dysuria, we believe that VCUG should be performed without hesitation when a urethral lesion is suspected.
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- 2021
13. How accessible is primary eye care for children in England?
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Irene Ctori, Rakhee Shah, Miriam L. Conway, Catherine M. Suttle, and Salma Wilson
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Appointment time ,Parents ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,genetic structures ,RJ101 ,Eye care ,Health Services Accessibility ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Primary Health Care ,Social change ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,National health service ,Sensory Systems ,eye diseases ,Telephone survey ,Ophthalmology ,England ,Eye examination ,Family medicine ,Child, Preschool ,Autism ,Older child ,RE ,Psychology ,Optometry - Abstract
PURPOSE: Good vision during childhood is vital for visual, educational, and social development. Previous research highlights challenges in the accessibility of eye care for children. This study investigates the accessibility of primary eye care for young children with typical development and those with autism in England. METHODS: A telephone survey was conducted using four hypothetical scenarios (a child aged 1, 3, 5 years and a 13-year-old with autism). Four hundred community optometric practices (100 different practices for each scenario) were contacted to explore the availability of an eye examination. The caller acted as a parent, asking about the availability of an eye examination for their child and raising concerns regarding the child. Key barriers and enablers to the accessibility of primary eye care were identified through an analysis of qualitative information. RESULTS: Of the 400 practices, only three (
- Published
- 2021
14. More Contact with Biological Parents Predicts Shorter Length of Time in Out of Home Care and Mental Health of Youth in the Child Welfare System
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Ming Cui and Lenore M. McWey
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Gerontology ,Sociology and Political Science ,Mental health ,Article ,Education ,Test (assessment) ,Child and adolescent ,Foster care ,Welfare system ,Negatively associated ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Older child ,Kinship care ,Psychology - Abstract
Foster care is intended to be a temporary placement option. Viewing permanency as central to child well-being, current U.S. policies aim to limit the length of time a child spends in out-of-home foster placements. There is little recent research, however, on predictors of length of time in out-of-home care. The purposes of this study were to test if more frequent contact with biological parents predicted less time in out-of-home care, and determine if more frequent contact with biological parents was associated with better mental health outcomes using three waves of data from the National Survey on Child and Adolescent Well-Being II, a U.S. nationally representative dataset of youth involved with the child welfare system. Findings revealed that more frequent contact with biological mothers was associated with fewer cumulative days in out-of-home care. Among covariates, older child age was related to longer stays in out-of-home care, and Black youth experienced more cumulative days in out-of-home care compared to White youth. Links between frequency of contact and youth mental health outcomes also were tested, and more frequent contact with both mothers and fathers was associated with lower mental health symptoms. Being separated from siblings also was associated with more mental health problems, and compared with foster care, being in kinship care was negatively associated with mental health problems. A discussion of the findings in light of U.S. polices and best-practices is included.
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- 2021
15. Predicting Dropout from Children’s Mental Health Services: Using a Need-Based Definition of Dropout
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Graham J. Reid and Kimberly W. Dossett
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Male ,Mental Health Services ,Gerontology ,050103 clinical psychology ,Patient Dropouts ,Adolescent ,Child Health Services ,education ,Psychological intervention ,Logistic regression ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,health services administration ,mental disorders ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Attrition ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,health care economics and organizations ,Dropout (neural networks) ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,Mental Disorders ,05 social sciences ,Service provider ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,3. Good health ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Caregivers ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Child risk ,Older child ,Female ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Dropout from children's mental health services has negative impacts on children, families and service providers. To target interventions aimed to reduce dropout, it is essential to predict individuals who drop out. This study compares predictors of dropout using a novel need-based definition, to existing definitions of dropout. Children (N = 650; 61% male) aged 5-13 attended five children's mental health agencies in Ontario. A mixed effects logistic regression was used to model binary outcome variables (i.e., dropout or treatment completion), for each definition of dropout. Using the need-based definition, older child age, lower child problem presentation, higher child risk behaviors, higher caregiver needs, and more child strengths predicted an increased likelihood of dropout. The need-based definition results in different predictors of dropout than existing definitions in the literature. High caregiver needs was the only predictor of dropout across all definitions. Caregiver needs represent a prospective target when distributing interventions aimed to reduce dropout.
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- 2019
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16. A Comprehensive, Multidisciplinary Approach to the Evaluation of the Neonatal Airway
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Aldo V. Londino, Benjamin M. Laitman, Douglas Bush, Courtney Juliano, and Chantal Spencer
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Neonatal intensive care unit ,Respiratory distress ,business.industry ,respiratory system ,Timely diagnosis ,respiratory tract diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Multidisciplinary approach ,030225 pediatrics ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Older child ,Medicine ,Airway ,business ,Intensive care medicine ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Pulmonologists ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
This review identifies key distinctive features of the anatomy and physiology of the neonatal airway that contribute to pathology. Additionally, it highlights the importance of a multidisciplinary approach to the evaluation of the airway in certain neonates with respiratory distress in the neonatal intensive care unit. Advancements in airway imaging aid in the evaluation of the neonatal airway. However, a comprehensive airway evaluation is often indicated. This requires a team of subspecialists including neonatologists, radiologists, pediatric otolaryngologists, pulmonologists, and anesthesiologists. Disorders of the airway are a common challenge in the neonatal intensive care unit. For reasons that relate to size, anatomy, and physiology, key differences exist between the neonatal airway and that of the older child or adult. A comprehensive multidisciplinary approach to the neonate with suspected airway pathology can improve timely diagnosis, facilitate early intervention, and potentially help avoid unnecessary additional procedures in the neonatal intensive care unit.
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- 2019
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17. Mother–child adrenocortical synchrony: Roles of maternal overcontrol and child developmental phase
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Patricia A. Smiley, Dana Shai, Douglas A. Granger, Hannah F. Rasmussen, Jessica L. Borelli, Sameen Boparai, and Alison Goldstein
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Adult ,Male ,Hydrocortisone ,Child age ,Context (language use) ,Positive correlation ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Child Development ,0302 clinical medicine ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Child ,Maternal Behavior ,Saliva ,Cortisol level ,Developmental stage ,Parenting ,05 social sciences ,Mean age ,Middle Aged ,Child development ,Mother-Child Relations ,Older child ,Female ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
An increasing amount of empirical attention is focused on adrenocortical synchrony as an index of biobehavioral co-regulation between parent and child in the context of early child development. Working with an ethnically diverse community sample of children (N = 99, 50.5% male, ages 9-12), we collected saliva samples from mother-child dyads prior to and after a laboratory-based performance challenge task, and tested whether maternal overcontrol and child age moderated dyadic synchrony in cortisol. Results revealed that cortisol levels between mothers and children were significantly positively correlated at pretask for dyads with mean age and older children only, at 25-min post-task for all dyads, and at 45-min post-task for all dyads. Higher overcontrol/older child dyads exhibited a unique pattern of cortisol synchrony wherein at pretask, mother-child levels had the strongest positive correlation, whereas at 25 and 45 min, mother-child cortisol levels were significantly inversely correlated. These findings contribute to theory and research on parent-child relationships by examining parenting behavior, developmental stage, and adrenocortical synchrony in tandem.
