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1.
Clin Pediatr (Phila) ; 40(7): 365-73, 2001 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11491130

ABSTRACT

We sought to determine if a simple educational intervention initiated at the first well-child care visit, with reinforcement at subsequent visits, can improve inner-city infant immunization rates. We conducted a controlled trial involving 315 newborn infants and their primary caregivers in 3 inner-city primary care centers. Child health care providers gave caregivers in the intervention group an interactive graphic card with verbal reinforcement. At later visits, stickers were applied to the card when immunizations were given. Routine information was given to controls. After the trial, age-appropriate immunization rates at 7 months were 58% in each group. Intervention infants had 50% fewer missed opportunities to immunize (p=0.01) but cancelled 77% more appointments (p=0.04) than controls. We conclude that a brief educational intervention at the first well-child care visit did not boost 7-month immunization rates, although it was associated with fewer missed opportunities to immunize.


Subject(s)
Communicable Disease Control/methods , Health Education/organization & administration , Immunization Programs/statistics & numerical data , Vaccination/statistics & numerical data , Analysis of Variance , Case-Control Studies , Educational Status , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Poverty , Probability , Risk Assessment , Risk Factors , Socioeconomic Factors , United States , Urban Population
2.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil ; 80(4): 365-71, 1999 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10206596

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To determine the incidence and type of swallowing disorders that accompany severe brain injury and to identify factors that affect oral intake. DESIGN: Inception cohort study. SETTING: Level I trauma center. PATIENTS: Consecutively admitted patients with severe brain injury who achieved cognitive levels during admission to assess swallowing and who did not sustain injuries preventing swallowing assessment (n = 54). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Type of swallowing abnormalities and presence of aspiration evident on videofluoroscopic swallow studies (VFSS), days to initiation and achievement of oral feeding, ventilation days, presence of a tracheostomy, and cognitive levels at initiation and achievement of oral feeding. RESULTS: Sixty-one percent of subjects exhibited abnormal swallowing. Loss of bolus control and reduced lingual control occurred most commonly. Aspiration rate was 41%. Normal swallowers achieved oral feeding in 19 days versus 57 days for abnormal swallowers. Rancho Los Amigos (RLA) Level IV was needed for initiation of oral feeding; Level VI was needed for total oral feeding. Risk factors for abnormal swallowing included: lower admission Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) and RLA scores, presence of a tracheostomy, and ventilation time longer than 2 weeks. Risk factors for aspiration were lower admission GCS and RLA scores. CONCLUSIONS: Swallowing disorders and behavioral/cognitive skills are frequently present in patients with severe brain injury and significantly affect oral intake of food. Persons who swallow abnormally take significantly longer to start eating and to achieve total oral feeding, and they require nonoral supplementation three to four times longer than those who swallow normally.


Subject(s)
Brain Damage, Chronic/rehabilitation , Deglutition Disorders/rehabilitation , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Brain Damage, Chronic/diagnosis , Brain Injuries/diagnosis , Brain Injuries/rehabilitation , Deglutition Disorders/diagnosis , Enteral Nutrition , Female , Glasgow Coma Scale , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neurologic Examination , Prognosis , Risk Factors
3.
Pediatrics ; 103(2): E23, 1999 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9925869

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: 1) To compare the Mogen and Gomco clamps with regard to pain experienced during neonatal circumcision, and 2) to assess neonatal circumcision pain with and without dorsal penile nerve block (DPNB). DESIGN/METHODS: A randomized, controlled, nonblinded clinical trial; 48 healthy, full-term infants were randomized into one of the following four groups: Gomco vs Mogen with (+) or without (-) DPNB. DPNB+ infants were injected with 0.8 mL of 1% lidocaine before circumcision. DPNB- infants received no placebo injection. Heart rate, respiratory rate, and oxygen saturation (SaO2) during the procedure were monitored and data transferred to computer files by using the Datalab software system. Crying was recorded on videotape. Pre- and postcircumcision saliva samples for cortisol analysis were collected. Heart rate, respiratory rate, SaO2, cortisol changes, and duration of crying were evaluated statistically with two-way analyses of variance and t tests. RESULTS: The type of clamp but not the use of anesthesia was significantly associated with the length of the procedure (mean Mogen time, 81 seconds; mean Gomco time, 209 seconds) and percentage of respiratory rate change. The use of anesthesia but not the type of clamp was significantly associated with percentage of crying time and percentage of SaO2 change during the procedure. Heart rate changes and total crying time were significantly associated with both the type of clamp and the use of anesthesia. Neither clamp type nor anesthesia status was significantly associated with salivary cortisol changes, although the mean increase for the DPNB- group was approximately twice that for the DPNB+ group. Fifty-six percent of infants circumcised with the Mogen clamp and DPNB did not cry at all during the procedure. CONCLUSIONS: DPNB is effective in reducing neonatal circumcision pain with either the Mogen or the Gomco clamp. For a given anesthesia condition, the Mogen clamp is associated with a less painful procedure than the Gomco. The Mogen clamp with DPNB causes the least discomfort during neonatal circumcision.


