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HM11 Special Report: Pediatric Perils

Pediatric hospitalists demonstrated their leadership and ownership of clinical hospital medicine on this year’s pediatric track at HM11.

Joel Tieder, MD, MPH, advocated for a balanced and risk-based approach to apparent life-threatening events (ALTEs). Although the differential for this observer-defined symptom remains broad, a link to perhaps the most worrisome outcome, sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), has not been borne out in the medical literature. Testing seldom offers conclusive answers, Dr. Tieder said in his review.

Thus, a risk-based approach to guide work-up is prudent. Young age and a history of recurrent events are two factors that could signify risk for worrisome underlying pathology, to include infection and nonaccidental trauma. Dr. Tieder has worked with SHM to organize and lead an expert panel that hopes to release a white paper on this topic in the future.

John Pope, MD, Kris Rehm, MD, and Brian Alverson, MD, collectively presented an update on the top articles of the year relevant to pediatric HM.

Highlights included:

  • The potential utility of the Pediatric Early Warning Score in identifying clinical deterioration;
  • A reduction in symptoms in patients with irritable bowel syndrome given Lactobacillus GG;
  • The positive impact of an antimicrobial stewardship program on vancomycin usage;
  • The utility of the clinical examination in deciding whether a lumbar puncture is warranted to evaluate for bacterial meningitis in patients presenting with complex febrile seizures; and
  • The adequacy of short-term IV antibiotic therapy in young infants with UTIs.

Dr. Alverson provided an update on the development of clinical practice guidelines for community-acquired pneumonia in children, highlighting his participation on a committee cosponsored by the Pediatric Infectious Disease Society and the Infectious Disease Society of America. Laboratory and radiographic data rarely clarify the diagnosis of clinical pneumonia and are not as useful in the outpatient setting but may be justified to look for complications in children who are hospitalized, he reported.

Other take-home points:

  • Antimicrobial therapy in uncomplicated pneumonia should primarily target pneumococcus;
  • Ampicillin and amoxicillin penetrate lung tissue well, and in high dosages can overcome most pneumococcal resistance; and
  • Management of mycoplasma in children remains controversial and requires further investigation.
  • The final guidelines are expected to be published sometime toward the end of the year.

Dr. Shen is pediatric editor of The Hospitalist.

More from the HM11 Special Report

Texas-Sized Excitement

HM11 galvanizes hospitalists from all career stages, inspires take-home action

The Future Is Forward

As HM matures, movement turns attention to quality goals, resource management, and value propositions

The Future of Better Patient Care

“Portable Ultrasound” pre-course unveils almost-limitless possibilities, hospitalist says

HM=Improved Patient Care

Healthcare heavyweights confident hospitalists will make a difference

The Suggestions Box

Special Interest Forums provide hospitalists helpful hints, partnerships

Something for Everyone

HM11 attendees get the most out of educational and networking offerings

HM11 Breakout Sessions Roundup

Highlights from faculty presentations at HM11 May 11-13 in Grapevine, Texas

Utilizing Technology to Improve the Clinical and Operational Performance of Hospitalists

Recruiting and Retaining Hospitalists: Developing a Talent Facilitation Framework

Patient Satisfaction: Tips for Improving Your HCAHPS Scores

The Role of Hospital Medicine in Adapting to the New ACGME Requirements

Skin is In: Dermatological Images Every Hospitalist Should Recognize

The How, When and Why of Noninvasive Ventilation

This Disease Is Easy; It’s the patient Who’s Difficult

The Art of Clinical problem-Solving: Mystery Cases


You may also be interested in these ONLINE EXCLUSIVES:

Listen to new SHM President Joseph Li's goals

Dr. Li, associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and director of the hospital medicine division at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, shares his thoughts about his presidency and the future of HM

Listen to HM11 faculty discuss portable ultrasound and new ACGME rules

HM11 pre-course faculty Brad Rosen, MD, FHM, believes portable ultrasound technology will impact HM in a positive way; Jeffrey Schnipper, MD, MPH, FHM, talks about new rules on resident duty hours and patient caps

Issue
The Hospitalist - 2011(06)
Publications
Topics
Sections

Pediatric hospitalists demonstrated their leadership and ownership of clinical hospital medicine on this year’s pediatric track at HM11.