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- 2019
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18. Assessment of the Heineke–Mikulicz anoplasty for skin level postoperative anal strictures and congenital anal stenosis
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Devin R. Halleran, Carlos A. Reck, Alessandra C. Gasior, Alejandra Vilanova Sanchez, Laura Weaver, Richard J. Wood, Marc A. Levitt, Rebecca M. Rentea, and Hira Ahmad
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Adult ,Male ,Posterior sagittal anorectoplasty ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Outpatient procedure ,Anal Canal ,Constriction, Pathologic ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Postoperative Complications ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anal stenosis ,030225 pediatrics ,Humans ,Medicine ,Child ,Digestive System Surgical Procedures ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Rectum ,Infant ,Level iv ,Mean age ,General Medicine ,Plastic Surgery Procedures ,Anorectal Malformations ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Child, Preschool ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Older child ,Female ,Congenital anal stenosis ,business ,Anal stricture - Abstract
Introduction Acquired skin-level strictures following posterior sagittal anorectoplasty (PSARP) and some rare cases of congenital anal stenosis can be managed using a Heineke–Mikulicz like anoplasty (HMA). We hypothesized that this procedure was an effective, safe, and durable outpatient procedure in select patients. Methods We retrospectively reviewed all patients who underwent HMA for skin level strictures following PSARP or for certain congenital anal stenoses from 2014 to 2017. Results Twenty-eight patients (19 males, 9 females) with a mean age of 5.8 years (range 0.5–24.4) underwent HMA. Twenty-six had a prior PSARP, of which 18 were redo, and 8 were primary procedures. Two patients had congenital skin level anal stenosis. The mean follow up was 1.0 years (range 0.4–2.9). The average preprocedure anal size was Hegar 8, which after HMA increased 8 Hegar sizes to 16 (95% CI 7–9, p Conclusion HMA is a safe procedure for skin-level anal strictures following PSARP (primary and redo) and can also be used in some rare cases of congenital anal stenosis. Long-term follow up to determine the restricture rate is ongoing. A plan to do an HMA if a stricture develops may offer an alternative to routine anal dilations, particularly after a redo PSARP in an older child. Type of study Case series. Level of evidence Level IV.
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- 2019
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19. State Contexts and Foster Care Adoption Rates
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Marina Haddock Potter and Sarah A. Font
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Assisted reproductive technology ,Sociology and Political Science ,medicine.medical_treatment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,education ,050301 education ,Subsidy ,Article ,Education ,Foster care ,State (polity) ,Childbearing age ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Older child ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Demographic economics ,Business ,0503 education ,Reporting system ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Insurance coverage ,media_common - Abstract
Prior research has examined associations between state adoption policies and assisted reproductive technology insurance coverage and foster care adoption rates, but knowledge of the relationships between state policies and contexts and foster care adoption is still limited. In this study, we test adoption subsidy policy, alternative means of family formation, and the demographic characteristics of potential adoptive parents and children as predictors of foster care adoption rates at the state-year level using data from the Adoption and Foster Care Analysis and Reporting System and other sources for 2005 to 2016. We use between-within models to obtain random effects estimates between states and fixed effects estimates within states. We find that states with higher average adoption subsidies have lower foster care adoption rates. Foster parent rates, international adoption rates, and mandated in vitro fertilization insurance coverage are positively associated with foster care adoption. States with higher median household incomes and more same-sex couples have higher foster care adoption rates, but states with more women of childbearing age have lower rates of older child adoption. These findings suggest some ways states may seek to increase adoptions from foster care.
- Published
- 2021
20. Extra-axial, dural-based atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor
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Pravin Salunke, Partha Sarathi Mondal, Kirti Gupta, Anshul Siroliya, and Madhivanan Karthigeyan
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Extra axial ,030105 genetics & heredity ,Lesion ,Central Nervous System Neoplasms ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Right parietal region ,Child ,Rhabdoid Tumor ,business.industry ,Rhabdoid tumors ,Teratoma ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Cerebellopontine angle ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumor ,Older child ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosurgery ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumors (ATRTs) are malignant central nervous system tumors that affect early childhood (< 3 years), and mostly located in the infratentorial space. Owing to an infrequent occurrence, their radiological features have not been completely defined. Nevertheless, these are characteristically intra-axial except for few instances in the cerebellopontine angle region. We describe a case of a 10-year-old boy who harbored an extra-axial, dural-based ATRT in the right parietal region. The lesion was totally excised followed by adjuvant chemo-radiotherapy. At 10-month follow-up, he was well with no recurrence. The report intends to highlight an atypical imaging presentation of ATRT in an older child, and adds to the radiological spectrum. This uncommon pathology should be borne in mind, even in a supratentorial dural-based location.
- Published
- 2021
21. Bilingual Family Literacy Challenges
- Author
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Matthew Knoester
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Literacy development ,Language development ,Daughter ,Read aloud ,Framing (social sciences) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Family literacy ,Reading (process) ,Pedagogy ,Older child ,Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
In this chapter a father writes about supporting the language and literacy development of his English-dominant children before and after they were enrolled in a two-way Spanish/English bilingual primary school in a large Midwestern city. Both children struggled at first to understand, speak, read, and write in Spanish, but incrementally improved. The older child came to the school with age-level reading ability in English. The younger child struggled to learn to read and write in English as well. Framing the understanding of bilingual development with the work of Cummins and Thomas and Collier, the chapter describes the various ways the family attempted to support the children’s language and literacy development, including a nightly routine of reading and speaking in both English and Spanish at home. The author worked with the younger daughter first on reading English at night, asking the child to read aloud first with pre-primer books, as the school focused almost entirely on Spanish in the earliest grades. The differences in the children’s language development are theorized and recommendations are made.