Subject(s)
Circumcision, Male/adverse effects , Circumcision, Male/instrumentation , Nerve Block , Pain/prevention & control , Surgical Instruments , Crying , Equipment Design , Heart Rate , Humans , Hydrocortisone/analysis , Infant, Newborn , Male , Pain/etiology , Pain Measurement , Penis/innervation
4.
J Head Trauma Rehabil ; 14(5): 435-47, 1999 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10653939

ABSTRACT

Safe and adequate nutrition, vital to the recovery from a traumatic brain injury, can be severely compromised by the presence of dysphagia. This study identified injury severity and swallowing factors that were associated with impaired oral intake in patients with severe brain injury. An admitting Glasgow Coma Scale (GSC) 3-5; a Rancho Los Amigos Scale of Cognitive Functioning (RLA) Level II; a computed tomography (CT) scan exhibiting midline shift, brainstem involvement, or brain pathology requiring emergent operative procedures; or ventilation time >/=15 days identified patients at highest risk for abnormal swallowing, aspiration, and delay in initiation of oral feeding and achievement of total oral feeding. When combined in multivariate models, RLA Level, CT scan, ventilation time and aspiration emerged as significant independent predictors of impaired oral intake.


Subject(s)
Brain Injuries/complications , Brain Injuries/therapy , Deglutition Disorders/diagnosis , Deglutition Disorders/etiology , Enteral Nutrition/adverse effects , Enteral Nutrition/methods , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Aged , Analysis of Variance , Brain Injuries/classification , Brain Injuries/diagnosis , Cognition , Female , Glasgow Coma Scale , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Patient Selection , Respiration, Artificial , Retrospective Studies , Risk Factors , Time Factors , Tomography, X-Ray Computed
5.
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med ; 152(11): 1083-8, 1998 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9811285

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Most studies of alternative/complementary medicine use in children have focused on children with chronic illness and have not addressed the more common form of complementary medicine: popular home-based interventions and therapies for common low-morbidity sickness episodes. Also, there has often been a distinction between alternative/ complementary medical practices used by the general population and those used by members of ethnic minority groups and commonly referred to as folk medicine or ethnomedicine. OBJECTIVE: To describe the home-based therapies and practices that parents from diverse ethnocultural backgrounds use to treat the common cold in their children. METHOD: Interviews with mothers of children coming for care at a number of clinics and physicians' offices. Included were mothers from European American, African American, Puerto Rican, and West Indian-Caribbean heritages. RESULTS: Mean number of home-based remedies for the common cold did not differ among ethnic groups (controlling for maternal age, maternal education, number of children, and health insurance status). There were differences among groups regarding the frequency of use of specific remedies. CONCLUSIONS: Home-based remedies for colds in childhood are commonly used. Many of the treatments are complementary to biomedical treatment (ie, antipyretics, over-the-counter cold remedies, fluids). Very few are potentially hazardous if taken in moderation. Mothers from ethnic minorities use similar amounts of homebased interventions when compared with mothers from the majority culture.


Subject(s)
Common Cold/therapy , Complementary Therapies/statistics & numerical data , Ethnicity , Medicine, Traditional , Adult , Black or African American , Caribbean Region/ethnology , Child , Common Cold/ethnology , Connecticut/epidemiology , Female , Hispanic or Latino , Humans , Puerto Rico/ethnology , West Indies/ethnology , White People
6.
Ann Emerg Med ; 26(4): 439-42, 1995 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7574125

ABSTRACT

STUDY OBJECTIVE: To determine the significance of scapular fractures in blunt-trauma patients compared with blunt-trauma patients without scapular fractures. DESIGN: Retrospective chart review of 11,500 blunt-trauma patients with a control group matched for age, sex, and mechanism of injury. SETTING: Two Level I trauma centers. PARTICIPANTS: Ninety-two blunt-trauma patients with scapular fractures and 81 control patients. RESULTS: Mortality, neurovascular injury, and injury severity scores were compared for blunt-trauma patients with scapular fractures with those of the control group. Analysis revealed a 1% incidence of scapular fractures in blunt trauma with no neurovascular injury and no mortality. Scapular fractures were associated with thoracic injury in 49% of the patients, compared with 6% in the control group (difference, 43%; 95% confidence interval, 31.6 to 51.4; P < .001, Fisher's exact test). CONCLUSION: Scapular fractures are not a significant marker of greater mortality or of neurovascular morbidity in blunt-trauma patients.


