bims-cliped Biomed News
on Clinical pediatrics
Issue of 2026–07–05
39 papers selected by
Alyssa M. Portwood, Akron’s Children



  1. Acad Pediatr. 2026 Jul 02. pii: S1876-2859(26)00158-0. [Epub ahead of print] 103376
       OBJECTIVE: "What Matters Most" (WMM) refers to the core values, preferences, and priorities of an individual regarding their healthcare experience. Limited data exists on WMM to pediatric patients. The aim of this quality improvement (QI) project was to develop an additional tool for providing patient-centered care (PCC) by increasing the percentage of pediatric hospital medicine (PHM) patient encounters in which patients and/or caregivers were asked WMM from 9% to 75% in 5 months.
    METHODS: Following engagement of appropriate partners, WMM was assessed for eligible children within the first two days of admission. Using the Model for Improvement, this process was optimized through a series of Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles. Measures included the percentage of patients/caregivers asked WMM during admission (process), patient satisfaction and perception of PCC (outcome), and staff perception on time, impact on care, and satisfaction with the process (balancing).
    RESULTS: The percentage of patients/caregivers asked WMM increased from 9% to 57% over the study period and was sustained at 41% 17 months later. The proportion of patients satisfied increased from a median of 78% to 86%, and 90% (n=18) of sampled caregivers felt that being asked WMM positively impacted their child's care. While 94% (n=31) of providers reported spending <5 minutes on asking WMM, only 56% (n=24) were satisfied with the overall WMM process.
    CONCLUSION: This project successfully increased WMM elicitation and demonstrated a positive trend in patient satisfaction over the corresponding timeframe with minimal additional perceived time burden by providers.
    Keywords:  Patient-centered care; pediatrics; what matters most
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acap.2026.103376
  2. Phys Med Rehabil Clin N Am. 2026 Aug;pii: S1047-9651(26)00039-2. [Epub ahead of print]37(3): 521-536
      Chronic pain is increasing in prevalence worldwide, and practitioners should stay up to date regarding best practices for this population of patients. Certain populations can be more vulnerable to chronic pain and special attention must be paid. This article will highlight 3 special populations: children and adolescents, the elderly, as well as pregnant patients. The aim of this article is to delve into chronic pain syndromes that each population may face, as well as particular management strategies for each.
    Keywords:  Chronic; Elderly; Geriatrics; Pain; Pediatrics; pregnancy
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pmr.2026.03.012
  3. BMC Palliat Care. 2026 Jul 01.
       BACKGROUND: Current United States palliative care practice guidelines are intended to cover care across all age groups. Previous research with pediatric providers and caregivers concluded that pediatric hospice and palliative care have unique attributes. Not known is how adolescent hospice and palliative care patients understand quality palliative care. The purpose of this study was to characterize and define quality of care domains as described by adolescent and young adult patients receiving home-based hospice and palliative care.
    METHODS: Semi-structured interviews with 10-26 year-olds who received home-based hospice and/or palliative care visits in the prior three years at six diverse sites in the United States. Data were analyzed using Krippendorff's semantic content analysis methodology.
    RESULTS: There were 32 participants (63% female) who had a median(range) age of 17.5 (10-26) years old, and 69% (n = 22) were White. The domains with the highest number of themes were Structure and Processes of Care and Compassionate Care.
    CONCLUSIONS: The results address an important gap by including adolescent/young adult patients' voices regarding delivery of home-based hospice and palliative care. Clinical implications include prioritizing and making time to build trusting relationships directly with the AYA, empowering them to participate in their care to the extent appropriate and prepare for transition to adult care when needed, providing support for family members, and training for all providers in generalist spiritual care.
    Keywords:  Adolescent; Delivery of health care; Hospice; Palliative care; Pediatric; Young adult
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1186/s12904-026-02208-8
  4. Hosp Pediatr. 2026 Jul 02. pii: e2025009130. [Epub ahead of print]
      As the field of pediatric hospital medicine (PHM) grows, the need and opportunity to conduct randomized controlled trial (RCT) research to further the science of our field also grows. For successful conduct of PHM RCT studies, both the main principal investigator (PI) and site-PI personnel are needed. PHM has had rapid growth in the pool of junior and midcareer faculty poised to act as site-PI personnel and advance the health of hospitalized children. In this article, we describe the roles and responsibilities of site-PI personnel in multisite research. We also outline benefits of being a site PI and ways to explore this path of supporting PHM trials.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1542/hpeds.2025-009130
  5. Pediatrics. 2026 Jul 02. pii: e2026076324. [Epub ahead of print]
      
    OBJECTIVES: To characterize awareness, use, and perceived barriers to implementing single maintenance and reliever therapy (SMART) in primary care for children aged 5 years or older, hypothesizing high clinician awareness but limited use due to multilevel clinician-, system-, and caregiver barriers.
    METHODS: We conducted a sequential explanatory mixed-methods study among pediatric primary care clinicians within a practice-based research network. Clinicians completed a survey assessing SMART awareness, prescribing practices, and perceived barriers, guided by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) 2.0. Semistructured interviews were conducted with purposively sampled clinicians to explore factors influencing SMART implementation. Qualitative data were analyzed using an inductive-deductive approach and mapped to CFIR 2.0 constructs.
    RESULTS: Fifty-two clinicians (27.5%) completed the survey, and 24 completed interviews. Awareness of SMART was universal, but use remained limited among eligible pediatric patients, particularly younger children. Clinicians viewed SMART as effective and guideline-concordant but described multilevel barriers to routine implementation. Qualitative analysis identified 3 themes: (1) SMART is clinically advantageous but challenging to operationalize; (2) system-level and workflow barriers, including insurance coverage and prior authorization requirements, constrain adoption; and (3) caregiver resistance impedes deimplementation of short-acting β-agonists. Absence of SMART-specific asthma action plans emerged as a key barrier across care settings.
    CONCLUSION: Pediatric primary care clinicians endorse SMART therapy but face persistent clinician-, system-, and caregiver-level barriers to its implementation and to the deimplementation of short-acting β-agonists. Implementation strategies incorporating practice facilitation, audit and feedback, and electronic health record-generated SMART-specific asthma action plans may support more consistent uptake of pediatric guideline-concordant asthma care.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2026-076324
  6. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2026 Jun 24. pii: S0890-8567(26)00280-7. [Epub ahead of print]
       OBJECTIVE: This quality improvement initiative aimed to increase adherence to the Choosing Wisely recommendation by increasing compliance with medical screening recommendations for pediatric patients undergoing psychiatric evaluation in the emergency department (ED) from 70% to 95% between October 2024 and August 2025, thereby reducing unnecessary screening.
    METHOD: We conducted an observational study with sequential interventions in an urban tertiary care pediatric ED. Eligible patients were those with a psychiatry consult order. Laboratory testing was considered clinically indicated if documented by the physician. Interventions included operational changes, staff education, and monthly feedback. The primary outcome was compliance with indication-based testing (either no testing or testing with documented indication). Process measures included compliance among discharged and admitted patients; the balancing measure was missed diagnoses. Data were collected via chart review and analyzed using p-charts.
    RESULTS: Among 756 encounters, 216 required inpatient psychiatric admission. Before implementation, all admitted patients received screening labs. After implementation, 50 of 101 admitted patients (50%) had no laboratory testing. Overall compliance improved from 71.4% to 96.3%, with discharged patients increasing from 80.1% to 100% and admitted patients from 42.9% to 85.6%. No patients required transfer back to medical services for missed diagnoses or complications.
    CONCLUSION: Implementing Choosing Wisely recommendations was associated with a significant increase in compliance and reduction in unnecessary screening without compromising safety. Findings support indication-based medical clearance, improving efficiency, reducing costs, and aligning ED practice with evidence-based standards.
    DIVERSITY & INCLUSION STATEMENT: We worked to ensure sex and gender balance in the recruitment of human participants. We worked to ensure race, ethnic, and/or other types of diversity in the recruitment of human participants. We worked to ensure that the study questionnaires were prepared in an inclusive way. The author list of this paper includes contributors from the location and/or community where the research was conducted who participated in the data collection, design, analysis, and/or interpretation of the work.