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- 2020
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22. Tandem Breastfeeding: A Descriptive Analysis of the Nutritional Value of Milk When Feeding a Younger and Older Child
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Barbara Baranowska, Iwona Adamczyk, Katarzyna Łubiech, Krzysztof Skowron, Magdalena Twarużek, Elena Sinkiewicz-Darol, Urszula Bernatowicz-Łojko, and Diane L. Spatz
- Subjects
Adult ,Carbohydrate content ,prolonged lactation ,Fat content ,Breastfeeding ,Mothers ,lcsh:TX341-641 ,long-nursing mothers ,Article ,extended lactation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Environmental health ,Lactation ,Medicine ,Weaning ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Total protein ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,030504 nursing ,Descriptive statistics ,Milk, Human ,tandem breastfeeding ,business.industry ,weaning ,Infant, Newborn ,Nutritional Requirements ,food and beverages ,Infant ,child nutrition ,Nutrients ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Breast Feeding ,Child, Preschool ,Older child ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena ,lcsh:Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,Nutritive Value ,Food Science - Abstract
Breastfeeding is a gold standard of feeding of newborns and infants. Tandem breastfeeding (TBF) is feeding two children of different ages at the same time. The knowledge about the composition of human milk in prolonged lactation is still scarce. Milk from tandem breastfeeding women and after weaning was examined. Milk samples were collected from 13 TBF mothers. A 24-h milk collection was done. Analyses of fat, protein, carbohydrate and energy content were performed using MIRIS. Sociodemographic characteristics of TBF mothers was done. Higher fat content, energy value and total protein concentration was found in TBFM milk during tandem breastfeeding, than in milk after weaning the older child. The carbohydrate content remained stable. The composition of breastmilk, in terms of macronutrients, changes after weaning, taking into account the nutritional requirements of the younger child. The milk of nursing mothers in tandem did not show diurnal variability in individual components. These findings suggest an adaptive role of human milk to nutrient requirements of newborn and older children. The results may support the promotion of long breastfeeding, including tandem breastfeeding.
- Published
- 2020
23. The impact of unplanned school closure on childrens social contact: Rapid evidence review
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Ian P. Hall, G. James Rubin, Dale Weston, Samantha K Brooks, Louise E. Smith, Rebecca K. Webster, and Lisa Woodland
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Adult ,Parents ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Letter ,Adolescent ,Social contact ,social isolation ,Epidemiology ,Public health interventions ,MEDLINE ,PsycINFO ,Disease Outbreaks ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Virology ,Disease Transmission, Infectious ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Social Behavior ,Students ,Pandemics ,Schools ,Financial impact ,social contact ,Public health ,Risk of infection ,quarantine ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,school closure ,Infectious disease (medical specialty) ,Family medicine ,Older child ,Female ,Public Health ,Covid-19 ,Psychology ,mental health ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Primary research - Abstract
Background Emergency school closures are often used as public health interventions during infectious disease outbreaks to minimise the spread of infection. However, if children continue mixing with others outside the home during closures, the effect of these measures may be limited. Aim This review aimed to summarise existing literature on children’s activities and contacts made outside the home during unplanned school closures. Methods In February 2020, we searched four databases, MEDLINE, PsycInfo, Embase and Web of Science, from inception to 5 February 2020 for papers published in English or Italian in peer-reviewed journals reporting on primary research exploring children’s social activities during unplanned school closures. Main findings were extracted. Results A total of 3,343 citations were screened and 19 included in the review. Activities and social contacts appeared to decrease during closures, but contact remained common. All studies reported children leaving the home or being cared for by non-household members. There was some evidence that older child age (two studies) and parental disagreement (two studies) with closure were predictive of children leaving the home, and mixed evidence regarding the relationship between infection status and such. Parental agreement with closure was generally high, but some disagreed because of perceived low risk of infection and issues regarding childcare and financial impact. Conclusion Evidence suggests that many children continue to leave home and mix with others during school closures despite public health recommendations to avoid social contact. This review of behaviour during unplanned school closures could be used to improve infectious disease modelling.
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- 2020
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24. Determining temperature ratings for children's sleeping bags
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Elizabeth A. McCullough, Meredith Schlabach, and Steven J. Eckels
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Thermal manikin ,Heat losses ,Human Factors and Ergonomics ,030229 sport sciences ,Audiology ,Younger child ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Metabolic rate ,Older child ,Thermal protection ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Simulation - Abstract
Manufacturers label their sleeping bags with a temperature rating to assist consumers in selecting a bag that will provide them with an acceptable level of thermal protection under the expected conditions of use. These temperature ratings are typically based on thermal manikin testing and whole-body heat loss models. Due to physical and physiological differences between children and adults, existing adult sleeping bag temperature rating models cannot be applied to children's bags. Therefore, a model for determining the temperature ratings of children's sleeping bags is proposed. Issues related to measuring the thermal insulation of children's sleeping bags are also discussed. The results of the model indicate that an older child has a higher temperature rating than a younger child for the same level of insulation. This is due to the higher sleeping metabolic rate of younger children.
- Published
- 2018
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25. Dojenje in tandemsko dojenje
- Author
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Katarina Merše Lovrinčević and Jurka Lepičnik Vodopivec
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medicine.medical_specialty ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,Social stigma ,Descriptive statistics ,Health professionals ,Breastfeeding ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cronbach's alpha ,Family medicine ,medicine ,Chi-square test ,Older child ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Descriptive research ,Psychology - Abstract
Introduction: Tandem breastfeeding is a poorly understood concept. Mothers who tandem breastfeed are often faced with social stigma and poor support given by healthcare professionals. The purpose of the research was to study the knowledge on tandem breastfeeding among students of nursing.Methods: The research is based upon quantitative explorative-nonexperimental descriptive research design. Participants were random nursing (n = 66) and dietetics (n = 24) students. Data were gathered with a structured questionnaire (Cronbach α = 0.914). Descriptive statistics were used; a chi square test and singlefactor analysis of variance.Results: 50.7 % (n = 36) women and 84.2 % (n = 16) men (χ2 = 6.898, p = 0.009) considered it physiologically normal that if a woman stops breastfeeding the older child when she becomes pregnant again. 79.2 % (n = 19) dietetics students compared to 54.5 % (n = 36) nursing students (χ2 = 4.489, p = 0.034) knew that breastfeeding was the only form of nutrition in the first six months of an infant’s life. 86.3 % (n = 44) women in comparison to 13.7 % (n = 7) men recognized that the statement that infants who are tandem breastfed experience slower growth, was incorrect.Discussion and conclusion: Students participating in the research have demonstrated a lack of knowledge in both, breastfeeding and tandem breastfeeding. The study programme should contain more content on breastfeeding.
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- 2018
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26. A case report of an uncommon presentation of Nephroblastoma (Wilms tumor): in an older child with polycythemia and elevated erythropoietin
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A Sybenga and K Danyal
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Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Erythropoietin ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Medicine ,Older child ,Wilms' tumor ,General Medicine ,Presentation (obstetrics) ,business ,medicine.disease ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Introduction/Objective Wilms tumor (nephroblastoma), is a neoplasm that has a prevalence of 1 per 10,000 before the age of fifteen, with 50% occurring before age 3. WT1 (11p13) gene, a zinc finger transcription factor, is expressed in early urogenital system development and mutations here represent one of the primary pathways to the development of Wilms tumor. Although mouse model studies have shown that WT1 may be a transcriptional activator of erythropoietin (EPO) gene, increases in serum erythropoietin are rarely seen in patients with Wilms tumor. Concurrent polycythemia is a further rarity with only 11 such reports in literature. This is intriguing since WT1 mutations represent the most common mutation pathway in Wilms Tumor. Interestingly, other tumor types associated with elevated serum EPO and polycythemia (e.g. renal cell carcinoma and metanephric adenoma) are thought to do so through the generation of hypoxia inducible factor, and induction of VEGF. Methods/Case Report Here we present a case of Wilms tumor in a 7-year-old female who was establishing care after moving to Vermont. Physical examination showed possible splenomegaly ultimately discovered to be a large LUQ abdominal mass with a concurrent discovery of polycythemia. Subsequent serum EPO was 308 (Ref: 2.6-18.5 mIU/mL).). The mass was surgically removed with resolution of polycythemia. Histological evaluation showed a triphasic, blastema predominant Wilms tumor with favorable histology. Heterologous, vascular differentiation was seen in the stroma, positive for CD34 and CD31, and negative for D2-40. Results (if a Case Study enter NA) NA Conclusion Based on these findings, this phenomenon may be related to increased VEGF expression resulting in this patient’s increased serum EPO and polycythemia, and heterologous vascular differentiation within the tumor stroma. This is the first report of histology in a case of Wilms tumor associated with high serum EPO and polycythemia and may indicate an alternative pathway for the generation of EPO in Wilms tumor.
