keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38609015/self-reported-well-being-of-family-caregivers-of-children-with-medical-complexity
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lydia M McLachlan, Stacey Engster, Joseph G Winger, Alicia Haupt, Tal Levin-Decanini, Michael Decker, Robert B Noll, Justin A Yu
OBJECTIVES: Provide an in-depth and psychometrically rigorous profile of the emotional well-being and sleep-related health of family caregivers of children with medical complexity (CMC). METHODS: Cross-sectional survey study of family caregivers of CMC receiving care from a pediatric complex care center between May 2021 and March 2022. Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Short-Forms (PROMIS-SF) assessed global mental health, emotional distress (anxiety, depression, anger), psychological strengths (self-efficacy, emotional regulation, meaning and purpose), and sleep-related health (fatigue, sleep-related impairment)...
April 10, 2024: Academic Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38607244/do-weighted-blankets-improve-sleep-among-children-with-a-history-of-maltreatment-a-randomized-controlled-crossover-trial
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anthony B Cifre, Alyssa Vieira, Carter Baker, Annika Myers, Megan E Rech, Jinu Kim, Yuexin Zhang, Candice A Alfano
STUDY OBJECTIVES: Sleep disruption is prevalent and persistent among children who experience maltreatment/interpersonal trauma. Weighted blankets have gained popularity in recent years as a potential non-pharmacological intervention for improving sleep in various populations, but their efficacy has not been examined among maltreated children. The current study used a randomized, within-subjects, crossover design to examine whether the use of a weighted blanket improves objective and/or subjective indices of sleep among 30 children, ages 6 to 15 years (M = 9...
April 12, 2024: Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine: JCSM: Official Publication of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38606410/-family-talk-versus-usual-services-in-improving-child-and-family-psychosocial-functioning-in-families-with-parental-mental-illness-a-randomised-controlled-trial-and-cost-analysis
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mairead Furlong, Colm McGuinness, Christine Marie Mulligan, Sharon Lisa McGarr, Sinead McGilloway
BACKGROUND: Parental mental illness (PMI) is common and places children at high risk of developing psychological disorders. Family Talk (FT) is a well-known, whole-family, 7-session intervention designed to reduce the risk of transgenerational psychopathology. However, very few larger-scale evaluations of FT (across only a limited number of settings) have been conducted to date while there have been no cost analyses. This study aimed to assess the effectiveness and costs of delivering FT in improving child and family psychosocial functioning in families with PMI within routine mental health settings...
2024: Frontiers in Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38605762/role-of-gender-perceptions-in-shaping-gender-based-discrimination-and-gender-equality-among-school-going-adolescents-telangana-a-cross-sectional-community-based-study
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Varalakshmi Manchana, Srujan Vineet Gannavarapu
BACKGROUND: Adolescence is a unique phase of life, facilitates the transition of a child to an adult, and thus is characterized with distinctive challenges as well as potentialities. Gender socialization during adolescence is shaped by the family, culture, and social construct results to development of attitudes, with more consistent and organized vision toward self and the society. AIM: The present study aims to identify the gender attitudes, perceived gender role, and gender discrimination among adolescents...
February 2024: Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38605555/genomic-multidisciplinary-teams-a-model-for-navigating-genetic-mainstreaming-and-precision-medicine
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alan Ma, Timothy P Newing, Rosie O'Shea, Akira Gokoolparsadh, Emma Murdoch, Janette Hayward, Gillian Shannon, Lucy Kevin, Bruce Bennetts, Gladys Ho, Janine Smith, Margit Shah, Kristi J Jones, Sarah Josephi-Taylor, Sarah A Sandaradura, Lesley Adès, Robyn Jamieson, Nicole M Rankin
AIM: Recent rapid advances in genomics are revolutionising patient diagnosis and management of genetic conditions. However, this has led to many challenges in service provision, education and upskilling requirements for non-genetics health-care professionals and remuneration for genomic testing. In Australia, Medicare funding with a Paediatric genomic testing item for patients with intellectual disability or syndromic features has attempted to address this latter issue. The Sydney Children's Hospitals Network - Westmead (SCHN-W) Clinical Genetics Department established Paediatric and Neurology genomic multidisciplinary team (MDT) meetings to address the Medicare-specified requirement for discussion with clinical genetics, and increasing genomic testing advice requests...