    Keywords:  Choosing Wisely; Medical Clearance; Pediatric Emergency Medicine; Psychiatric Admission; Quality Improvement
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaac.2026.06.015
  7. Obes Pillars. 2026 Sep;19 100286
       Background: Coverage of obesity pharmacotherapy for youth varies substantially across state Medicaid programs. This variability limits access to evidence-based treatment for pediatric obesity. The Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic, and Treatment (EPSDT) benefit is a federally mandated Medicaid provision requiring coverage of medically necessary services for individuals under age 21, even when such services are not included in standard state Medicaid benefits. Despite its broad scope, EPSDT remains underutilized due to limited awareness and operational complexity.
    Methods: We developed a clinician-facing, practice-oriented framework to operationalize EPSDT for pediatric obesity treatment. This approach integrates (1) review of federal EPSDT policy and statutory requirements, (2) synthesis of state-level variability in implementation, and (3) aggregation of real-world clinical workflows from centers that have successfully obtained EPSDT coverage for obesity pharmacotherapy. We outline step-by-step processes for identifying eligible patients, documenting medical necessity, submitting prior authorization requests, and managing appeals. Standardized tools, including sample letters of medical necessity, documentation templates, and clinic workflow algorithms, were created to support implementation across diverse clinical settings.
    Results: Key components include: (1) reframing obesity as a chronic disease with documented comorbid risk to establish medical necessity; (2) aligning clinical documentation with EPSDT statutory language; (3) integrating multidisciplinary team roles to streamline submission and follow-up; and (4) implementing structured appeal pathways when initial requests are denied. Case-based examples and state-specific considerations highlight variability in payer response and demonstrate that EPSDT can effectively override standard Medicaid exclusions when appropriately applied.
    Conclusions: EPSDT represents a powerful but underutilized mechanism to expand equitable access to evidence-based obesity treatment for children and adolescents. A structured, clinician-driven approach can facilitate successful navigation of this benefit across diverse practice settings. Broader dissemination and adoption of standardized workflows may reduce disparities in access to obesity pharmacotherapy and support more consistent delivery of guideline-concordant care for pediatric obesity.
    Keywords:  Diagnostic, and treatment; Early and periodic screening; Obesity medications; Pediatric obesity
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.obpill.2026.100286
  8. J Pediatric Infect Dis Soc. 2026 Jul 02. pii: piag050. [Epub ahead of print]
      In this multi-site retrospective study, we evaluated influenza vaccination of hospitalized children during the 2018-19 through 2023-24 seasons. While screening varied across sites, influenza vaccine administration was lower in the pandemic and post-pandemic period for all sites. These results highlight the need for strategies to promote vaccination of hospitalized children.
    Keywords:  hospital-based vaccination program; influenza vaccination; inpatient vaccination; vaccination program; vaccine delivery
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1093/jpids/piag050
  9. Pediatr Rev. 2026 Jul 01. 47(7): 361-370
      Traumatic events can affect children and adolescents in very unique and sometimes complex ways. Pediatricians in primary care settings are uniquely positioned to identify the influence traumatic experiences have upon their patients' general functioning and potential development of psychopathology. Thus, it is of vital importance for pediatricians to be able to recognize these influences and coordinate appropriate care for children and adolescents who are either presenting emerging symptoms or experiencing more definitive posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). To support these efforts, this article provides a review of key clinical features of PTSD and related conditions that are commonly presented in primary care, as well as best practices for screening, treatment, and coordination of care. By improving pediatricians' knowledge and awareness of common childhood reactions to adverse and traumatic experiences, the goal of this review is to promote a broader scope of trauma-informed practice considerations that will help clinicians prevent symptom progression and the development of PTSD for their child and adolescent patients.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1542/pir.2025-006778
  10. MDM Policy Pract. 2026 Jan-Jun;11(1):11(1): 23814683261460886
       Background: Adolescents and young adults (AYA) comprise 50% of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) diagnosed annually. AYA frequently access emergency departments (EDs) for health care. Thus, the ED could be a strategic venue for the diagnosis and treatment of STIs.
    Objective: Cost-effectiveness analysis examining screening strategies for Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhea (CT/GC).
    Design: Decision analytic cost-effectiveness model.
    Setting: Six pediatric EDs.
    Participants: AYA 15 to 21 y of age seeking acute care at pediatric EDs.
    Interventions: 1) Usual care, 2) targeted screening (using a computerized sexual health survey), and 3) universally offered screening.
    Main Outcomes and Measures: Cost in 2024 US dollars and effectiveness measured as STIs detected and successfully treated. Secondary effectiveness outcome metric: quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs). The cost perspective is the direct health care sector, and the time horizon is lifelong.
    Results: Targeted screening was the most effective and most costly (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio [ICER] of $517 per case detected and successfully treated). In a secondary analysis using QALYs lost for long-term complications of untreated CT/GC, targeted screening had an ICER of $23,320/QALY. In this analysis, usual care was dominated, being more costly and less effective than universally offered screening. In subgroup analyses of female versus male, only cohorts using $/QALY, targeted screening remained highly cost-effective for females ($6,389/QALY) compared with universally offered screening but was not cost-effective in males.
    Conclusions and Relevance: Targeted screening is a highly cost-effective strategy for detecting and treating STIs in adolescents seeking pediatric ED care compared with universally offered screening, with an ICER of $517 per case detected and treated. When considering quality of life for female- versus male-only subgroups, screening for males becomes less clear.
    Keywords:  adolescent medicine; computerized decision support; cost-effectiveness analysis; decision analysis; emergency medicine; sextually transmitted infections
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1177/23814683261460886
  11. Lancet Respir Med. 2026 Jul 03. pii: S2213-2600(26)00086-X. [Epub ahead of print]
       BACKGROUND: In emergency care, clinicians currently have scarce evidence-based guidance on whether to order diagnostic tests for suspected pulmonary embolism in children. We aimed to test whether the Pulmonary Embolism Rule-Out Criteria in Children (PERC-Peds) can safely rule out pulmonary embolism in children.
    METHODS: This multicentre, prospective, observational, diagnostic accuracy study was done in 21 paediatric emergency departments across the USA. We enrolled children aged 4-17 years who presented with symptoms prompting the emergency physician to order, or strongly consider ordering, a diagnostic test for pulmonary embolism. Participants formed a consecutive series. At the point of care, clinicians completed a case report form to record the components of the PERC-Peds rule. Diagnostic testing, including D-dimer testing, was done at clinician discretion. Trained research personnel collected patient-reported demographic data, symptoms, medications, and past medical histories prospectively and cross-checked patient-reported past medical histories and medications against data in the electronic health record. Follow-up was done 45 days after enrolment with a standardised, automated SMS message to caregivers. The criterion standard for pulmonary embolism was the outcome of any venous thromboembolism (VTE; including image-proven pulmonary embolism or proximal deep vein thrombosis [DVT; above knee or elbow, but not including isolated saphenous, brachial, or calf vein clots]) within 45 days, as adjudicated by an independent committee of three board-certified paediatric emergency physicians. Adjudicators viewed all imaging reports, information from the 45-day follow-up, and outside medical records. The primary endpoint was safe exclusion by use of PERC-Peds in all participants who were adjudicated, defined as the upper limit of the 95% CI for the false-negative rate not crossing 1·5%.
    FINDINGS: Between July 29, 2020, and Sept 29, 2024, 4039 children were enrolled, with 4011 participants adjudicated for pulmonary embolism or proximal DVT. Date of last follow-up was Sept 18, 2025. The median age of the adjudicated population was 15 years (IQR 13-16); 2567 (64·0%) were female and 1444 (36·0%) were male. 3988 participants had complete data, and 253 (6·3%, 95% CI 5·6-7·2) were diagnosed with pulmonary embolism or proximal DVT within 45 days. The sensitivity of the PERC-Peds rule was 99·6% (95% CI 97·8-100·0), specificity was 19·6% (18·4-20·9), and false-negative rate was 0·1% (0·0-0·8). D-dimer test was ordered in 3161 (78·8%) of 4011 participants. Sequential use of PERC-Peds followed by D-dimer test ruled out pulmonary embolism or proximal DVT in 2167 (54·3%) with a false-negative rate of 0·9% (0·6-1·4).
    INTERPRETATION: In this multicentre, prospective, observational, diagnostic accuracy study of children with suspected pulmonary embolism in the emergency department, we found a 6·3% prevalence of pulmonary embolism or proximal DVT; in this population, the PERC-Peds negative rule can safely rule out pulmonary embolism. Use of PERC-Peds might reduce low-value diagnostic testing for pulmonary embolism in children and adolescents.
