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1.
Fam Community Health ; 47(3): 219-230, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38758024

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Undernutrition is related to numerous childhood outcomes. However, little research has investigated the relationship between food insecurity and family dynamics. This systematic review seeks to validate the evidence for a relationship between these 2 factors. METHODS: A systematic literature review was conducted in Embase, PubMed, and Scopus. Inclusion criteria include peer-reviewed research articles published during or after 1996 in English, using standardized measures of family function and food insecurity. Exclusion criteria include measurement of parent or child characteristics without assessing household or family characteristics or demographics. Two reviewers independently voted using Covidence, and Alpha agreement was determined at each phase. RESULTS: A total of 15 studies were included for data extraction after the initial search being completed in April 2022. All included studies were found to be appropriate in numerous categories for quality assessment. Primary findings from these studies show a potential relationship exists between food insecurity and family dynamics. DISCUSSION: The findings in this review suggest that effects of food insecurity expand to various aspects of healthy family functioning. Unhealthy family dynamics in childhood can also expose children to trauma and lead to increased physical and mental health disorders in the future.


Assuntos
Relações Familiares , Insegurança Alimentar , Humanos , Relações Familiares/psicologia , Criança , Características da Família
2.
Am Surg ; : 31348241256054, 2024 May 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38794835

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: The optimal time for intervention in surgical necrotizing enterocolitis (sNEC) remains to be elucidated. Surgical management varies between peritoneal drain (PD), laparotomy (LAP), and PD with subsequent LAP (PD + LAP). We propose that some infants with surgical NEC benefit from late (>48 h) operative intervention to allow for resuscitation. METHODS: A retrospective comparison of clinical information in infants with sNEC from 2012 to 2022 was performed. Early intervention was defined as less than 48 hours from time of NEC diagnosis to surgical intervention. RESULTS: 118 infants were identified, 92 underwent early intervention (62 LAP; 22 PD; 8 PD + LAP) and 26 underwent late intervention (20 LAP; 2 PD; 4 PD + LAP). Infants with early intervention were diagnosed younger (DOL 8 [6, 15] vs 20 [11, 26]; P=< .05) with more pneumoperitoneum (76% vs 23%; P=< .05). The early intervention group had a higher mortality (35% vs 15%; P=< .05). When excluding infants with pneumoperitoneum, the early intervention group had a higher mortality rate (10/22 (45%), 4/26 (15%); P < .05) and had more bowel resected (29 ± 17 cm vs 9 ± 8 cm; P < .05), with the same number of patients scoring above 3 on the MD7 criteria. CONCLUSION: Infants with NEC who underwent early surgical intervention had a higher mortality and more bowel resected. While this study has a provocative finding, it is severely limited by the non-specific 48-hour cut off. However, our data suggests that a period of medical optimization may improve outcomes in infants with sNEC and thus more in-depth studies are needed.

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