April 11, 2024: Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38604316/characteristics-of-women-concordant-and-discordant-for-urine-drug-screens-for-cannabis-exposure-and-self-reported-cannabis-use-during-pregnancy
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ryan Bogdan, Shelby D Leverett, Anna M Constantino-Petit, Nicole Lashley-Simms, David B Liss, Emma C Johnson, Shannon N Lenze, Rachel E Lean, Tara A Smyser, Ebony B Carter, Christopher D Smyser, Cynthia E Rogers, Arpana Agrawal
BACKGROUND: Increasing cannabis use among pregnant people and equivocal evidence linking prenatal cannabis exposure to adverse outcomes in offspring highlights the need to understand its potential impact on pregnancy and child outcomes. Assessing cannabis use during pregnancy remains a major challenge with potential influences of stigma on self-report as well as detection limitations of easily collected biological matrices. OBJECTIVE: This descriptive study examined the concordance between self-reported (SR) cannabis use and urine drug screen (UDS) detection of cannabis exposure during the first trimester of pregnancy and characterized concordant and discordant groups for sociodemographic factors, modes of use, secondhand exposure to cannabis and tobacco, and alcohol use and cotinine positivity...
April 9, 2024: Neurotoxicology and Teratology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38604068/women-s-expectations-preferences-and-needs-in-midwifery-care-results-from-the-qualitative-midwifery-care-mica-study-childbirth-and-early-parenthood
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nataliya Makarova, Toni Maria Janke, Janne Schmittinger, Caroline Johanna Agricola, Merle Ebinghaus, Christine Blome, Birgit-Christiane Zyriax
OBJECTIVE: The main goals of our study were (I) the investigation of expectations and preferences as well as (II) the determination of needs of women in regard to midwifery care. DESIGN: Descriptive phenomenology was used to investigate the ways in which women experienced childbirth and early parenthood. A descriptive qualitative research design was chosen, using focus groups. SETTING: ix online focus groups were carried out with 19 women for this part of the Midwifery Care (MiCa) study, mainly from the north of Germany...
April 5, 2024: Midwifery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38603607/new-onset-hallucinations-and-developmental-regression-in-a-child-with-autism-spectrum-disorder
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aanchal Sharma, Demetra Pappas, Joseph Gonzalez-Heydrich, Nancy R Sullivan, Sarah S Nyp
Nick is a 5-year-old boy who began displaying self-stimulating behaviors and decreased social interactions shortly before turning 3 years. At the age of 3.5 years, he was diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder by a local developmental-behavioral pediatrician. His parents recall that the physician described Nick to be "high functioning" and encouraged them to expect that he would attend college and live independently as an adult. Upon receiving the diagnosis, intervention was initiated using an applied behavioral analysis (ABA) approach...
April 11, 2024: Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics: JDBP
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38603416/quality-early-childhood-education-and-care-in-a-time-of-covid-19
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sasha Tregenza, Verity Campbell-Barr
Contextual approaches to high quality Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) seek to capture the complexity of children's lives, developing pedagogical approaches that are responsive to children's needs and interests. In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic provided a complex layer to the question of what constitutes quality ECEC. A mixed methods appreciative inquiry of educators' and parents' views of quality in one ECEC setting in England, became an unexpected ethnographic exploration of quality ECEC in the time of a global pandemic...
June 2023: Journal of Early Childhood Research: ECR
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38602727/-observation-on-effect-of-five-evolutive-phases-and-six-climatic-factors-on-pregnancy-and-sterility
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lian-Jun Pan, Yan-Tai Ruan, Qing-Jing Shi
Objective: To verify statements about the effect of five evolutive phases and six climatic factors in 《huang di nei jing》 on pregnancy and sterility. Methods: Data of missed abortion from Nanjing Maternity and Child Health Care Hospital between 2006-2020 and Yangzhou Maternity and Child Health Care Hospital between 2012-2020 were collected. According to Chinese sexagenary cycle heavenly stems and earthly branches of each year between 2006-2020 was determined. And then based on the heavenly stems and earthly branches, evolutive phases and six climatic factors of each year were established...