    FUNDING: US National Institutes of Health.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/S2213-2600(26)00086-X
  12. Int Emerg Nurs. 2026 Jun 27. pii: S1755-599X(26)00122-9. [Epub ahead of print]87 101863
       INTRODUCTION: Deliberate practice simulation (DPS) is a tool that can enhance learning through repetitive, task-oriented education with immediate feedback. We aimed to increase emergency nurses' knowledge of commonly used medications and their storage locations in a pediatric emergency department.
    METHODS: This quality improvement (QI) pilot project utilized an observational, cross-sectional assessment approach. Through plan-do-study-act (PDSA) cycles, we initiated this project in the pediatric emergency department at a level-one pediatric trauma center. Quantitative needs assessment and baseline data on emergency nurse knowledge of the location of resuscitation medications were collected. "Pass" was considered 26 out of 33 correct (∼79%) on graded electronic assessments. DPS sessions used the crash cart with verbal quizzing on the medications. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, and paired t-tests were conducted to determine the effect of DPS on emergency nurses' pass rates on our graded electronic assessments.
    RESULTS: Thirty-six emergency nurses participated in each cycle. With the use of DPS, there was a notable increase in the percentage of those who achieved "pass" from 8.3% to 55.6% (mean increase of 47.3%, p < 0.01). The proportion of correctly identified medication locations increased from 69% to 78% (mean increase of 9%, p < 0.003). Participants improved on the paired t-test in knowledge assessment scores (mean increase of 4.6 points or 22%, p < 0.00001).
    CONCLUSION: Our QI pilot project demonstrates notable improvement in emergency nurses' knowledge of resuscitation medication location in emergencies through deliberate practice simulation. These findings suggest DPS can improve resuscitation efficiency and offers a promising approach to emergency nursing education.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ienj.2026.101863
  13. Pediatrics. 2026 Jul 01. pii: e2026076146. [Epub ahead of print]
       OBJECTIVE: To assess the impact of a social care intervention on parents' discussion, receipt of referrals, and enrollment in resources for social needs.
    METHODS: We conducted a Type 2 hybrid effectiveness-implementation stepped wedge cluster trial in 18 pediatric practices across 14 states that were part of the American Academy of Pediatrics' Pediatric Research in Office Settings and Academic Pediatric Association Continuity Research Network. Three clusters of 6 practices (8 urban, 6 suburban, 4 rural) participated in Usual Care, Core Training, Pilot, and WE CARE (Well-Child Care Evaluation, Community Resources, Advocacy, Referral, Education) phases. The WE CARE intervention included the following: (1) a screener for 6 social needs and (2) clinician access to practice-generated Family Resource Books with referral handouts. Parents of children 2 months to 10 years were enrolled either during Usual Care or WE CARE phases at their well-child visit and followed up 3 months later. Data were analyzed using generalized estimating equation models.
    RESULTS: In total, 1882 parents were enrolled (WE CARE n = 842, Usual Care n = 1040), and 64% completed follow-up. Overall, 60% of children were publicly insured. Compared with Usual Care parents, significantly more WE CARE parents reported discussing social needs with their child's clinician (91% vs 79%; AOR, 3.6; 95% CI, 2.6-4.8) and receiving 1 or more referral (20% vs 12%; AOR, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.3-2.2). At 3-month follow-up, there were no self-reported differences with enrollment in new community resources between WE CARE and Usual Care parents (23% vs 22%; P = .63).
    CONCLUSIONS: Systematically screening and referring for social needs was associated with higher rates of social needs assessments and referrals but not enrollment differences.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2026-076146
  14. Paediatr Anaesth. 2026 Jul 03.
       INTRODUCTION: Pediatric ambulatory surgery has become the dominant model of surgical care in the United States, driven primarily by economic forces. There is variability in regional practice patterns, quality improvement cycles, and outcomes. Opportunity exists to overcome knowledge gaps and provide sustainable pathways of quality improvement. Our unique capability of describing the evolution of our pediatric ambulatory quality improvement practice allows us to contribute a single center's perspective.
    METHODS: We chose to complete a comprehensive retrospective review of our quality improvement process, outcome, and balancing metrics contained in our electronic health record (EHR) from our free-standing pediatric ambulatory surgery center (ASC) from July 2010 through December 2024. A commercial software system extracted de-identified, aggregated health data from the system's EHR. The data are processed and presented in statistical process control charts. This methodology allows clinicians to distinguish between common cause and special cause variation.
    RESULTS: Improvement themes (opioid-free anesthesia and stewardship, enhanced recovery, environmental efforts, positive deviance, and learning healthcare system) are described. Improvements in all six domains of quality (effectiveness, efficiency/timeliness, patient experience, equity, and safety) are illustrated with reliable sustainability. Our system achieved approximately a 13-fold increase in quality improvement (QI) project completion rate with self-serve, real-world data access; enabling the team to take on improvement tasks previously deemed too big, lengthy, or risky to complete.
    DISCUSSION: We provide preliminary evidence that these methods may be generalizable. Requirements include engaged leadership, a standard framework for improvement with experienced leadership or accessible support, and easy access to real-world electronic medical record data (i.e., learning healthcare system [LHS]). Lastly, leaders must create a culture supportive of teamwork, change, and continuous improvement. Systems facilitate adoption and hinder resistance to standards, always with implementation and sustainability in mind. Meaningful, large-scale improvements in healthcare outcomes require collaboration across LHSs.
    Keywords:  ambulatory surgery; enhanced recovery; opioids; pediatric anesthesia; positive deviance; quality improvement; sustainability
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1002/pan.70252
  15. JCO Oncol Pract. 2026 Jun 29. OP2600031
       PURPOSE: Febrile pediatric oncology patients with central lines are at high risk of sepsis. However, emerging evidence fails to support the historic 1-hour window for antibiotic administration in well-appearing patients, suggesting that providers may have more time to tailor antibiotic therapy in these patients. Before this quality improvement project, 92% of febrile oncology patients without severe neutropenia (absolute neutrophil count [ANC] ≥500) in our pediatric emergency department (ED) received empiric intravenous cefepime. The aim of this study was to decrease this percentage to 60% by June 30, 2025.
    METHODS: A multidisciplinary team implemented interventions using Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) methodology, including clinical pathways and order set updates, tips for communicating with families, and a risk stratification tool. The outcome measure was the percentage of febrile oncology patients without severe neutropenia who received cefepime. Process measures included order set use, percentage of antibiotics ordered before ANC results were obtained, and the time to ANC result. Balancing measures included readmission of patients within 7 days, admission to the intensive care unit within 24 hours of ED discharge, and percentage of patients with antibiotics administered >3 hours after arrival.
    RESULTS: There was an average of 7.9/month febrile oncology patients without severe neutropenia. Following the first PDSA cycle, cefepime use in patients without severe neutropenia decreased from 92% to 26.8%. Patients with antibiotics administered before ANC reporting decreased from 90% to 35.2%. Patients with IV antibiotics administered >3 hours from arrival increased from 2.3% to 29%. Remaining balancing measures did not statistically change.
    CONCLUSION: Implementation of a new clinical pathway with order sets, adoption of a risk stratification tool, and patient and family involvement safely improved antibiotic stewardship for febrile oncology patients.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1200/OP-26-00031
  16. Eur J Pediatr. 2026 Jun 27. pii: 536. [Epub ahead of print]185(7):
      Advances in neonatal and pediatric critical care have expanded the focus from short‑term survival to include greater attention to long‑term neurodevelopmental health and family well‑being. This narrative review synthesizes the evolution of neurodevelopmental and neuroprotective care across neonatal (NICU), pediatric (PICU), and cardiovascular (CVICU/PCICU) intensive care settings. Developmental care emerged in the NICU through individualized, cue‑based approaches such as the Newborn Individualized Developmental Care and Assessment Program (NIDCAP), emphasizing stress reduction, protection of sleep, optimized sensory environments, and parent-infant coregulation. As survivorship after critical illness improved, parallel concerns about post‑intensive care morbidities, including cognitive, behavioral, and functional impairments, catalyzed adoption of family‑centered and brain‑focused practices in the PICU, supported by contemporary guidelines integrating pain and sedation optimization, delirium prevention, environmental stewardship, and early mobility. More recently, dedicated cardiac neurodevelopmental programs have adapted NICU principles to the high‑acuity CVICU/PCICU population, pairing hemodynamic vigilance with developmental goals through structured interdisciplinary models (e.g., developmental rounds, holding protocols, early therapy, feeding support, and caregiver mental health resources). Across settings, common implementation domains include family partnership, cue‑based care, protected sleep and circadian support, sensory modulation, humane pain and sedation strategies, early rehabilitation, and coordinated follow‑up after discharge.