Subject(s)
Fractures, Bone/epidemiology , Scapula/injuries , Wounds, Nonpenetrating/epidemiology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Fractures, Bone/mortality , Humans , Incidence , Injury Severity Score , Male , Registries , Retrospective Studies , Trauma Centers , Wounds, Nonpenetrating/classification , Wounds, Nonpenetrating/mortality
7.
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med ; 149(9): 982-8, 1995 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7655603

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Childhood asthma is the most common chronic illness of childhood. The highest prevalence of childhood asthma in the United States occurs in the Puerto Rican community, and there are many traditional beliefs and practices regarding asthma that coexist with biomedical therapies. OBJECTIVES: To describe the ethnomedical treatment practices for childhood asthma in one mainland United States Puerto Rican community and to determine whether any of these practices are effective or potentially harmful. METHOD: Home interview with caretakers of 118 Puerto Rican children with asthma who seek care at two community health clinics in an inner city in the eastern United States. RESULTS: Common home-based ethnomedical practices include attempts to maintain physical and emotional balance and harmony, religious practices, and ethnobotanical and other therapies. Potentially harmful practices are uncommon, and other remedies are only harmful if not taken as directed. Many remedies are not effective from a biomedical standpoint (ie, bronchodilation or antiinflammation), but if analyzed within the ethnomedical explanatory model--which includes the belief that expulsion of mucus and phlegm from the body is beneficial for the treatment of asthma--these remedies bring about the desired effect and are therefore considered effective to the user. CONCLUSIONS: Ethnomedical therapies for asthma in the mainland Puerto Rican community are well known and commonly used. Most practices are not idiosyncratic but fit within a coherent ethnocultural belief system. The health care practitioner can lower the risk for potentially toxic effects of some treatments by discussing these practices with patients and families. Some ethnomedical practices are not discordant with biomedical therapy. Incorporation of these practices into the biomedical plan may help to fit the biomedical therapy into the lifestyle of the patient.


Subject(s)
Asthma/therapy , Attitude to Health/ethnology , Hispanic or Latino , Medicine, Traditional , Child , Child, Preschool , Connecticut , Data Collection , Female , Humans , Infant , Puerto Rico/ethnology
8.
J Dev Behav Pediatr ; 15(1): 34-8, 1994 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7515076

ABSTRACT

Whether recent advances in developmental pediatrics have influenced pediatric practice is uncertain. We interviewed, in their offices, 41 randomly selected, board-certified, primary care pediatricians in Connecticut to explore their attitudes and clinical approaches to developmental problems. Responses were compared with those from a similar survey of 97 New England pediatricians performed 15 years ago. Important changes in certain clinical approaches were found. For example, pediatricians are currently less likely to rely on history and physical examination alone to confirm a suspicion of mental retardation (p < .01) and are more likely to refer such a child for further assessment (p < .01); they are more likely to perform hearing screening in evaluating a child with delayed speech (p < .05); they are more likely to contact the school in evaluating a failing child (p < .01), and are more likely to refer such a child for further assessment (p < .01). Results indicate favorable changes in pediatricians' approaches to developmental problems and support the greater emphasis on developmental issues in pediatric education.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Developmental Disabilities/diagnosis , Education, Medical, Graduate , Intellectual Disability/diagnosis , Pediatrics/education , Adult , Aged , Child , Child, Preschool , Connecticut/epidemiology , Developmental Disabilities/epidemiology , Developmental Disabilities/etiology , Female , Humans , Infant , Intellectual Disability/epidemiology , Intellectual Disability/etiology , Internship and Residency , Male , Middle Aged , Patient Care Team , Risk Factors
9.
Am J Obstet Gynecol ; 168(5): 1449-56, 1993 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8498426