- Published
- 2021
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27. A Study on the Post-Adoption Service Experiences of Mothers Adopting an Older Child
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Mi-sun Lee, Mi-hee Byun, Sun-suk Kim, and Jaejin Ahn
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Service (business) ,Nursing ,Older child ,Post adoption ,Psychology - Published
- 2017
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28. Displaced Supracondylar Humerus Fractures in Children – Are They All Identical?
- Author
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S K Gera, McH Tan, Y G Lim, and Kbl Lim
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medicine.medical_specialty ,paediatric ,elbow fracture ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,older child ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Humerus ,Ulnar nerve ,Orthopedic surgery ,030222 orthopedics ,Elbow fracture ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Gartland classification ,Nerve injury ,Neurovascular bundle ,Median nerve ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,humerus supracondylar fracture ,adolescent ,Emergency Medicine ,Original Article ,medicine.symptom ,business ,RD701-811 ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: This study aims to ascertain if there are any differences in supracondylar fractures between children under seven years of age and those above 7 years of age. MATERIALS AND METHODS: All cases of displaced humerus supracondylar fractures that required surgical stabilization were identified and retrospectively reviewed. Demographic data, mode of injury, associated neurovascular injuries and details of surgery performed were obtained from clinical records. The Gartland classification and the extent of comminution of fractures were also documented from review of radiographs. RESULTS: One hundred and twelve children were included in this study, of whom 61 (54.46%) were younger than seven years of age while 51 (45.5%) were aged seven years or older. Children aged seven or older had a greater incidence of associated neurological deficit at presentation (p=0.046). Of the six patients with nerve injury in the older age group, one patient (16.7%) had a radial nerve injury, two patients (33.3%) had ulnar nerve injuries while another two patients (33.3%) had median nerve injuries. There was one patient (16.7%) with both median and ulnar nerve injuries. Comminuted fractures were also more common in the older children (p=0.004). No significant differences were demonstrated between the groups with regard to age, gender and mechanism of injury, laterality, incidence of open fracture, vascular injuries and operative time. CONCLUSION: Children aged seven years or older who sustain supracondylar humeral fractures tend to get more comminuted fractures. There is also a higher incidence of associated neurological injury. These cases must be carefully examined for at presentation and parents need to be appropriately counselled about them.
- Published
- 2017
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29. Effects of Individual, Peer, and Family Factors on Child Alcohol Abuse in Ukraine
- Author
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Viktor Burlaka
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,05 social sciences ,Alcohol abuse ,Alcohol ,medicine.disease ,Impulsivity ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,chemistry ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Older child ,Domestic violence ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,030212 general & internal medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Child Behavior Checklist ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,Alcohol consumption ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
The present study aims to estimate the relationship between child alcohol problems, sociodemographic characteristics, externalizing behavior, parental and peer alcohol use, and family violence by using a cross-sectional community sample of 320 Ukrainian children (9–16 years of age, 50% boys) and their parents. Participants answered questions from the Drinking and Drug History and Current Use Patterns Questionnaire, the Revised Conflict Tactics Scales, the Alabama Parenting Questionnaire, and the Child Behavior Checklist. Fifty-two percent of children reported alcohol use within the past year and 32% experienced alcohol-related problems. The average number of reported alcohol problems was 11.19 (SD = 63.65). Five robust regression models examined correlates of early problem drinking in Ukraine. The final model indicated older child age (β = 0.21, p
- Published
- 2017
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30. Three sides to a story: Child, parent, and nurse perspectives on the child's experience during hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
- Author
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Kristin Bingen, Eva C. Guinan, Hocine Tighiouart, Susan K. Parsons, Grace Chang, Karen L. Syrjala, Angie Mae Rodday, Sunita K. Patel, Christina Ullrich, Norma Terrin, Mary Jo Kupst, Sean Phipps, Christopher J. Recklitis, and Lynnette L. Harris
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Repeated measures design ,Emotional functioning ,Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Distress ,0302 clinical medicine ,Mood ,Oncology ,Nursing ,Quality of life ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Medicine ,Older child ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,Prospective cohort study - Abstract
BACKGROUND The experience of children undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), including the ways in which different participants (ie, children, parents, and nurses) contribute to the overall picture of a child's experience, is poorly characterized. This study evaluated parent, child, and nurse perspectives on the experience of children during HSCT and factors contributing to interrater differences. METHODS Participants were enrolled in a multicenter, prospective study evaluating child and parent health-related quality of life over the year after HSCT. Children (n = 165) and their parents and nurses completed the Behavioral, Affective, and Somatic Experiences Scale (BASES) at baseline (before/during conditioning), 7 days after the stem cell infusion (day+7), and 21 days after the stem cell infusion (day+21). The BASES domains included Somatic Distress, Mood Disturbance, Cooperation, and Getting Along. Higher scores indicated more distress/impairment. Repeated measures models by domain assessed differences by raters and changes over time and identified other factors associated with raters' scores. RESULTS Completion rates were high (≥73% across times and raters). Multivariate models revealed significant time-rater interactions, which varied by domain. For example, parent-rated Somatic Distress scores increased from baseline to day+7 and remained elevated at day+21 (P < .001); children's scores were lower than parents' scores across time points. Nurses' baseline scores were lower than parents' baseline scores, although by day+21 they were similar. Older child age was associated with higher Somatic Distress and Mood Disturbance scores. Worse parent emotional functioning was associated with lower scores across raters and domains except for Cooperation. CONCLUSIONS Multirater assessments are highly feasible during HSCT. Ratings differ by several factors; considering ratings in light of such factors may deepen our understanding of the child's experience. Cancer 2017;123:3159–66. © 2017 American Cancer Society.
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- 2017
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31. Acute pain management in the neonate
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Glyn Williams
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Analgesic ,Psychological intervention ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,Distress ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Opioid ,030202 anesthesiology ,Pain assessment ,030225 pediatrics ,Intervention (counseling) ,Physical therapy ,Older child ,Medicine ,business ,Acute pain ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Acute pain management in the neonatal period remains a challenge for the clinician. Responses to pain and analgesic intervention are developmentally influenced and cannot be not directly extrapolated from the older child. Successful and safe intervention will minimize acute physiological and behavioural distress, reduce pain scores and potentially improve short- and long-term outcomes. This requires an understanding of the physiology and pharmacology in this age group alongside a multi-modal approach to treatment using both pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions.