Joel Tieder, MD, MPH, advocated for a balanced and risk-based approach to apparent life-threatening events (ALTEs). Although the differential for this observer-defined symptom remains broad, a link to perhaps the most worrisome outcome, sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), has not been borne out in the medical literature. Testing seldom offers conclusive answers, Dr. Tieder said in his review.

Thus, a risk-based approach to guide work-up is prudent. Young age and a history of recurrent events are two factors that could signify risk for worrisome underlying pathology, to include infection and nonaccidental trauma. Dr. Tieder has worked with SHM to organize and lead an expert panel that hopes to release a white paper on this topic in the future.

John Pope, MD, Kris Rehm, MD, and Brian Alverson, MD, collectively presented an update on the top articles of the year relevant to pediatric HM.

Highlights included:

  • The potential utility of the Pediatric Early Warning Score in identifying clinical deterioration;
  • A reduction in symptoms in patients with irritable bowel syndrome given Lactobacillus GG;
  • The positive impact of an antimicrobial stewardship program on vancomycin usage;
  • The utility of the clinical examination in deciding whether a lumbar puncture is warranted to evaluate for bacterial meningitis in patients presenting with complex febrile seizures; and
  • The adequacy of short-term IV antibiotic therapy in young infants with UTIs.

Dr. Alverson provided an update on the development of clinical practice guidelines for community-acquired pneumonia in children, highlighting his participation on a committee cosponsored by the Pediatric Infectious Disease Society and the Infectious Disease Society of America. Laboratory and radiographic data rarely clarify the diagnosis of clinical pneumonia and are not as useful in the outpatient setting but may be justified to look for complications in children who are hospitalized, he reported.

Other take-home points:

  • Antimicrobial therapy in uncomplicated pneumonia should primarily target pneumococcus;
  • Ampicillin and amoxicillin penetrate lung tissue well, and in high dosages can overcome most pneumococcal resistance; and
  • Management of mycoplasma in children remains controversial and requires further investigation.
  • The final guidelines are expected to be published sometime toward the end of the year.

Dr. Shen is pediatric editor of The Hospitalist.

More from the HM11 Special Report

Texas-Sized Excitement

HM11 galvanizes hospitalists from all career stages, inspires take-home action

The Future Is Forward

As HM matures, movement turns attention to quality goals, resource management, and value propositions

The Future of Better Patient Care

“Portable Ultrasound” pre-course unveils almost-limitless possibilities, hospitalist says

HM=Improved Patient Care

Healthcare heavyweights confident hospitalists will make a difference

The Suggestions Box

Special Interest Forums provide hospitalists helpful hints, partnerships

Something for Everyone

HM11 attendees get the most out of educational and networking offerings

HM11 Breakout Sessions Roundup

Highlights from faculty presentations at HM11 May 11-13 in Grapevine, Texas

Utilizing Technology to Improve the Clinical and Operational Performance of Hospitalists

Recruiting and Retaining Hospitalists: Developing a Talent Facilitation Framework

Patient Satisfaction: Tips for Improving Your HCAHPS Scores

The Role of Hospital Medicine in Adapting to the New ACGME Requirements

Skin is In: Dermatological Images Every Hospitalist Should Recognize

The How, When and Why of Noninvasive Ventilation

This Disease Is Easy; It’s the patient Who’s Difficult

The Art of Clinical problem-Solving: Mystery Cases


You may also be interested in these ONLINE EXCLUSIVES:

Listen to new SHM President Joseph Li's goals

Dr. Li, associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and director of the hospital medicine division at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, shares his thoughts about his presidency and the future of HM

Listen to HM11 faculty discuss portable ultrasound and new ACGME rules

HM11 pre-course faculty Brad Rosen, MD, FHM, believes portable ultrasound technology will impact HM in a positive way; Jeffrey Schnipper, MD, MPH, FHM, talks about new rules on resident duty hours and patient caps

Pediatric hospitalists demonstrated their leadership and ownership of clinical hospital medicine on this year’s pediatric track at HM11.