    CONCLUSION:  While the strength of evidence varies by unit type and outcome, available data support feasibility and potential benefits for delirium reduction, functional recovery, feeding, parent experience, and early developmental trajectories. Continued multicenter research and implementation science are needed to define optimal bundles, equity‑informed delivery, and durable long‑term outcomes.
    WHAT IS KNOWN: • Neurodevelopmental care is well established in NICUs, emphasizing cue-based care, pain reduction, environmental protection, and family partnership. • Survivors of pediatric and cardiac critical illness remain at risk for cognitive, behavioral, emotional, and functional impairments.
    WHAT IS NEW: • This review extends neurodevelopmental care beyond the NICU to PICU and CVICU settings. • It proposes a unified multidisciplinary framework for brain-focused critical care across pediatric ICU environments.
    Keywords:  NICU; Neurodevelopmental care; PICU
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-026-07203-y
  17. Acad Pediatr. 2026 Jun 28. pii: S1876-2859(26)00168-3. [Epub ahead of print] 103386
       BACKGROUND: Energy insecurity, defined as the inability to meet household energy needs due to limited financial resources, is an understudied problem with potential adverse impacts on child health. In the United States, households with children are more likely to experience energy insecurity, but little is known about which households are most at risk. In addition, few studies have investigated the relationship between energy insecurity and other forms of household material hardship.
    METHODS: We analyzed nationally representative data from the United States (U.S.) 2022-2024 Household Pulse Survey administered by the U.S. Census Bureau. We used descriptive statistics to estimate national and state-level prevalence of energy insecurity among households with children. We then used multivariable logistic regression to examine the association between energy insecurity and other household material hardships, specifically housing insecurity (being behind on rent or mortgage payments) and food insufficiency (not having enough food for all members of the household).
    RESULTS: Among 505,794 survey respondents, weighted to represent 30,864,951 households with children under 18 years of age across the U.S., almost half (49.2%) reported energy insecurity within the past year. State-level prevalence of energy insecurity ranged from 37.5% in Washington, DC to 60.9% in Mississippi. In multivariable logistic regression models, homeowners who were behind on mortgage payments (odds ratio (OR) 4.91, 95% confidence interval (CI) 4.51-5.34) and renters who were behind on rent payments (OR 3.22, 95% CI 2.91 - 3.57) had increased odds of energy insecurity relative to homeowners who were caught up on mortgage payments. Food insufficiency (OR 5.40, 95% CI 5.07 - 5.75) was also associated with increased odds of energy insecurity.
    CONCLUSIONS: Energy insecurity is highly prevalent among U.S. households with children. Families experiencing housing insecurity or food insufficiency have increased odds of also experiencing energy insecurity. To support children's health and well-being, pediatric health care providers should aim to identify and address both energy insecurity and other concurrent material hardships in clinical settings. Policymakers focused on improving child health should consider strategies for providing consolidated support to families experiencing multiple economic hardships, such as streamlining application and enrollment processes across energy, food, and housing-related government benefit programs.
    Keywords:  Climate Change; Food Insecurity; Global Warming; Housing Insecurity; Social Determinants of Health
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acap.2026.103386
  18. Antimicrob Steward Healthc Epidemiol. 2026 ;6(1): e183
       Background: Candida auris (also referred to as Candidozyma auris) is an emerging multidrug-resistant fungal pathogen associated with high morbidity and mortality. Existing infection prevention and control (IPC) guidance has largely focused on adult populations, with limited recommendations for pediatric healthcare and non-healthcare settings.
    Methods: The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA) convened a multidisciplinary expert panel to develop IPC recommendations for C. auris. The panel developed recommendations using a structured, iterative Delphi consensus process with rounds of discussion, refinement, and anonymous electronic voting with predefined consensus thresholds. Panelists reviewed relevant peer-reviewed and gray literature integrated with expert judgment and practical considerations. Preambles and remarks provide additional context and guidance.
    Results: This consensus statement provides recommendations for prevention of C. auris in pediatric acute care settings, non-acute healthcare settings, and non-healthcare congregate settings. Recommendations incorporate pediatric risk factors and care and address screening practices, isolation precautions, caregiver-infant/child dyad considerations, room placement and rooming in, breastfeeding and skin-to-skin practices, visitation, use of shared spaces, environmental cleaning and disinfection, and management of medical and non-medical equipment, including toys. Recommendations emphasize coordination with local infection prevention and public health partners.
    Conclusions: This SHEA consensus statement addresses gaps in pediatric-specific IPC guidance for C. auris. The recommendations provide a practical framework to support prevention of transmission within the context of pediatric clinical, developmental, and family-centered care.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1017/ash.2026.10419
  19. J Hosp Med. 2026 Jun 30.
      Rotavirus is a vaccine-preventable cause of acute, viral gastroenteritis typically characterized by diarrhea, vomiting, and fever. Prior to rotavirus vaccine introduction, nearly all children worldwide had been infected by 5 years of age. Severe rotavirus gastroenteritis causes dehydration and electrolyte derangements, and infants and young children are particularly vulnerable to seasonal outbreaks due to high communicability and initial infection severity. While rotavirus vaccination has significantly decreased hospitalization of infants with rotavirus infections, recognition and management of rotavirus infections are still important for hospitalists, particularly with the January 2026 Centers for Disease Prevention and Control's vaccine recommendation changes.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1002/jhm.70379
  20. Neurol Clin. 2026 Aug;pii: S0733-8619(26)00022-8. [Epub ahead of print]44(3): 499-509
      Sport-related concussion affects approximately 1.6 to 3.8 million athletes annually in the United States. Management has evolved from historical practices of strict cognitive and physical rest to evidence-based approaches emphasizing early, individualized, active rehabilitation. Most adults recover within approximately 14 days, while children and adolescents may require up to 4 weeks, with initial symptom burden representing the strongest predictor of recovery duration. Early, progressive aerobic activity initiated within 24 to 72 hours postinjury accelerates recovery compared to prolonged rest.
    Keywords:  Active rehabilitation; Return to learn; Return to play; Subsymptom threshold exercise
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ncl.2026.03.009
  21. J Palliat Med. 2026 Jun 29. 10966218261460532
       BACKGROUND: Children with life-limiting conditions often have complex care needs, and their caregivers require expert clinical support after-hours and over weekends to support care at home.
    OBJECTIVES: This quality improvement initiative examined usage patterns and impact on caregiving of the nurse-led 24-Hour Clinical Care Line initiated in 2018 by the Canuck Place Children's Hospice, which provides inpatient and community-based pediatric palliative care and respite for children with life-limiting conditions in British Columbia and the Yukon in Canada.
    METHODS: Phone call tracking logs and clinical profiles were analyzed to examine user demographics, temporal usage patterns, and reasons for calling. Families were asked to provide feedback on the service for quality improvement.
    RESULTS: From June 2020 to March 2024, 194 families placed 1106 calls. Mothers/foster mothers made 67% of the calls. Caregivers of children with central nervous system (CNS) and metabolic conditions made a significantly higher number of calls per child on average. Caregivers calling about children aged <1 year represented a disproportionately large group of callers. Parents of children >15 years made significantly fewer calls. The most common call reason was family support (73.1%), followed by providing an update on child status (58.5%), pain and symptom management (50.9%), and care planning (10.9%). Call volume peaked at bedtime and was consistent over nighttime hours and weekends. Late winter and spring were the most popular seasons for calls, following typical temporal influenza patterns.
    Keywords:  community palliative care; hospice palliative care; nursing research; pediatric palliative care; telephone support line
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1177/10966218261460532
  22. J Pediatr Surg. 2026 Jul 02. pii: S0022-3468(26)00366-0. [Epub ahead of print] 163284
       PURPOSE: To establish contemporary national benchmarks for penetrating head injury (PPHI) in children and adolescents by characterizing its epidemiology, age, race/ethnicity, mechanism, and intent, and to identify independent predictors of mortality, in order to inform age- and mechanism-specific prevention.