- Published
- 2017
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32. Infantile myofibromatosis: unusual diagnosis in an older child
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Franzese, Christine B. and Carron, Jeffrey
- Subjects
- *
DIAGNOSIS , *CLINICAL medicine , *MEDICAL care , *DECISION making in clinical medicine - Abstract
Summary: This manuscript describes the unusual presentation of infantile myofibromatosis (IM) in an older child with its diagnosis and management. An 8-year-old girl presented with a painless, rapidly expanding malar mass. CT demonstrated an erosive soft tissue lesion and needle biopsy was nondiagnostic. Complete excision returned the pathologic diagnosis of IM. The patient had no complications and no evidence of recurrence at 1 year. Almost 90% of IM cases present by age two and IM in older children is highly unusual. The solitary form of IM is most common and its treatment is complete excision with an excellent prognosis. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2005
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33. Idiopathic Facial Aseptic Granuloma in an older child: A case report in a pre‐adolescent boy
- Author
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Denise W. Metry, Rosie Qin, and Emily K Burns
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Pre adolescents ,Dermatology ,Diagnosis, Differential ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Child ,Connective Tissue Diseases ,Idiopathic facial aseptic granuloma ,Granuloma ,business.industry ,Benign lesion ,medicine.disease ,Child, Preschool ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Older child ,Dermatopathology ,business ,Facial Dermatoses ,Pediatric population - Abstract
Idiopathic facial aseptic granuloma (IFAG) is an uncommon, benign lesion that presents in the pediatric population. The diagnosis is classically associated with preschool-aged children. Herein, we present a case of IFAG in a pre-adolescent boy, emphasizing the importance of diagnostic consideration in older children.
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- 2020
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34. Adolescent Presentation of Posterior Urethral Valves
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Rachel Davis, Hiten D. Patel, John P. Gearhart, Wayland J. Wu, Roni Manyevitch, and Heather N. Di Carlo
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urethral Obstruction ,Adolescent ,business.industry ,Urology ,Urinary system ,Cystoscopy ,Distension ,Surgery ,Catheter ,Visual evidence ,medicine ,Humans ,Older child ,business ,Urethral valve - Abstract
Posterior urethral valves (PUVs) present clinically across a varied spectrum, ranging from severe obstruction with massive distension of the bladder and upper urinary tracts in the fetus, to a much more indolent course with minor secondary changes in the young or older child. Type III (diaphragm) PUVs are relatively uncommon, and are associated with difficulty in passing a transurethral catheter into the bladder as well as smooth dilation of the bladder. The following case examines the unusual experiences of both diagnosing PUVs in a teenager, and capturing visual evidence of type III valves during cystourethroscopy.
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- 2020
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35. Medical Child Abuse: A Case Presenting as Anogenital Bleeding of Unknown Origin in an Older Child
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Oluyemisi Adeyemi-Fowode, Reena Isaac, Krista J. Childress, and Lisa M. Moon
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Child abuse ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mothers ,Laboratory testing ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,medicine ,Humans ,Medical history ,Child Abuse ,Child ,Anus Diseases ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,General Medicine ,Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy ,Family medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Etiology ,Older child ,Female ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Uterine Hemorrhage ,Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage ,business - Abstract
Background Medical child abuse is a challenging diagnosis to make, particularly in older children with unusual presenting symptoms. Case A 7-year-old child with complex medical history presented with anogenital bleeding of unknown origin. Extensive laboratory testing, imaging studies, and diagnostic procedures were negative for any etiology. Forensic testing confirmed the blood in her underwear was a genetic match to the patient. Trial separation from the mother was diagnostic and therapeutic in this case. Summary and Conclusion Older children who are victims of medical child abuse might present in a variety of ways, and might even collaborate with the perpetrator in falsifying symptoms. It is important to keep medical child abuse on the differential when the patient's symptoms and work-up do not match.
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- 2018
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36. Pelvis/Hip Paediatric
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Apostolos H. Karantanas, Prudencia N. M. Tyrrell, and Victor N. Cassar-Pullicino
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Hip dysplasia ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Young child ,business.industry ,Radiography ,Medicine ,Older child ,Medical physics ,business ,medicine.disease ,Pelvis - Abstract
Accurate and reproducible measurements related to the paediatric hip and pelvis can be challenging. A standardised radiograph requires close attention to positioning of the infant or child to ensure that it is neither rotated nor inclined. Even a minor degree of obliquity can result in great variability of measurement. In the young child several bony landmarks are not yet established and difficulty can be encountered in determining the appropriate point of measurement. Awareness of these issues allows one to employ the best and most readily reproducible measurement at a particular age or stage of development. Although ultrasound plays an important role in evaluation of paediatric hip dysplasia, this is mainly in infants and radiography continues to play an important role in the older child and adult. There are a wide range of measurements available for different clinical scenarios. These will be addressed in this chapter.
- Published
- 2019
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37. Elicit a Developmental History
- Author
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Tina Iyama-Kurtycz
- Subjects
Nonverbal communication ,Receptive language ,medicine ,Autism ,Older child ,Close relatives ,Social differences ,medicine.disease ,Psychology ,Cautionary Warning ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
This chapter discusses taking a developmental and autism-focused history and acknowledging that developmental and behavioral problems are stories that unfold over time. Going back to infancy is critical to this process, and questions to ask regarding infancy, toddlerhood, and childhood are included. Your history may be complicated by the broader autism phenotype, the tendency of close relatives of the child to have some language and social differences. There is a cautionary warning regarding an invalid way for nonverbal children to communicate. For the verbal older child and adolescent with ASD, using their very special interests can give insight into how a child views their world. Important communication and social milestones are discussed.
- Published
- 2019
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38. The Diagnostic Borderlands of the Autism Spectrum
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Tina Iyama-Kurtycz
- Subjects
Late diagnosis ,business.industry ,Additional diagnoses ,medicine ,Autism ,Older child ,Differential diagnosis ,medicine.disease ,business ,Apraxia ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
We look at children who might have other or additional diagnoses to explain their symptoms; as the autism spectrum expands, it includes other, possibly related conditions. First we explore the differential diagnosis for ASD (section “Differential Diagnostic Conditions”) and then children who are diagnosed later (section “The Older Child: Late Diagnosis and Primary Behavioral Concerns”).