June 2023: Zhonghua Nan Ke Xue, National Journal of Andrology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38602549/trajectories-of-school-refusal-sequence-analysis-using-retrospective-parent-reports
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laelia Benoit, Edith Chan Sock Peng, Julien Flouriot, Madeline DiGiovanni, Nicolas Bonifas, Alexandra Rouquette, Andrés Martin, Bruno Falissard
School refusal (SR) is a form of school attendance problem (SAP) that requires specific mental health care. Despite improvements in the definition of SAPs, the course of SR is not well characterized. To explore three-year patterns of SR course in children, as reported by their parents, we deployed an anonymous web-based survey. We defined SR onset as the absence of ≥ 2 school weeks during one academic year, combined with emotional distress. We defined standard SR trajectories using sequence analysis of parents' recollection of three consecutive years of school attendance...
April 11, 2024: European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38602348/elder-abuse-geriatrics-describing-an-important-new-medical-specialist
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elizabeth M Bloemen, Sarah Tietz, Daniel M Lindberg, Jason Hayes, Hillary Lum, Elaine Gottesman, Alyssa Elman, Michelle Sullivan, Chloe Pino, Jennine McAuley, Amy Shaw, David Hancock, E-Shien Chang, Robin Yasui, Veronica M LoFaso, Michael E Stern, Tony Rosen
Elder mistreatment, including elder abuse and neglect, is a difficult diagnosis to make and manage for most providers. To address this, two elder abuse consultation teams were developed for patients in the hospital and emergency department settings. As these teams have developed, the providers involved have obtained specialized training and experience that we believe contributes to a new field of elder abuse geriatrics, a corollary to the well-established field of child abuse pediatrics. Providers working in this field require specialized training and have a specialized scope of practice that includes forensic evaluation, evaluation of cognition and capacity, care coordination and advocacy for victims of abuse, and collaboration with protective services and law enforcement...
April 11, 2024: Journal of Elder Abuse & Neglect
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38602124/-the-world-is-turned-upside-down-how-parents-of-children-with-spina-bifida-experience-transition-a-qualitative-study
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexandra Wattinger, Brigitte Seliner
The world is turned upside down: How parents of children with spina bifida experience transition. A qualitative study Abstract: Background: The coming of age of a child with spina bifida (SB) requires the transition from child-centred to adult-centred health care. This transition process (TP) calls for adjustments to the parental role, while health professionals assume a central position in accompanying the families. It is unclear how parents experience the TP in times of complex change and what support needs arise in the process...
April 11, 2024: Pflege
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38600856/maternal-sleep-health-social-support-and-distress-a-mixed-methods-analysis-of-mothers-of-infants-and-young-children-in-rural-us
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexandra R Fischer, Kelly R Doudell, Jenny M Cundiff, Sha-Rhonda M Green, Catherine A Lavender, Heather E Gunn
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to explore sleep health in rural maternal populations through a social-ecological framework and identify risk and protective factors for this population. METHODS: 39 individuals who are mothers of infants or children under the age of 5 years completed an online survey, 35 of which completed a subsequent semi-structured interview. Recruitment was limited to one rural community and was in partnership with community healthcare providers...
April 11, 2024: Behavioral Sleep Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38600787/parent-perceptions-of-social-well-being-in-children-with-special-educational-needs-during-covid-19-a-mixed-methods-analysis
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laila Osman, Jess Whitley
BACKGROUND: Children's educational experiences worldwide have been significantly impacted as a result of global school closures during the COVID-19 pandemic of Spring 2020. A growing number of studies aim to analyse impacts of these changes on social well-being, with limited studies placing an emphasis on the experiences of students with special educational needs (SENs). This article focusses on parent perspectives regarding impacts of school closures on social well-being in Canadian children with SEN...