    METHODS: Retrospective cohort study of children and adolescents aged 1-17 years with PPHI in the American College of Surgeons Trauma Quality Improvement Program (TQIP) database, 2019-2023. PPHI comprised firearm, cut/pierce, and animal-bite mechanisms with documented head-region involvement. Patients were stratified into four developmental age groups (1-4, 5-9, 10-14, 15-17 years). Outcomes included overall (emergency department and in-hospital) mortality, neurosurgical intervention, length of stay, and hospital-acquired infection (HAI). Animal bites were summarized as a separate descriptive subgroup; the multivariable mortality model was restricted to firearm and cut/pierce mechanisms, with a sensitivity analysis varying the head-injury severity threshold.
    RESULTS: Among 9,046 children and adolescents with PPHI, 73.8% were male and 49.9% were aged 15-17 years. Mechanism and intent shifted markedly with age: animal bites predominated among children aged 1-4 years (61.3% of that group), whereas firearms accounted for 88.2% of injuries in adolescents aged 15-17 years. Injuries were predominantly unintentional before age 10 (80.9%); self-inflicted injury peaked at ages 10-14 (21.1%); and assault predominated at ages 15-17 (63.4%). Overall mortality was 25.4% and rose from 12.2% in children aged 1-9 years to 31.3% in those aged 10-17 years. Firearms caused 6,199 injuries (68.5%) and 97.7% of all deaths. Independent predictors of mortality included firearm mechanism, self-inflicted intent, non-Hispanic Black race, lower Glasgow Coma Scale score, higher Injury Severity Score, and direct (non-transferred) arrival.
    CONCLUSION: PPHI in U.S. children and adolescents comprises three distinct epidemiologic phenotypes, animal bites in young children, self-inflicted firearm injury peaking in early adolescence, and firearm assault concentrated among older, predominantly non-Hispanic Black adolescents. Firearms drive nearly all mortality. These national benchmarks support tailored, phenotype-specific prevention rather than a single undifferentiated strategy.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2026.163284
  23. Emerg Med J. 2026 Jul 03. pii: emermed-2026-216136. [Epub ahead of print]
      Intranasal (IN) ketamine offers an alternative to intravenous procedural sedation in the Paediatric Emergency Department. A review of the literature was carried out to assess evidence for the efficacy of IN ketamine as an alternative to IV ketamine for use as procedural sedation. 150 individual papers were found, of which eight were included as studies providing data relevant to the clinical question. The author, date, country of publication, group studied, study type, outcomes, key results and study weaknesses were tabulated. The clinical bottom line is that in paediatric patients requiring sedation, IN ketamine has a slightly lower likelihood of success than intravenous ketamine; however, offers a useful needle-free alternative. With a clear explanation of the evidence to parents and shared decision-making, it should be considered in severely needle-phobic children.
    Keywords:  pediatric emergency medicine; pediatric injury
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1136/emermed-2026-216136
  24. JHLT Open. 2026 Aug;13 100606
      This special issue of the Journal of Heart Transplantation Open is dedicated to Pediatric Thoracic Transplantation. The authors will discuss subjects related to pediatric lung transplantation such as access to donor organs, allograft dysfunction and role of functional status in outcomes.
    Keywords:  allograft; children; donor; frailty; lung transplant; outcomes; pediatric
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhlto.2026.100606
  25. Skin Appendage Disord. 2026 Apr 28.
       Background: Dissecting cellulitis is a chronic primary scarring alopecia characterized by pustules, nodules, abscesses, and sinus tracts that progress to permanent hair loss. Its prevalence is low, and reports in pediatric populations are scarce.
    Summary: This review aims to expand current understanding of dissecting cellulitis in pediatric population, highlighting it as a potential differential diagnosis at this age group to enable early diagnosis and prevent complications. A literature review was conducted using PubMed, Google Scholar, and SciELO, employing English and Spanish terms: "dissecting cellulitis," "children," "pediatrics," and "perifolliculitis capitis abscedens et suffodiens," covering publications from 1999 to 2025. Dissecting cellulitis is an uncommon disease in pediatric patients. Its pathogenesis is multifactorial, and it is clinically characterized by papules and pustules that evolve into nodules, abscesses, and fistulous tracts, leading to disfiguring scars and alopecia. Diagnosis is primarily clinical, supported by trichoscopy and histopathological examination. Differential diagnosis with other conditions is crucial to prevent its irreversible course. Although no standardized treatment protocol exists, multiple therapeutic options have been successfully employed in pediatric cases.
    Key Messages: Recognizing that dissecting cellulitis can occur in pediatric patients is essential to achieve early diagnosis and treatment, thereby preventing irreversible sequelae with significant psychosocial impact.
    Keywords:  Children; Dissecting cellulitis; Hair; Perifolliculitis capitis abscedens et suffodiens; Trichology
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1159/000552195
  26. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2026 Jul 03. 7 CD015511
       RATIONALE: The prevalence of e-cigarette use has recently increased globally amongst children and adolescents. In response to this increase and emerging evidence about the potential harms of e-cigarettes in children and adolescents, leading public health organisations have called for approaches to address e-cigarette use. Whilst evaluations of approaches to reduce uptake and use regularly appear in the literature, the collective long-term benefit of these is currently unclear.
    OBJECTIVES: The co-primary objectives were to: (1) evaluate the effectiveness of interventions to prevent e-cigarette use in children and adolescents (aged 19 years and younger) with no prior use, relative to no intervention, waiting-list control, usual practice, or an alternative intervention; and (2) evaluate the effectiveness of interventions to cease e-cigarette use in children and adolescents (aged 19 years and younger) reporting current use, relative to no intervention, waiting-list control, usual practice, or an alternative intervention. Secondary objectives were to: (1) examine the effect of such interventions on child and adolescent use of other tobacco products (e.g. cigarettes, cigars, chewing tobacco and pouches); and (2) describe the unintended adverse effects of the intervention on individuals, or on organisations where such interventions were being implemented.
    SEARCH METHODS: We searched CENTRAL, Ovid MEDLINE, Ovid Embase, Ovid PsycINFO, EBSCO CINAHL and Europe PMC on 1st September 2025. Additionally, we searched two trial registry platforms (WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform; ClinicalTrials.gov), and reference lists of relevant systematic reviews. We contacted corresponding authors of articles identified as ongoing studies.
    ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs), including cluster-RCTs, factorial RCTs, and stepped-wedge RCTs. To be eligible, the primary targets of the interventions were children and adolescents aged 19 years or younger. Interventions could have been conducted in any setting, including the community, school, health services, or the home, and must have sought to influence children or adolescent (or both) e-cigarette use directly. Studies with a comparator of no intervention (i.e. control), waiting-list control, usual practice, or an alternative intervention not targeting e-cigarette use were eligible. Two review authors independently screened the titles and abstracts of references, with any discrepancies resolved through consensus or a third reviewer.
    OUTCOMES: The critical review outcome was e-cigarette use in children and adolescents aged 19 years or younger. We included measures to assess the effectiveness of interventions to: prevent child and adolescent e-cigarette use (including measures of e-cigarette use amongst those who were never-users); and cease e-cigarette use (including measures of e-cigarette use amongst children and adolescents who were current e-cigarette users at baseline). We included data measured at least six months post-baseline. Outcomes were current use (defined as use in the past 30 days), ever use (defined as any lifetime use) and adverse effects.
    RISK OF BIAS: Risk of bias for all included studies was assessed using the Cochrane RoB 2 tool. We applied this tool to the critical and important review outcomes from each included study to assess and rate each outcome as low, some concerns or high for all relevant domains.
    SYNTHESIS METHODS: Pairs of review authors independently extracted information from the included studies, with any discrepancies resolved through consensus or a third reviewer when required. Meta-analyses were conducted using a random-effects model where data were suitable for pooling, with two prevention studies measuring e-cigarette use pooled. Studies and outcomes unsuitable for pooling in meta-analyses were instead summarised narratively.