- Published
- 2019
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39. Fifteen-minute consultation: Point of care ultrasound in the management of paediatric shock
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Michael J Griksaitis and James A Hardwick
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Point-of-Care Systems ,Pediatrics ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Intensive care ,medicine ,Bedside ultrasound ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,Child ,Accident emergency ,Referral and Consultation ,Ultrasonography ,business.industry ,Point of care ultrasound ,Ultrasound ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Shock ,Shock (circulatory) ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Older child ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
The use of point of care ultrasound (POCUS) in the assessment of the acutely shocked adult patient has been well established for over a decade. Comparatively, its use in paediatrics has been limited, but this is starting to change with the recent introduction of Children’s Acute Ultrasound training. This article highlights the pathophysiology of shock in children and demonstrates how bedside ultrasound can be used to assist decision making in the clinical assessment of the neonate, infant or older child presenting with undifferentiated shock. We discuss a structured protocol to use when performing the POCUS examination and explain how this could lead to a more rapid correlation of the ultrasound findings with the underlying cause of shock.
- Published
- 2019
40. A Deep Learning Approach to Predict Malnutrition Status of 0-59 Month's Older Children in Bangladesh
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Mirza Shaheen Iqubal, Amit Kumar Das, Samrat Mitra, and Mehrab Shahriar
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business.industry ,Deep learning ,Developing country ,medicine.disease ,Malnutrition ,Environmental health ,Workforce ,medicine ,Health survey ,Older child ,Artificial intelligence ,Underweight ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Psychology ,Wasting - Abstract
The state of malnutrition can be considered as a predominant issue for a developing nation like Bangladesh. Since today's children are the future's workforce, it explicitly impacts to the economic improvement of Bangladesh. So, prevention of child malnutrition is the most foremost investigation at this stage. The study aims to classify malnutrition based on deep learning approach of predictive modeling on significant malnutrition features to predict malnutrition status of a 0–59 months' older child. To do so an Artificial Neural Network (ANN) approach is applied to Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey 2014 (BDHS) children data. This study clarifies how a predictive model classifies the malnutrition condition. ANN approach shows the best accuracy with wasting, underweight, and stunting. In conclusion, determining the malnutrition status using deep learning approach is the most scientific way to deal with it both for policymakers and clinicians.
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- 2019
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41. G284(P) Where do the children play? A cross-sectional analysis of children’s activities in rural gambia and their risk of diarrhoea
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Buba Manjang, W Holdsworth, J Sowe, JT Martin, Semira Manaseki-Holland, Francesca L. Crowe, Carole Cummins, and E Harris Snell
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Multivariate logistic regression model ,Increased risk ,Cross-sectional study ,business.industry ,Environmental health ,Mixed effects ,Psychological intervention ,Medicine ,Older child ,Faecal bacteria ,Livestock ,business - Abstract
Aims Previous research has shown that young children from lower-income countries who play on soil contaminated with faecal bacteria may have an increased risk of diarrhoea. We describe the directly observed activities of young children in rural Gambia and assess whether exposure to the ground outside and factors such as who cares for the child are associated with the child’s risk of diarrhoea. Methods This was a cross-sectional analysis of secondary data from 735 randomly selected households with a child aged 6–36 months from 30 rural villages in The Gambia. Fieldworkers observed the children’s activities and the presence of livestock in the compound, and caregivers reported diarrhoea in the children over the past week. The predictors of diarrhoea were assessed by using a mixed effects multivariate logistic regression model, adjusted for demographic, socio-economic and behavioural factors. Results The majority (87.1%) of children were observed on the ground outside and 84.4% of children were in compounds that contained livestock. Some children (15.6%) were observed on the ground on multiple occasions but the longest period the children were observed on the ground was a median (IQR) of 93 (46–195) minutes. For every hour a child spent on the ground outside during the longest observed period, their risk of diarrhoea increased by 12.4% (adjusted OR=1.124, 95% CI=1.000–1.264, p=0.049). Having an older child, compared to an adult supervising the child reduced the risk of diarrhoea by nearly half (adjusted OR=0.523, 95% CI=0.344–0.794, p=0.002). Conclusion This is the first study from rural Gambia to explore the activities of young children and quantify their exposure to soil on the ground and nearby livestock. The length of the longest period the child spent on the ground outside was positively associated with the risk of diarrhoea. This study highlights the need for interventions that will reduce young children’s exposure to contaminated soil in compounds and suggests that older children as carers could play a part.
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- 2019
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42. Correlation of scores with number of Ponseti casts required for clubfoot correction in the older child
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Anil Agarwal and Mukesh Shanker
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Orthodontics ,030222 orthopedics ,Foot abduction ,Clubfoot ,business.industry ,Severity grading ,Clubfoot correction ,medicine.disease ,Ponseti method ,Correlation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Older child ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Low correlation ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Background We examined the correlation between initial Pirani and Dimeglio scores and their individual components to the number of casts for older clubfoot children. Methods Twenty seven patients (39 feet) aged 2–11 years with idiopathic clubfeet were treated using the Ponseti technique and correlation with number of corrective casts calculated. The number of cast required was counted from application of primary cast to the time of initiation of the foot abduction orthosis. Results Average 8.45 ± 2.31 (range, 4–13) casts were used for treatment. A low correlation (r = 0.203) was identified when total Dimeglio score was compared with the number of casts. No correlation was identified for Pirani score (r = 0.023). Among individual components, only cavus deformity had a significant positive correlation to cast numbers. Conclusions The Pirani and Dimeglio classifications still remain the most widely practiced clubfoot severity grading systems for the older clubfoot child. However, their prognostic value to predict the total cast duration from initial severity remains questionable.
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- 2019
43. Correlates of Sun Protection and Sunburn in Children of Melanoma Survivors
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Jeffrey E. Gershenwald, Jeffrey E. Lee, Ellen R. Gritz, Mary K. Tripp, Alexander V. Prokhorov, Susan K. Peterson, and Sanjay Shete
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Skin Neoplasms ,Epidemiology ,Sun protection ,Psychological intervention ,Sunburn ,Article ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Health belief model ,Survivors ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Melanoma ,integumentary system ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Limiting ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Surgery ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Older child ,Female ,business ,Sunscreening Agents ,Demography - Abstract
Introduction Sunburns during childhood increase melanoma risk. Children of melanoma survivors are at higher risk, but little is known about their sunburn and sun protection. One study showed that almost half of melanoma survivors' children experienced sunburn in the past year. This study evaluated sunburn and sun protection in melanoma survivors' children, and relevant survivor characteristics from Social Cognitive Theory and the Health Belief Model. Methods Melanoma survivors (N=340) were recruited from a comprehensive cancer center. Survivors completed a baseline questionnaire administered by telephone to report on the behavior of their children (N=340) as part of an RCT of a sun protection intervention. Data were collected in 2008 and analyzed in 2015. Results In the prior 6 months, 28% of children experienced sunburn. "Always" or "frequent" sun protection varied by behavior: sunscreen, 69%; lip balm, 15%; wide-brimmed hats, 9%; sleeved shirts, 28%; pants, 48%; sunglasses, 10%; shade, 33%; and limiting time outdoors, 45%. Survivors' sunburn and sun protection were positively associated with these outcomes in children. Correlates of sunburn also included older child age and higher risk perceptions. Correlates of sun protection behaviors included younger child age; stronger intentions, higher self-efficacy, and more positive outcome expectations about sun protection; and greater number of melanomas in survivors. Conclusions Melanoma survivors may have a heightened awareness of the importance of their children's sun protection, but their children are not routinely protected. Correlates of children's sunburn and sun protection suggest subgroups of survivors to target with interventions to improve sun protection.