Joel Tieder, MD, MPH, advocated for a balanced and risk-based approach to apparent life-threatening events (ALTEs). Although the differential for this observer-defined symptom remains broad, a link to perhaps the most worrisome outcome, sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), has not been borne out in the medical literature. Testing seldom offers conclusive answers, Dr. Tieder said in his review.

Thus, a risk-based approach to guide work-up is prudent. Young age and a history of recurrent events are two factors that could signify risk for worrisome underlying pathology, to include infection and nonaccidental trauma. Dr. Tieder has worked with SHM to organize and lead an expert panel that hopes to release a white paper on this topic in the future.

John Pope, MD, Kris Rehm, MD, and Brian Alverson, MD, collectively presented an update on the top articles of the year relevant to pediatric HM.

Highlights included:

  • The potential utility of the Pediatric Early Warning Score in identifying clinical deterioration;
  • A reduction in symptoms in patients with irritable bowel syndrome given Lactobacillus GG;
  • The positive impact of an antimicrobial stewardship program on vancomycin usage;
  • The utility of the clinical examination in deciding whether a lumbar puncture is warranted to evaluate for bacterial meningitis in patients presenting with complex febrile seizures; and
  • The adequacy of short-term IV antibiotic therapy in young infants with UTIs.

Dr. Alverson provided an update on the development of clinical practice guidelines for community-acquired pneumonia in children, highlighting his participation on a committee cosponsored by the Pediatric Infectious Disease Society and the Infectious Disease Society of America. Laboratory and radiographic data rarely clarify the diagnosis of clinical pneumonia and are not as useful in the outpatient setting but may be justified to look for complications in children who are hospitalized, he reported.

Other take-home points:

  • Antimicrobial therapy in uncomplicated pneumonia should primarily target pneumococcus;
  • Ampicillin and amoxicillin penetrate lung tissue well, and in high dosages can overcome most pneumococcal resistance; and
  • Management of mycoplasma in children remains controversial and requires further investigation.
  • The final guidelines are expected to be published sometime toward the end of the year.

Dr. Shen is pediatric editor of The Hospitalist.

More from the HM11 Special Report

Texas-Sized Excitement

HM11 galvanizes hospitalists from all career stages, inspires take-home action

The Future Is Forward

As HM matures, movement turns attention to quality goals, resource management, and value propositions

The Future of Better Patient Care

“Portable Ultrasound” pre-course unveils almost-limitless possibilities, hospitalist says

HM=Improved Patient Care

Healthcare heavyweights confident hospitalists will make a difference

The Suggestions Box

Special Interest Forums provide hospitalists helpful hints, partnerships

Something for Everyone

HM11 attendees get the most out of educational and networking offerings

HM11 Breakout Sessions Roundup

Highlights from faculty presentations at HM11 May 11-13 in Grapevine, Texas

Utilizing Technology to Improve the Clinical and Operational Performance of Hospitalists

Recruiting and Retaining Hospitalists: Developing a Talent Facilitation Framework

Patient Satisfaction: Tips for Improving Your HCAHPS Scores

The Role of Hospital Medicine in Adapting to the New ACGME Requirements

Skin is In: Dermatological Images Every Hospitalist Should Recognize

The How, When and Why of Noninvasive Ventilation

This Disease Is Easy; It’s the patient Who’s Difficult

The Art of Clinical problem-Solving: Mystery Cases


You may also be interested in these ONLINE EXCLUSIVES:

Listen to new SHM President Joseph Li's goals

Dr. Li, associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and director of the hospital medicine division at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, shares his thoughts about his presidency and the future of HM

Listen to HM11 faculty discuss portable ultrasound and new ACGME rules

HM11 pre-course faculty Brad Rosen, MD, FHM, believes portable ultrasound technology will impact HM in a positive way; Jeffrey Schnipper, MD, MPH, FHM, talks about new rules on resident duty hours and patient caps

Issue
The Hospitalist - 2011(06)
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The Hospitalist - 2011(06)
Publications
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