    INCLUDED STUDIES: We identified three studies with 10,510 participants as eligible for inclusion. A further 30 studies were identified as ongoing and five are awaiting classification and likely to be eligible for a future update. Two studies employed a cluster-RCT design to test the effectiveness of school-based interventions to prevent adolescent e-cigarette use, with one study judged to have 'some concerns' for the overall risk of bias for the e-cigarette ever-use outcome and the other study judged as 'high risk'. The remaining study employed an RCT design to test the effectiveness of a community-based intervention (delivered via text-messages) to support adolescents to cease e-cigarette use. We judged the overall risk of bias as low for this study which reported an e-cigarette current-use outcome. Included studies were conducted in the United States, Australia and Sweden.
    SYNTHESIS OF RESULTS: For the critical outcome of e-cigarette ever use, a meta-analysis of two studies (one high risk of bias, one some concerns) found that prevention interventions may prevent ever use, relative to usual care, although evidence is very uncertain (RR 0.94, 95% CI 0.89 to 0.99; 2 studies; 5306 participants; random-effects model; very-low certainty evidence). The certainty of evidence in this effect was downgraded due to risk of bias, indirectness and imprecision. One study reporting a prevention intervention reported no adverse effects. For the critical outcome of e-cigarette current use, one study reported that a cessation-focused intervention is likely to reduce adolescent current use of e-cigarettes (RR 0.73, 95% CI 0.65 to 0.82; 1 study, 1064 participants; moderate-certainty evidence). The certainty of evidence in this effect was downgraded due to indirectness. The cessation intervention did not report on adverse effects of the intervention.
    AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Given only three randomised studies were included in the review, there is limited evidence, of very low-to-moderate-certainty, that interventions may be effective in preventing or ceasing adolescent e-cigarette use. As findings of the 30 ongoing studies are published, certainty of evidence of effects may improve. Until then, the findings of this review should be considered together with evidence from studies employing other trial designs not eligible for inclusion in this review to guide actions to prevent or cease e-cigarette use. This is a living systematic review. We search for new evidence every month and update the review when we identify relevant new evidence.
    FUNDING: This review was supported by the NHMRC Centre for Research Excellence (No. APP1153479) - 'the National Centre of Implementation Science'. NHMRC also provides support for the editorial and author support function of Cochrane Public Health.
    REGISTRATION: This review is registered in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. The protocol (https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD015511) and previous version of the review (https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD015511.pub2) are published in the Cochrane Library.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD015511.pub3
  27. Front Pediatr. 2026 ;14 1691052
       Background: Following the end of the COVID-19 pandemic, attention shifted towards patients who developed sequelae, persistent symptoms, or relapsing or remitting symptoms of new conditions after a prior history of acute SARS-CoV-2 infection. The objective of the present study was to identify the prevalence, clinical characteristics, and potential associated factors of long COVID in children treated during the pandemic in a primary care unit.
    Methods: A cross-sectional analytical study was conducted from January to December 2022. Children under 18 years of age and their parents were included in the study if they had been treated at the Mexican Social Security Institute. Two distinct manifestations of long COVID were considered: (a) "persistence", defined as continuous symptoms beginning in the acute phase and lasting for more than 3 months; and (b) "post-COVID conditions", defined as new or recurrent symptoms lasting for more than 3 months, appearing after the acute episode, and not associated with any active disease or infectious condition. An exploratory binary logistic regression analysis was performed to identify associated factors, using an odds ratio (OR) as the measure of association.
    Results: The study included 349 children and adolescents. The prevalence of long COVID was 11.8% (95%CI 7.8%-17.5%). For "persistence", the most frequent symptoms were cough (50%) and rhinorrhea (15.4%); for "post-COVID conditions", the most common symptoms were myalgia (33.3%), asthenia and irritability (26.7% each), and constipation (20%). Multivariate analysis revealed that the associated factors for individuals aged over 8 years were a history of reinfection (OR 9.7, 95%CI 1.6-58) and BMI at the time of the survey (OR 1.1, 95%CI 1.0-1.2), while for those aged under 8 years, the associated factor was male sex (OR 4.7, 95%CI 1.3-17.3). It is important to emphasize that these results are the product of an exploratory analysis and aim to create and test new hypotheses.
    Conclusions: For healthcare professionals, it is crucial to consider the possibility of long COVID, as this study indicated that approximately 12% of children and adolescents may be affected. Further research is necessary to better understand and manage long COVID in pediatric populations and to investigate the association between reinfections and their increased prevalence.
    Keywords:  COVID-19; SARS-CoV2; child health; epidemiological factors; post-acute COVID-19 syndrome; post-infectious disorders
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2026.1691052
  28. Paediatr Anaesth. 2026 Jun 27.
       INTRODUCTION: Pediatric ambulatory anesthesia has rapidly evolved as the predominant model for surgical care in the United States, yet variability in practice standards and outcomes persists. This final installment of a four-part series addresses the gaps that remain between research and real-world practice, highlighting the limitations of traditional research models and existing registries in translating evidence into improved universal care and creation of benchmarks.
    METHODS: Through a review of selected pediatric databases and registries, this paper examines their contributions, strengths, and challenges in generating actionable knowledge and standardizing care.
    RESULTS: The discussion emphasizes the impact of unwarranted variation, the slow adoption of clinical guidelines, and the need for more robust, inclusive data sources that reflect the realities of community-based practice, where most children receive their care rather than the experience of large, academic centers.
    DISCUSSION: To address these challenges, we propose the need to create a multicenter, collaborative Learning Health System (LHS) consortium, leveraging real-world electronic medical record data, continuous quality improvement, and implementation science focused on improving quality of care and outcomes in ambulatory Pediatric Anesthesia practice. This model prioritizes adaptive methodologies, inclusive participation across diverse practice settings, and iterative, data-driven improvements. One of the greatest challenges is the ability to capture data from a range of care settings, and not just tertiary and quaternary children's hospitals. We delve into a possible solution to overcome this limitation by extending its reach beyond safety. This proposed LHS consortium offers the possibility of a pragmatic and sustainable pathway to accelerate the development and dissemination of standards and best practices in Pediatric Anesthesia. By fostering collaboration, embracing positive deviance, and bridging the gap between research and practice, this approach ensures that every child benefits from the highest standards of safety, quality, and innovation-regardless of where their care is delivered.
    Keywords:  Pediatric Anesthesia; ambulatory surgery; implementation science; learning healthcare system; positive deviance; quality improvement
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1002/pan.70256
  29. J Am Board Fam Med. 2026 Jul;pii: 162929. [Epub ahead of print]39(1):
       PURPOSE: There has yet to be a comprehensive multi-state study describing the children that use school-based health centers (SBHCs). This study seeks to determine sociodemographics, care utilization patterns, and prevalence of asthma and overweight among children seeking care at SBHCs.
    METHODS: This retrospective cross-sectional analysis examined electronic health record data of children utilizing SBHCs within a large network of community-based clinics, consisting of 180 SBHCs in 14 U.S. states from 2012-2018. Demographics of exclusive SBHC users (SBHC-only group) were compared to utilizers of SBHCs plus non-SBHC community health centers (SBHC+ group).
    RESULTS: Of 179,970 children with ≥1 ambulatory visit at a SBHC, 75.6% received care exclusively at SBHCs. Many SBHC-users reported family income <138% of the federal poverty line (48.9%) and self-identified as Hispanic (45.7%). Among SBHC utilizers, the prevalence of asthma (8%) and overweight (30%) were comparable to national statistics. Overall, 33% of children received well-childcare and 24% received influenza vaccinations exclusively at SBHCs. When comparing the two groups within the study, the SBHC-only group were older, and more lacked insurance (13.4%) compared with SBHC+ children (2.6%). The SBHC-only group had fewer total yearly visits, fewer yearly well-child visits, and fewer influenza vaccinations. In age stratified groups, preschool-aged children received the most well-childcare and influenza vaccinations in SBHCs.
    CONCLUSIONS: SBHCs serve a pediatric population that is disproportionately low-income, uninsured, and Hispanic. Children, particularly preschoolers, receive preventive healthcare at SBHCs. Given the population served, SBHCs have strong potential to address pediatric health inequities if adequately resourced, utilized, and integrated with other facilities including community health centers.