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: We determined the prevalence of prenatal cocaine use in a racially mixed sample of urban and suburban mothers and correlated its use with maternal demographics and newborn measurements. STUDY DESIGN: Meconium from 621 consecutive newborns delivered at two university-affiliated urban hospitals were assayed for benzoylecgonine. Maternal and infant characteristics were linked anonymously with the results. Statistical analysis included t test, Fisher's exact test, Duncan's multiple range analysis, and analysis of covariance, with a value of p < 0.05 considered significant. RESULTS: We found that 3.4% of meconium samples had benzoylecgonine levels exceeding 0.1 micrograms/ml. Its presence was statistically correlated with maternal and neonatal characteristics. A nurse's opinion of cocaine use was correct 22% of the time. CONCLUSIONS: Prenatal cocaine use was statistically associated with multiparity, multigravidity, late-onset and clinic-based prenatal care, public assistance, nonwhite race, and low academic achievement. A nurse's opinion was a poor predictor of maternal cocaine use. Cocaine-exposed infants were significantly smaller, and this correlated best with nonwhite background.


Subject(s)
Cocaine , Cocaine/analogs & derivatives , Meconium/chemistry , Substance Abuse Detection/methods , Substance-Related Disorders/diagnosis , Birth Weight , Cocaine/analysis , Cocaine/metabolism , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Nurses , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Complications/epidemiology , Prenatal Care/statistics & numerical data , Prevalence , Sensitivity and Specificity , Substance-Related Disorders/epidemiology , Substance-Related Disorders/metabolism , Suburban Population , Urban Population
10.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil ; 73(7): 635-41, 1992 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1622318

ABSTRACT

With traumatic brain injuries numbering more than two million per year, health professionals are faced with the challenges of restoring and maximizing quality of life. This study quantifies the benefits of a formalized head injury program, including the concept of trauma rehabilitation, defined as early, aggressive rehabilitation during acute hospitalization. Thirty-eight severely head injured patients received treatment at the same rehabilitation facility. Twenty-one of these patients received acute care services at ten different hospitals without formalized traumatic brain injury programs, and 17 received services at a hospital with a formalized early intervention program. Comparison of outcome data for the two programs revealed that patients in the formalized program had comas and rehabilitation stays approximately one third the length of patients in nonformalized programs (18.9 vs 53.8 days and 106.5 vs 239.5 days, respectively). Mean cognitive levels at discharge from the acute hospitals (5.6 vs 4.0) and the rehabilitation facility (7.4 vs 6.7) were significantly higher for the formalized program, and they facilitated a significantly higher percentage of discharges to home vs extended care facility (94% vs 57%).


Subject(s)
Craniocerebral Trauma/rehabilitation , Activities of Daily Living , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Cognition , Craniocerebral Trauma/physiopathology , Female , Glasgow Coma Scale , Humans , Length of Stay , Male , Middle Aged , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Prognosis , Rehabilitation Centers
11.
Pediatrics ; 87(2): 171-7, 1991 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1987527

ABSTRACT

Sixty-five families were enlisted in a study exploring factors associated with distress behavior in 5-year-old children receiving diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis immunizations. At a home visit 1 month before the immunization, the following measures were obtained: (1) the Behavioral Style Questionnaire, a measure of temperament: (2) parental self-reports of medically related attributes (eg. "good patient"); (3) parental attitudes toward pain in children and responsiveness to their child's pain; and (4) parental prediction of distress at upcoming immunization. The child's distress behavior during the immunization was evaluated using a modification of the Procedure Rating Scale-Revised and, after the procedure, the child's assessment of his or her pain was elicited using the Oucher. Children's mean Procedure Rating Scale-Revised score was 2.57 of a possible 11. Thirty-one (48%) had low (less than or equal to 1) and 7 (11%) had high distress scores (greater than or equal to 2 SD above the mean). Factors positively correlated with distressed behavior included more "difficult child" cluster characteristics, the individual temperamental dimension of adaptability, but few parental attitudes and attributes. Parent's predictions of distress were the strongest correlates. These findings document the variation that children demonstrate in response to pain and offer some insight into associated innate and environmental factors. These results imply that treatment strategies derived from parental knowledge and tailored to individual characteristics of the child may be most effective in alleviating pain-related distress in medical settings.


Subject(s)
Child Behavior , Diphtheria-Tetanus-Pertussis Vaccine/adverse effects , Individuality , Pain/psychology , Parents/psychology , Temperament , Attitude , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Male , Pain/etiology , Sex Factors
14.
J Oral Surg ; 29(3): 201-4, 1971 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-5278870

Subject(s)
Cutis Laxa , Adult , Humans , Male
17.
Med Times ; 94(11): 1390-3, 1966 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-5922355

Subject(s)
Hyperaldosteronism , Adult , Humans , Male
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