News

New recommendations by an expert panel sponsored by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), National Institutes of Health, and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) regarding growth curves will be published for practicing pediatricians early next year, reported Laurence Grummer-Strawn, PhD, Chief of the Maternal and Child Nutrition Branch of the CDC.

Many parents today are skeptical that recommended vaccinations are necessary. Data suggest that as many as 23% of parents think that children receive too many vaccinations, 29% believe that vaccines aren’t always proven safe, and 25% think that vaccination weakens the immune system.

Playing outside is a long-held joy of childhood, but bugs and animals that can cause harm lurk in places where children are likely to be playing?including the lawn, the woods, and the playground. Dennis L. Murray, MD, professor of pediatrics at the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta, offered preventive advice that you can share with parents during a seminar, "Keeping Children Safe in the Great Outdoors" Saturday at the 2006 AAP National Conference and Exhibition in Atlanta.

The US Congress dramatically reduced children's access to health care by passing the Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) this year, according to American Academy of Pediatrics President Eileen Ouellette, MD, JD, during an address Saturday morning at the AAP National Conference and Exhibition in Atlanta. The act was subsequently signed into law by President George W. Bush.

When deciding whether a tonsillectomy is indicated for a given patient, tailor your decision to the severity of symptoms and that patient's ongoing story, advised a specialist Saturday at the AAP's National Conference and Exhibition in Atlanta.

Molds are commonplace in virtually every modern environment, and are even present in the everyday jar of peanut butter sitting on the kitchen counter in most children's homes. The advice of Lynnette J. Mazur, MD, MPH, presented Saturday at a seminar at the AAP National Conference and Exhibition, was simple: Eat a balanced diet!

Allergies are not only becoming more prevalent but, in the case of food allergy, the natural course may be changing, according to Robert A. Wood, MD, professor of pediatrics and director of pediatric allergy and immunology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore.

Playing outside is a long-held joy of childhood, but bugs and animals that can cause harm lurk in places where children are likely to be playing?including the lawn, the woods, and the playground. Dennis L. Murray, MD, professor of pediatrics at the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta, offered preventive advice that you can share with parents during a seminar, "Keeping Children Safe in the Great Outdoors" Saturday at the 2006 AAP National Conference and Exhibition in Atlanta.

A report issued late this past summer by the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases (NFID) provides practical strategies and tools to help pediatricians and other health care professionals increase what NFID considers an alarmingly low rate of influenza immunization among children who have asthma—part of an initiative to address immunization barriers and improve parental education about the importance of influenza vaccination for all children with asthma. Influenza vaccination has been shown to reduce morbidity and mortality in this high-risk pediatric population.

The section of the National Institutes of Health that conducts and supports research on human development, medical rehabilitation, and the health of children, adults, families, and communities, has launched its redesigned Web site with your need and interests in mind. The new National Institute of Child Health and Human Development site, http://www.nichd.nih.gov, provides easy access to information for clinicians and for researchers, patients, and the general public.

Care provided by a primary care practice that embraces the medical home model is better organized, more accessible, and less stressful to coordinate-so say parents of children who have special health-care needs. Here is a look at how you and your practice benefit from providing family-centered care within the medical home model.