    Keywords:  Access to Care; Asthma; Child Health; Community Health Centers; Community-Based Research; Health Disparities; Health Policy; Health Promotion; Pediatrics; School Health Services
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.3122/jabfm.2025.250321R1
  30. J Am Coll Emerg Physicians Open. 2026 Aug;7(4): 100447
      Adolescent substance use remains a major public health concern, and the emergency department (ED) represents a critical point of contact for identification and early intervention. Many adolescents rely on the ED as their primary or sole source of health care, making missed opportunities for screening particularly consequential. Although overall substance use rates among youth have stabilized or declined in recent years, drug-related mortality, especially from illicitly manufactured fentanyl, has risen sharply, highlighting the need for proactive detection and intervention. Professional organizations recommend universal, validated screening for substance use in adolescents, yet implementation in ED settings remains inconsistent due to workflow constraints, confidentiality concerns, and limited provider training. Validated tools, such as the Car, Relax, Alone, Forget, Friends, Trouble (CRAFFT) questionnaire, the screening to brief intervention (S2BI) tool, and the brief screener for tobacco, alcohol, and other drugs (BSTAD) tool, allow rapid, developmentally appropriate screening. They can be integrated into electronic health records (EHRs) or self-administered digital formats. Evidence suggests that electronic or kiosk-based screening increases disclosure and detection without adversely affecting throughput. Screening alone is insufficient; pairing detection with brief motivational interventions and facilitated referral to treatment improves short-term outcomes and linkage to care. However, follow-up rates remain suboptimal, underscoring the need for structured referral pathways, behavioral health integration, and technology-enabled supports such as text-based reminders or telehealth. Universal, developmentally tailored screening in the ED, combined with brief intervention and active linkage to outpatient care, offers a practical strategy to reduce substance-related morbidity and improve long-term outcomes for adolescents.
    Keywords:  SBRIT; adolescent substance use; brief intervention; emergency department screening; linkage to care
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acepjo.2026.100447
  31. Autism. 2026 Jul 01. 13623613261459642
      Wandering - or leaving a supervised space and/or care of a responsible person - disproportionately affects children with autism and can lead to serious injury. We describe parent-reported wandering in children with autism in early childhood and adolescence and characterize wandering in adolescence. Of 258 teens with autism enrolled in the Study to Explore Early Development, caregivers reported that 45% never wandered, 41% wandered only in early childhood, and 14% wandered at least once in adolescence (including 9% that wandered at both time points). Childhood externalizing behavior problems were positively associated with wandering only in early childhood and at least once in adolescence compared to never wandered (both p < .01). Adolescents who wandered most often left public places (58.3%). To address wandering, caregivers most often added home locks/alarms (30.6%) and least often placed a tracking device (8.3%) on the adolescent. In conclusion, wandering is less common among adolescents than young children with autism but still presents opportunities for intervention. These findings can help partners communicate that childhood externalizing behavior problems are associated with wandering regardless of age and promote awareness of and access to interventions that can improve health and safety.Lay AbstractWandering occurs when a child leaves a safe space. Children with autism wander more than other children. This can lead to serious injury. We describe wandering in children and adolescents with autism. In total, 258 teens with autism were included in the analysis. Caregivers reported that 45% never wandered, 41% wandered only in early childhood, and 14% wandered at least once in adolescence (including 9% that wandered at both time points). Children with behaviors like hyperactivity were more likely to wander in both early childhood and adolescence. Adolescents who wandered most often left public places (58.3%). To address wandering, caregivers most often added home locks/alarms (30.6%) and least often placed a tracking device (8.3%) on the adolescent. In sum, wandering is less common among adolescents than young children with autism. However, we can still help families with adolescents with autism who wander. One way to help these families is to educate people that behavior problems like hyperactivity are associated with wandering regardless of age. Another way to help these families is to increase ways to address wandering away from the home to keep adolescents with autism safe.
    Keywords:  autism; prevention; safety; wandering
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1177/13623613261459642
  32. J Palliat Med. 2026 Jul 03. 10966218261460500
       BACKGROUND: When a child dies in a pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) from a sudden or unexpected cause such as trauma or sepsis, intense grief felt by the child's family can cause sustained psychosocial impacts. Supporting unexpectedly bereaved families with evidence-based bereavement care is key to improving grief outcomes, and understanding their specific needs is essential to inform the delivery of bereavement care in PICUs.
    AIM: To understand what is known about (1) bereavement care needs of families who have experienced the unexpected death of a child in a PICU, and (2) approaches to address families' needs.
    METHODS: An integrative review was systematically conducted with the protocol registered a priori on the Open Science Framework. Original peer-reviewed research articles relating to relatives of children who died an unexpected death in a PICU were included from OVID Medline, PsycINFO, CINAHL, SCOPUS, and ProQuest, along with guidelines from Google© searching. Articles were critically appraised using Critical Appraisal Skill Program, Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool, and Appraisal of Guidelines, Research and Evaluation II checklists, and data were synthesized using the constant comparison method.
    RESULTS: Twenty-nine original research articles (15 qualitative, 11 quantitative, 1 mixed method, and 2 secondary analyses) and five guidelines were included in this review. Three original articles focused on unexpected child death exclusively. From the findings of all 34 articles, four linked themes were identified: (1) connection and (2) communication with PICU clinicians, (3) awareness of the impacts of unexpected death, and (4) emotional and physical support for family members.
    CONCLUSION: Unexpectedly bereaved family members' needs included close relationships with clinicians and caring support before and after their child's death, including ongoing follow-up from the PICU. Further targeted research is needed to better understand the specific needs of unexpectedly bereaved families, gain diverse and representative evidence in this area, and develop innovative, evidence-based interventions to improve bereavement outcomes for the whole family.
    Keywords:  bereavement; death; family; intensive care units; pediatric; sudden
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1177/10966218261460500
  33. An Bras Dermatol. 2026 Jul 03. pii: S0365-0596(26)00126-1. [Epub ahead of print]101(4): 501413
       BACKGROUND: Pediatric psoriasis may result in significant cumulative life course impairment, and there is comparatively less evidence available than for adult psoriasis.
    OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to provide an update on the management of pediatric psoriasis, integrating recent immunogenetic and therapeutic advances. It highlights challenges, including clinical heterogeneity, complex differential diagnosis, and limited treatment options, especially in Brazil.
    METHODS: A narrative review was conducted, including studies published in English, Portuguese, and Spanish between 2009 and 2025, retrieved from the United States National Library of Medicine (PubMed), Cochrane Library, and Scientific Electronic Library Online (SciELO). The following descriptors were used: "psoriasis", "child health", "pediatrics", "therapeutics", "comorbidity", and "T-lymphocyte antigen differentiation".
    RESULTS: Pediatric psoriasis most commonly presents as chronic plaque. Differential diagnoses are broad and include atopic dermatitis and autoimmune diseases. Data about comorbidities, particularly cardiovascular risk, are controversial. Although severe cases are less frequent, they are associated with a substantial impact on quality of life. Conventional therapies include topical corticosteroids, phototherapy, and non-targeted systemic agents such as acitretin, methotrexate, and cyclosporine. Biologic therapies have been approved for pediatric use and demonstrate safety profiles and superior efficacy compared to conventional treatments.
    STUDY LIMITATIONS: Scarcity of pediatric psoriasis guidelines.
    CONCLUSIONS: Despite advances in understanding adult psoriasis, evidence in pediatric populations remains limited, especially in Brazil. Expanding knowledge in pediatric psoriasis is essential to improve diagnosis, optimize treatment strategies, and increase access to innovative therapies, thereby reducing inflammatory burden and cumulative life course impairment.
    Keywords:  Antigens; Child health; Comorbidity; Differentiation; Pediatrics; Psoriasis; T-Lymphocyte; Therapeutics
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.abd.2026.501413
  34. J Palliat Med. 2026 Jun 28. 10966218261463852
       BACKGROUND: Pain is a common symptom for children and adolescents with treatment-refractory cancers at the end of life (EoL). Palliative radiotherapy (RT) is a noninvasive, outpatient therapy with an acceptable safety profile that helps to mitigate physical pain. It has been proven as an essential treatment modality for symptom control at EoL in the adult population. While the efficacy of palliative RT is well-established in adults, evidence in the pediatric population remains limited. This systematic review aimed to identify and evaluate the current evidence on palliative RT for the treatment of cancer pain in children and adolescents.
    METHODS: Five databases were searched for pediatric empirical quantitative studies. Inclusion criteria include children and adolescents aged ≤21 years old with terminal cancer who received palliative RT for pain relief, single- or multicenter studies with ≥10 cases published in English. The primary outcome was pain control postpalliative RT, and secondary outcomes included reduction in opioid usage.
