
Diagnosing and treating a child?s ADHD is often not enough. Most patients have coexisting developmental or psychiatric disorders that must be addressed.

Diagnosing and treating a child?s ADHD is often not enough. Most patients have coexisting developmental or psychiatric disorders that must be addressed.


How can you distinguish intentionally inflicted injuries from findings not caused by abuse?

Accident-prone child: Stress, temperament, or ADHD?

A call to root out "pejorativism" in the medical lexicon

Appropriate evaluation and treatment of fractures of the distal radius, elbow, clavicle, and tibia hinge on the clinician?s recognition of mechanisms and patterns of injury and physical and radiographic findings.





From the point of view of a pediatric practitioner, little changed in the work of the federal government since being reviewed in these pages last month.



How should pediatricians be prepared for the prospect of community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus?

Prophylactic antibiotics have long provided asplenic children with a measure of protection against bacteremia and sepsis. Recent progress in vaccines promises to strengthen the defense.

Can 6-year-old head banger be stopped?

Do you know what parents are reading? A look at who else is molding America's children

Appropriate evaluation and treatment of fractures of the distal radius, elbow, clavicle, and tibia hinge on the clinician?s recognition of mechanisms and patterns of injury and physical and radiographic findings.

Increased use of fluoroquinolones has been associated with some decreased susceptibility to these agents among Streptococcus pneumoniae. Consider the potential for a further increase in the prevalence of antimicrobial resistance, as well as safety concerns in children, when prescribing fluoroquinolones.

Pediatric Puzzler: Respiratory distress (respiratory depression secondary to opiate ingestion)

The pioneering use of a health educator has helped this small, rural pediatric practice realize its medical mission and its business goals. The clinic's experience, the authors assert, can be applied anywhere.

Pediatricians increasingly are recognizing a mandate to treat pain aggressively. Psychotropic drugs have new pediatric uses, broadening clinicians' options.

We now understand the importance of controlling pain in children, and we understand better how to control it safely.


Wheeler D et al: Arch Dis Child 2003;88:688





Q I have treated an 8-year-old boy and his 5-year-old sister in my practice for the past two years. They have always been healthy and seem to have good interactions with each other, their mother, and me when they are in the office. However, at a routine well-child examination, the boy's mother informed me of two concerns about her son and even broke down in tears when describing them.