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- 2016
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44. '¡Uy, no! ¡Mirá lo que pasó!'. Uso de recursos evaluativos en narrativas de ficción por niños pequeños de poblaciones urbano-marginadas
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Celia Renata Rosemberg and Florencia Alam
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Contexto de interacción ,Linguistics and Language ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Ciencias de la Educación ,Young children ,purl.org/becyt/ford/5.3 [https] ,Interacción conversacional ,Interactions between children ,Language and Linguistics ,Grounded theory ,Education ,CIENCIAS SOCIALES ,Qualitative analysis ,Narrative ,Girl ,Evaluation ,Fictional narratives ,media_common ,Marginalised urban populations ,Peer interaction ,purl.org/becyt/ford/5 [https] ,Recursos evaluativos en narraciones ficcionales ,Zona de desarrollo potencial ,Art ,Psicolingüística ,Contexte d'interaction ,Ressources évaluatives dans des narrations fictionnelles ,Point de développement potentiel ,Interaction conversationnelle ,Otras Ciencias de la Educación ,Psycholinguistique ,Older child ,Social psychology ,Humanities - Abstract
El presente trabajo se propone analizar los recursos evaluativos (Labov, 1972) empleados por niños de 4 años de poblaciones urbanas marginadas cuando cuentan un relato de ficción en distintos contextos de producción: en interacción con un niño mayor, en interacción con un par y de formaindividual. El corpus está conformado por 99 narrativas solicitadas a 33 niños y niñas de 4 años a partir de una secuencia de imágenes en las tres condiciones mencionadas. Las narrativas fueron filmadas en video. Se empleó un procedimiento cualitativo, el Método Comparativo Constante(Strauss & Corbin, 1990), con el objetivo de elaborar inductivamente un sistema de categorías que permitió dar cuenta de los recursos evaluativos empleados por los niños. Luego se analizó la distribución cuantitativa de estas categorías y se emplearon procedimientos estadísticos (ANOVA yChi cuadrado) para evaluar la significatividad de las diferencias. Por último, se analizaron de forma cualitativa las narrativas producidas por una misma niña en las tres condiciones consideradas. Los resultados mostraron que los niños empleaban mayor cantidad de recursos evaluativos cuando interactuaban con un par que en las otras dos condiciones. El análisis cualitativo de las narrativas producidas por una misma niña en las tres condiciones permite comprender esta diferencia en función del modo particular que adopta la interacción con un niño de igual edad. Estos resultados,que se discuten atendiendo a investigaciones psicolingüísticas y del análisis conversacional,permiten ponderar la relevancia de las interacciones entre pares en la producción de narrativas y su potencial uso en el diseño de estrategias pedagógicas.Palabras clave: evaluación, narrativas de ficción, interacciones entre niños, niños pequeños,poblaciones urbano marginadas. This work aims to analyze the evaluative resources (Labov, 1972) that 4-year-old children from marginalized urban populations employ when they tell a fictional account in different contexts of production: interaction with a same age child, interaction with an older child and individual performance. The corpus is made up of 99 narratives elicited from a sequence of images to 33 4-year-old children in the three conditions mention. The narratives were videotaped and transcribed. A qualitative method was employed, the Constant Comparative Method, in order to create a system of categories that allowed to analyzed the evaluative resources employed by the children. The quantitative distribution of these categories was then analyzed, and statistics procedures were employed in order to evaluate the significance of the differences. Last, we analyzed qualitatively the narratives produced by the same girl in the three conditions. Results show that the children employed more evaluative resources when they interacted with a peer than in the other two conditions. The qualitative analysis of the narratives produced by one child in the three conditions allowed understand this difference due to the characteristics of the interaction with a same age child. These results, which are discussed in response to psycholinguistic and conversational analysis previous research, allow weigh the importance of peer interactions in the production of narratives and their potential use in designing teaching strategies. Le présent travail se propose d’analyser les ressources évaluatives (Labov, 1972) employées par des enfants de 4 ans issus de populations défavorisées, au moment de raconter un événement fictif produit dans différents contextes : et ce durant l’interaction avec un enfant plus grand, puis avec un enfant de leur âge, et enfin de manière individuelle. Le corpus est conformé par 99 narrations sollicitées à 33 enfants de 4 ans, à partir d’une séquence d’images présentée dans les trois conditions mentionnées ci-dessus. Les narrations ont été filmées et transcrites. Nous avons employé une procédure qualitative, la Méthode Comparative Constante (Strauss & Corbin, 1990), afin de construire de manière inductive un système des catégories nous permettant de comprendre les ressources évaluatives employées par les enfants. Ensuite, nous avons analysé la distribution quantitative de ces catégories, et nous avons employé des procédures statistiques afin d’évaluer la significativité des différences. Finalement, nous avons analysé de façon qualitative les récits produits par la même petite fille, pendant les trois scénarios déjà mentionnés. Les résultats ont démontré que les enfants employaient une quantité de ressources évaluatives plus large lorsqu’ils échangeaient avec des enfants de leur âge, que dans les autres contextes. L’analyse qualitative des récits produits par la même petite fille dans les trois conditions, permet de comprendre cette différence en fonction de la particularité dont l’enfant du même âge adopte l’interaction. Ces résultats, qui sont discutés en réponse à des travaux de recherche psycholinguistiques et d’analyse conversationnelle, permettent de peser l’importance des interactions entre pairs dans la production de récits et leur utilisation potentielle dans la conception de stratégies d’enseignement. Fil: Alam, Florencia. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Saavedra 15. Centro Interdisciplinario de Investigaciones en Psicología Matemática y Experimental Dr. Horacio J. A. Rimoldi; Argentina Fil: Rosemberg, Celia Renata. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Saavedra 15. Centro Interdisciplinario de Investigaciones en Psicología Matemática y Experimental Dr. Horacio J. A. Rimoldi; Argentina
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- 2016
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45. Children’s Influence on Their Parent’s Adult Development: Mothers’ and Fathers’ Receptivity to Children’s Requests for Change
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Leon Kuczynski, Robyn Pitman, Loan Ta-Young, and Lori D. Harach
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Adult development ,05 social sciences ,Socialization ,Receptivity ,050109 social psychology ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Transactional leadership ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Older child ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Indirect impact ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
This mixed-method study examined parents’ experiences of their children’s influence on parent’s continuing adult development. Mothers and fathers from 30 families were separately interviewed regarding two of their children who were between 8 and 14 years old. Parents reported on recent events when their younger and older child successfully requested that parents change their preferences, attitudes, and personal behaviors. Mothers reported more direct child influence than fathers, and both parents reported that they were more receptive to influence from their older children. Thematic analyses revealed that parents were generally comfortable with child influence and constructed their children as actors and agents. Parents attributed their receptivity to agentic qualities of children’s requests, goals for empowering children, and maintaining their mutual relationship. The findings provided insight into the transactional and relational nature of children’s influence and the direct and indirect impact of children on the adult development of parents.