May 2024: Child: Care, Health and Development
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38596849/meaningful-work-career-fit-and-professional-well-being-of-pediatric-academicians-in-the-united-states
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ariella Slovin, Samudragupta Bora, John R Barber, Heidi M Kloster, Stephen R Rogers, Cori M Green, Steven M Selbst, Kathi J Kemper, Janet R Serwint, Arvin Garg, Sylvia W Lim
OBJECTIVE: Examine associations between time spent in academic activities perceived as meaningful and professional well-being among academic pediatrics faculty. METHODS: The sample comprised 248 full-time pediatric faculty (76% female, 81% white, non-Hispanic, 41% instructor or assistant professor) across the United States who completed an online survey in November 2019. Survey items included sociodemographic and professional characteristics, professional well-being measures (Stanford Professional Fulfillment Index; Maslach Burnout Inventory; Intention to Leave Academic Medicine), perceived meaningfulness of academic activities and assigned time to those activities...
April 10, 2024: Hospital Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38596421/a-review-of-medication-errors-and-the-second-victim-in-pediatric-pharmacy
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kaitlin Bredenkamp, Michael J Raschka, Amy Holmes
The concept of the second victim, described as the sense of victimization of health care professionals following the exposure to a traumatic, unanticipated medical error, was first introduced in 2000 by Albert W. Wu. Since then, the concept has gained immense traction and inspired the generation of assistance programs for second victims. With most second victim occurrences resulting from medication errors, pediatric pharmacists are at a high risk of experiencing second victim phenomenon. Second victims may experience both psychological and physical symptoms of distress often akin to post-traumatic stress disorder...
April 2024: Journal of Pediatric Pharmacology and Therapeutics: JPPT: the Official Journal of PPAG
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38596413/medication-management-through-collaborative-practice-for-children-with-medical-complexity-a-prospective-case-series
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jena Quinn, Heather Monk Bodenstab, Emily Wo, Richard H Parrish
OBJECTIVE: Care coordination for children and youth with special health care needs and medical complexity (CYSHCN-CMC), especially medication management, is difficult for providers, parents/caregivers, and -patients. This report describes the creation of a clinical pharmacotherapy practice in a pediatric long-term care facility (pLTCF), application of standard operating procedures to guide comprehensive medication management (CMM), and establishment of a collaborative practice agreement (CPA) to guide drug therapy...
April 2024: Journal of Pediatric Pharmacology and Therapeutics: JPPT: the Official Journal of PPAG
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38593571/subjective-experience-of-parent-child-relationship-in-adolescents-with-congenital-heart-disease-a-qualitative-study
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yu-Hsuan Hsiao, Hung-Tao Chung, Jou-Kou Wang, Pei-Fan Mu, Shu-Wen Chen, Ying-Mei Shu, Chi-Wen Chen
PURPOSE: To explore the parent-child relationship through the subjective experience of adolescents with congenital heart disease (CHD). DESIGN AND METHODS: A descriptive phenomenology approach was adopted. Twelve adolescents aged from 12 to 18 years with CHD were recruited from the pediatric cardiology clinics at two medical centers in Taiwan. Data were collected through in-depth interviews. Data were analyzed using Colaizzi's phenomenological analysis method, and results were reported in accordance with the Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Research guidelines...
April 8, 2024: Journal of Pediatric Nursing
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38593235/weaning-strategies-for-children-on-home-invasive-mechanical-ventilation
#40
REVIEW
Harutai Kamalaporn, Aroonwan Preutthipan, Allan L Coates
Children who require home mechanical ventilation (HMV) with an artificial airway or invasive mechanical ventilation (HMV) have a possibility of successful weaning due to the potential of compensatory lung growth. Internationally accepted guidelines on how to wean from HMV in children is not available, we summarize the weaning strategies from the literature reviews combined with our 27-year experience in the Pediatric Home Respiratory Care program at the tertiary care center in Thailand. The readiness to wean is considered in patients with hemodynamic stability, having effective cough measured by maximal inspiratory pressure, requiring a fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2 ) < 40%, positive end expiratory pressure <5 cmH2 O, and acceptable arterial blood gases...
April 9, 2024: Pediatric Pulmonology
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