    RESULTS: Seven observational retrospective studies (n = 63 patients/235 metastatic sites/139 palliative RT courses), published between 2003 and 2024, were included. Palliative RT was associated with a 77.9% (95% confidence interval [CI] 71.2-84.6, p = 0.4) reduction in pain when used as an adjuvant therapy across all seven studies. A reduction in opioid use was observed in 43.2% (95% CI 31.8-54.7, p = 0.4) across two studies (n = 52 patients/17 palliative RT courses). These were not statistically significant results. The subgroup analysis showed that it was associated with 80.0% (95% CI 69.9-90.1, p = 0.9) reduction of pain in patients with bony lesions across two studies (n = 19 metastatic sites/41 courses).
    CONCLUSION: While our meta-analysis does not provide sufficient evidence to show that palliative RT reduced pain in children and adolescents with terminal cancer, it adds to the growing body of evidence supporting integrated approaches to symptom control in pediatric oncology. Further research is needed to substantiate its clinical benefits in augmenting and facilitating optimal EoL care in children and adolescents with advanced malignancies.
    Keywords:  end of life; oncology; pain; palliative; pediatric; radiotherapy
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1177/10966218261463852
  35. Breastfeed Med. 2026 Jul 01. 15568253261466537
       OBJECTIVE: To improve access to hospital-grade breast pumps for women with infants in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) by reducing delays in pump acquisition.
    DESIGN: A quality improvement project using Lean Six Sigma DMAIC (Define-Measure-Analyze-Improve-Control) methodology to identify process gaps and streamline workflows.
    SETTING/LOCAL PROBLEM: Level IV NICU at a large academic medical center in the western United States. Women with private or employer-sponsored insurance experienced acquisition delays and out-of-pocket costs compared with women covered by public assistance programs (e.g., Medi-Cal, women, infants, and children [WIC]).
    PATIENTS: Baseline cohort included 39 NICU families (April 2023): 12 with private insurance and 27 with public assistance coverage. During the 12-month follow-up period, 200 admissions were recorded. In addition, 47 staff members participated in the study.
    INTERVENTION/MEASUREMENTS: Baseline measures included pump ordering timelines, insurance coverage type, and out-of-pocket costs. Interventions included role clarification, durable medical equipment (DME) vendor mapping, standardized communication protocols, staff education, and patient-facing handouts. An onsite WIC pump supply was established. Outcomes were monitored for 12 months.
    RESULTS: At baseline, 92% (11/12) of privately insured women paid out of pocket for hospital-grade pumps, with delays of up to 21 days; women with public assistance coverage obtained pumps within 1-2 business days. After implementation, out-of-pocket rates declined to less than 5%, and median acquisition time decreased to 3.5 days (range: 1-7 days) for privately insured families. Improvements were sustained at 12 months.
    CONCLUSIONS: Lean Six Sigma-guided process redesign improved the efficiency and equity of hospital-grade breast pump access in the NICU, reducing delays and financial burden for privately insured families. Persistent payer exclusions highlight insurance-related barriers as a social determinant of lactation support.
    Keywords:  Lean Six Sigma; NICU; breast pumps; equity; insurance access; lactation; neonatal care; quality improvement
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1177/15568253261466537
  36. Pediatr Emerg Care. 2026 Jul 03.
       OBJECTIVES: Primary: To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of point-of-care ultrasound for the identification of elbow fractures in pediatric patients.
    METHODS: We searched MEDLINE, PubMed, CINAHL, and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) up until December 1, 2025 for studies involving pediatric patients presenting to the emergency department with suspected elbow fractures, who underwent POCUS. Studies were assessed for risk of bias using the QUADAS-2 framework. The primary outcome of interest was the ability of POCUS to accurately detect elbow fractures in terms of sensitivity and specificity.
    RESULTS: Nine studies were reviewed and included in the meta-analysis encompassing 1444 patients. POCUS demonstrated a sensitivity of 92.7% (95% CI: 87.9%-95.8%) with a specificity of 84.5% (75.4% to 90.7%). Once sample size was accounted for, the estimated heterogeneity between studies was small. The studies analyzed were generally of good quality with the reference standard and flow and timing being the main areas subject to bias.
    CONCLUSIONS: The findings of this systematic review and meta-analysis support the conclusion that POCUS is an effective tool in the diagnosis of pediatric elbow fractures presenting to the ED. Given its high sensitivity, a negative POCUS examination may be used to reliably rule out pediatric elbow fractures where the clinical suspicion is low. The moderately high specificity means that positive findings may require confirmatory radiography in cases where clinical findings are less convincing.
    Keywords:  POCUS; bedside ultrasound; child; children; elbow fracture; pediatric; pocket size ultrasound; point-of-care ultrasound; supracondylar fracture
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1097/PEC.0000000000003653
  37. Pediatr Emerg Care. 2026 Jun 30.
       OBJECTIVES: To describe rates and characteristics of pediatric behavioral health (BH) emergency department (ED) visits and hospitalizations before, during, and after the COVID-19 pandemic.
    METHODS: We performed a repeated cross-sectional analysis of data from the California Department of Health Care Access and Information Emergency Discharge database, a database of visits to all California EDs. We included all patients aged 6 to 17 who presented to the ED between September 2018 and December 2022. We compared rates and disposition of BH ED visits during 3 time periods: prepandemic, pandemic, and postpandemic. We conducted logistic regression analysis to assess patient-level characteristics associated with BH visits, including race and ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and distance from the ED.
    RESULTS: We assessed 5,228,930 ED visits, of which 215,460 had a primary BH diagnosis. The pandemic was associated with a relative increase in rates of BH visits and admissions/transfers, compared with prepandemic. Postpandemic, rates of visits and admissions/transfers were similar to prepandemic, with notable exceptions among certain diagnoses and demographic groups. Across time periods, the most common BH visit diagnosis was suicide attempt/ideation, with suicide attempt/ideation remaining elevated postpandemic. Racial and ethnic minority groups had lower odds of BH visits but similar or higher rates of admission/transfer, compared with white patients. Postpandemic, children with public insurance and who live further from a hospital had higher severity of BH ED visits.
    CONCLUSIONS: Postpandemic, there appears to be an ongoing pediatric BH crisis and persistent disparities. There is a continued need for improved and equitable access to BH care.
    Keywords:  COVID-19; behavioral health; mental health; substance use
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1097/PEC.0000000000003644
  38. Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open. 2026 Jun;14(6): e7856
       Background: Dog bites are a major cause of pediatric injury, resulting in serious physical and psychological effects. This study examines breed-specific injury patterns, management, and outcomes.
    Methods: A retrospective review of pediatric dog bite cases from 2010 to 2024 was conducted. Variables included demographics, injury characteristics, dog breed, management, and outcomes (eg, infection, scarring, revisions). Descriptive and statistical analyses were performed.
    Results: Among 430 patients, the median age was 8.0 years (interquartile range 4.0-11.0). Bite frequency decreased with age (Spearman rho = -0.67; P = 0.001). Head and neck injuries were the most common (184 of 430, 42.8%). Specialist consultation occurred in 125 of 430 (29.1%), and 41 of 430 (9.5%) required operating room (OR) intervention. Head and neck injuries had higher rates of complex reconstruction (15 of 184, 8.2% versus 6 of 246, 2.4%; P = 0.007), soft-tissue loss (15.8% versus 7.7%; P = 0.009), and avulsion (19.6% versus 4.9%; P < 0.001) compared with injuries elsewhere. Among known breeds (n = 169), pit bulls were the most frequently reported (81 of 169, 47.9%). Management patterns and outcomes did not differ significantly by breed. In multivariable regression analysis (n = 169), dermal (OR 25.48, 95% confidence interval 2.97-679.02; P = 0.013) and subcutaneous involvement (OR 6.85, 95% confidence interval 1.33-54.54; P = 0.037) were associated with higher odds of abnormal scars, whereas breed was not. Patients requiring specialist consultation had higher return-to-OR rates than emergency department-managed patients (8.0% versus 0.0%; P < 0.001), with similar infection rates (6.4% versus 4.9%).
    Conclusions: Objective wound characteristics were more informative than breed classification for predicting management needs and scar outcomes. Prevention should prioritize safer child-dog interactions in familiar settings. Improved structured documentation may strengthen future risk stratification.
    DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1097/GOX.0000000000007856