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- 2016
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46. Dream Weaver/Dream Catcher: The Older Child and Analyst at Work
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Denia G. Barrett
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Clinical Psychology ,Psychoanalysis ,Work (electrical) ,Early adolescence ,media_common.quotation_subject ,General partnership ,Older child ,Dream diary ,Meaning (existential) ,Dream ,Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Children in late latency through early adolescence can join in a partnership with their analyst to explore their dreams as important communications about themselves. The child is the bearer of the dream, the analyst the receiver, and their shared attention to something new presenting itself to each of them offers a unique opportunity to seek meaning together. This article provides clinical illustrations of work with the dreams of children in different phases of analysis and during developmental transitions. Technical approaches that invite a child’s interest in dreams are demonstrated.
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- 2016
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47. A influência de crenças e tabus alimentares na amamentação
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Maria Maitê Leite Lima, Marcela Komechen Brecailo, Thiécla Katiane Rosales Silva, Emilaine Ferreira dos Santos, Priscila Antunes Tsupal, and Melhem, Angélica, Rocha de Freitas
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education.field_of_study ,Child care ,Early weaning ,Environmental health ,Population ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Breastfeeding ,Older child ,Mean age ,Dietary restrictions ,education ,Eating habits ,Psychology - Abstract
Cultural factors, such as food taboos, negatively influence the promotion of breastfeeding, resulting in early weaning. The aim of this study was to investigate differences in eating habits of a group of mothers in relation to breastfeeding. Cross-sectional study consisting of mothers of children under two years old enrolled in the Child Care Program of two Basic Health Units of Guarapuava-PR. One located in the peripheral region (US 1) and the other in the central area (US 2) to detect differences in eating habits of this population. The study included 96 mothers with mean age 25,11 years, of which 86.5% said they believed that some food would undermine breastfeeding. The main foods to be avoided, according to the mothers, were acidic foods, alcohol, chocolate and soft drinks. Mothers of units 1 and 2 have made mention consumption of foods derived from corn, and only two mentioned in the U.S. 2 beer consumption as food lactogenic black. No differences were found between the health U.S. 1 and U.S. 2. In relation to dietary restrictions were not found relevant data related to the taboos of the interviewees. Highlights the importance of orientation to promote breastfeeding and encourage mothers to solve any doubts, avoiding early weaning and continued breastfeeding until two years of age or older child.
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- 2016
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48. Outcomes in Adolescent and Older-Child Adoptions.
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Haugaard, Jeffrey J., Wojslawowicz, Julie C., and Palmer, Megan
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OLDER child adoption ,TEENAGERS ,PROBLEM children ,AGE ,GENDER ,SIBLINGS ,ADOPTIVE parents ,FAMILIES ,SOCIAL development - Abstract
This column reviews and comments on studies of the outcome of older-child and adolescent adoption. The research demonstrates that children adopted at older ages are more likely to exhibit higher levels of some problem behaviors than children adopted at younger ages. Gender, age and the placement of sibling groups are among the variables that seem to influence outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1999
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49. Closure of ventricular septal defect in anatomically corrected malposition of great arteries: Case series with review of literature
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Amitabha Chattopadhyay, Sanjiban Ghosh, Aritra Mukherji, and Debasis Das
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Aorta ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Conduction abnormalities ,Percutaneous ,business.industry ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Great vessels ,Great arteries ,030225 pediatrics ,medicine.artery ,Internal medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Pulmonary artery ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Older child ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Normal heart - Abstract
Anatomically corrected malposition of great arteries constitutes a rare form of congenital cardiac malformation where aorta and pulmonary artery arise from respective ventricles but the alignment of the great vessels does not conform to that of a normal heart. It often poses a diagnostic challenge due to a close resemblance to other great vessel malposition defects. The majority of the patients with this disorder are physiologically corrected and present due to associated lesions, most commonly ventricular septal defects. In this review, we present two children of anatomically corrected malposition who presented with hemodynamically significant ventricular septal defects. The older child had a restrictive defect and was successfully managed by percutaneous closure in-spite of associated septal malalignment. The younger child had a larger defect and underwent surgical closure for the same. None of the children had any associated outflow tract obstructions. Closure of ventricular septal defect with such an anatomy either surgically or by percutaneous route has its own set of challenges. Although the risks of conduction abnormalities are not increased, there is a potential for future development of outflow tract obstruction requiring periodic follow-up. Detailed echocardiography and proper understanding of the unique anatomy forms the basis of successful management of associated lesions in anatomically corrected malposition of great arteries.
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- 2020
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50. Suppurative arthritis of hip in a walking child: Effect of patient’s age, delay in surgical drainage, and organism virulence
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Anil Agarwal and Vimal Kumar Kh
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Male ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Virulence ,Walking ,Suppurative Arthritis ,medicine.disease_cause ,Time-to-Treatment ,lcsh:Orthopedic surgery ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Synovial Fluid ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,Arthritis, Infectious ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Retrospective cohort study ,Staphylococcal Infections ,medicine.disease ,Radiography ,lcsh:RD701-811 ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Child, Preschool ,Drainage ,Older child ,Female ,Hip Joint ,Surgery ,Septic arthritis ,business - Abstract
Introduction:We undertook a retrospective study to stratify the effect of patient’s age, delay in surgical drainage, and Staphylococcus aureus (SA) virulence on expected clinicoradiological outcomes following suppurative arthritis of hip joint in a walking child.Materials and methods:The study was conducted in 18 children over 2 years of age who suffered from joint fluid culture-positive SA arthritis of hip joint and treated with open arthrotomy. Outcomes were defined on the following criteria: age of child (≥5 years or Results:The mean patient age was 6.22 years at the time of index procedure. The average delay in surgery was 17.06 days. Follow-up averaged 15.28 months. Five patients had associated with osteomyelitis femur in preoperative radiographs. MRSA culture was grown in 8 hips (44.4%) of 18 hips. Unsatisfactory clinical results according to Moon’s criteria were obtained in 55.6% patients with 38.9% being MRSA infected. Unsatisfactory Choi’s radiological results were present in 33.3% patients, 27.8% under MRSA category. Our study did not find age to be a significant factor either in clinical or radiological outcome. The clinical results were unsatisfactory in 81.8% patients with surgical delays when compared to early surgery ( p < 0.05).Conclusions:The clinicoradiological outcome in suppurative hip arthritis of walking children was unsatisfactory when there was delay in treatment beyond 5 days, and the causative organism was virulent (MRSA). The presence of preoperative joint incongruency or osteomyelitis of proximal femur was another risk factor.
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- 2020
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