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1.
Pediatrics ; 104(5 Pt 1): 1149-51, 1999 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10545565

ABSTRACT

This statement reviews patterning as a treatment for children with neurologic impairments. This treatment is based on an outmoded and oversimplified theory of brain development. Current information does not support the claims of proponents that this treatment is efficacious, and its use continues to be unwarranted.


Subject(s)
Behavior Therapy , Brain Injury, Chronic/therapy , Intellectual Disability/therapy , Child , Humans
2.
Pediatrics ; 104(4 Pt 1): 978-81, 1999 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10506246

ABSTRACT

Care coordination is a process that links children with special health care needs and their families to services and resources in a coordinated effort to maximize the potential of the children and provide them with optimal health care. Care coordination often is complicated because there is no single entry point to multiple systems of care, and complex criteria determine the availability of funding and services among public and private payers. Economic and sociocultural barriers to coordination of care exist and affect families and health care professionals. In their important role of providing a medical home for all children, primary care pediatricians have a vital role in the process of care coordination, in concert with the family.


Subject(s)
Case Management/organization & administration , Child Health Services/organization & administration , Delivery of Health Care, Integrated/organization & administration , Disabled Persons , Pediatrics , Child , Humans , Professional-Family Relations , Referral and Consultation , United States
3.
Pediatrics ; 103(2): 527-30, 1999 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9925859

ABSTRACT

This statement endorses the implementation of universal newborn hearing screening. In addition, the statement reviews the primary objectives, important components, and recommended screening parameters that characterize an effective universal newborn hearing screening program.


Subject(s)
Hearing Disorders/diagnosis , Mass Screening , Hearing Disorders/therapy , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn
5.
JAMA ; 260(10): 1439-44, 1988 Sep 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3404602

ABSTRACT

Persons with developmental disabilities living in the community have a greater number and variety of health care needs than the average population of the same age and sex. The erroneous assumption that the generic health care system would be able to provide all necessary services to the large number of individuals recently transferred from state residential facilities to the community has proved to be an unexpected disappointment to human service policymakers. In an effort to remedy this situation, a program of health care services was established by the New Jersey Department of Human Services at a community teaching hospital to supplement the existing generic system of medical care. Within four years, the program had rapidly grown to provide care for 729 patients who had come to rely on the center for primary care, specialty medical and dental services, and medical case management. The demographic characteristics of this program are described as well as data on morbidity, service utilization, and special problems encountered when care was provided to this complex and medically underserved population.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care , Intellectual Disability , Outpatient Clinics, Hospital , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Child , Delivery of Health Care/economics , Dental Service, Hospital , Female , Hospitals, Teaching , Humans , Intellectual Disability/economics , Intellectual Disability/genetics , Male , Middle Aged , New Jersey , Nurse Practitioners , Outpatient Clinics, Hospital/economics , Outpatient Clinics, Hospital/organization & administration , Workforce
7.
Dev Med Child Neurol ; 27(3): 374-6, 1985 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4018432

ABSTRACT

A 19-year-old mentally retarded male's cachexia, of five months duration, was attributed to a previously undetected anterior dislocation of the mandible. After reduction of the mandible he improved markedly, with better appetite and rapid weight-gain.


Subject(s)
Cachexia/etiology , Intellectual Disability/complications , Joint Dislocations/complications , Mandibular Injuries/complications , Adult , Diagnosis, Differential , Humans , Joint Dislocations/diagnosis , Male , Mandibular Injuries/diagnosis
8.
Dev Med Child Neurol ; 25(6): 735-7, 1983 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6653906

ABSTRACT

It is a well-established fact that 20 to 40 per cent of patients in residential institutions for the retarded have seizures and take anticonvulsants. Most patients have quiescent seizure disorders and can manage well on monotherapy. In this study, 78 per cent of the patients remained seizure-free after switching from multiple-drug regimens to monotherapy.


Subject(s)
Anticonvulsants/administration & dosage , Epilepsy/drug therapy , Intellectual Disability/drug therapy , Adolescent , Adult , Carbamazepine/administration & dosage , Drug Therapy, Combination , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Phenobarbital/administration & dosage , Phenytoin/administration & dosage , Primidone/administration & dosage
9.
J Pediatr Surg ; 14(6): 834-8, 1979 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-45116

ABSTRACT

Cryptorchidism was present in 12% of 316 boys with congenital rubella (CR) followed by The Roosevelt Hospital Rubella Project. Eight of these patients, age 4 through 16 yr, had a recent orchiopexy, 4 on the left, 2 on the right, and 2 bilaterally. The vasoepididymal system was absent or apparently obstructed in 60% of the 10 sides. The epididymis was abnormal in 6 instances and the vas deferens in 5. Sixty-one boys of the entire series had an intravenous pyelogram (IVP) that was significantly abnormal in 18%. The 8 patients described all had a normal IVP except for 2 who had a malrotated kidney on the involved side. In 5 of the 8, a known maternal rubella infection has occurred during the first 8 wk of gestation. As the rubella virus is known to interfere with cellular growth and tissue differentiation in early pregnancy, it apparently altered the developing testis and mesonephric duct system. Similar vasoepididymal abnormalities have been described previously in patients with uncomplicated cryptorchidism, inguinal hernia, kidney defects, cystic fibrosis and male sterility. Their presence should alert the clinician to perform an IVP and also consider a diagnosis of congenital rubella.


Subject(s)
Cryptorchidism/complications , Epididymis/abnormalities , Rubella/congenital , Vas Deferens/abnormalities , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Male , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Complications, Infectious
10.
Pediatrics ; 64(5): 620-6, 1979 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-386238

ABSTRACT

Lymphocyte transformation, interferon, and leukocyte migration inhibition factor synthesis were studied in purified lymphocyte cultures for 20 children with congenital rubella and 18 healthy children (seven susceptible and 11 immune to rubella). Lymphocyte transformation after phytophemagglutinin stimulation was significantly lower in children with congenital rubella as compared to healthy controls. Responses to purified rubella virus were absent in the susceptible controls and absent or at least two times lower in congenital rubella children than in immune controls. After purified rubella virus stimulation, leukocyte migration inhibition factor production was detected in all immune controls, but in none of the susceptible controls, or the congenital rubella-infected children. The results varied with gestational age of intrauterine infection: the impairment of cellular immune response, both after phytohemagglutinin or rubella virus stimulation, was more severe in the children infected in the first two months than in the latter stages of gestation.


Subject(s)
Immunity, Cellular , Rubella/congenital , Age Factors , Antibodies, Viral/analysis , Antigens, Viral , Female , Gestational Age , Humans , Immunity , Infant, Newborn , Interferons/biosynthesis , Leukocyte Migration-Inhibitory Factors/biosynthesis , Lymphocyte Activation , Pregnancy , Rubella/immunology , Rubella virus/immunology
17.
Pediatr Clin North Am ; 18(1): 87-97, viii, 1971 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25868176

ABSTRACT

A review of the immunology of rubella and the basic requirements of various laboratory tests used in its diagnosis.


Subject(s)
Rubella/diagnosis , Child , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Rubella/blood , Rubella/congenital , Serologic Tests , Virology/methods
18.
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