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Edited by
James Ip, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Grant Stuart, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Isabeau Walker, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Ian James, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London
Trauma is the leading cause of mortality and morbidity in children in developed countries. Traumatic brain injury is responsible for the largest proportion of deaths. Preventable death due to major haemorrhage occurs early in the first 24 hours. Mechanisms vary with age. Blunt injury represents over 80% of cases. Falls and road traffic collisions (RTCs) are the most common mechanisms across all ages, except for non-accidental injury (NAI) in < 1 year olds. There has been a substantial rise in penetrating trauma due to gun and knife crime in the adolescent population. The centralisation of trauma services in the United Kingdom with the creation of regional networks has changed how paediatric trauma is managed. Severely injured children are triaged at scene and taken directly to major trauma centres (MTCs). Outcomes have improved, and there is better standardisation between treating institutions. Initial trauma management involves stabilisation, resuscitation, identification and treatment of life-threatening injuries in the primary survey. Some patients will need damage control surgery to control haemorrhage. This is followed by definitive care and rehabilitation. Anaesthetists are an integral part of the trauma team involved throughout the patient journey. Dedicated anaesthetic roles are airway management and ongoing resuscitation during surgery.
Edited by
James Ip, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Grant Stuart, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Isabeau Walker, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Ian James, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London
Paediatric anaesthesia employs a range of equipment to ensure safe and effective achievement of anaesthetic goals. Variation in size and physiology in this age group has implications for clinicians using these technologies. Applied aspects and practical tips of this phenomenon are discussed in this chapter. Areas covered include equipment used to manage airway, vascular access, drug and fluid delivery, monitoring of various physiologic parameters, etc. While it is imperative to stay abreast with increasingly sophisticated drug delivery and monitoring systems, no monitor is a substitute for the presence and vigilance of the well-trained anaesthetist.
Edited by
James Ip, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Grant Stuart, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Isabeau Walker, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Ian James, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London
Paediatric patients differ significantly from adults in the way that drugs affect them, for a number of reasons, including differences in their size, physiology and comorbidities. Developmental changes affecting the absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion of many anaesthetic drugs, particularly during the first few months of life, profoundly affect both their pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. Drugs discussed are the intravenous induction agents propofol, thiopental and ketamine; the sedatives dexmetetomidine and midazolam; and the opioids morphine, fentanyl and remifentanil, as well as muscle relaxants such as suxamethonium and non-depolarising relaxants. Inhalational anaesthetics are assessed for their usefulness in paediatric practice. Appropriate drug dosages are included and important differences from adult values emphasised.
Edited by
James Ip, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Grant Stuart, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Isabeau Walker, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Ian James, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London
Ophthalmic surgery takes place in children of all ages, from premature neonates to teenagers, the majority of whom are ASA 1 or 2. In some cases, the ocular pathology may be part of a wider congenital or metabolic abnormality and anaesthesia is not so straightforward. Nearly all will require general anaesthesia. Anxiety can be common in children returning for repeated procedures, and premedication may be necessary. Surgery can be extraocular or intraocular. Simple day-case procedures can usually be managed with an inhalational spontaneous breathing technique and supraglottic airway device (SAD). Certain more complex cases necessitate a completely still eye, and muscle relaxation is therefore usually required. Special anaesthetic considerations are management of the oculocardiac reflex (OCR), commonly elicited by traction on the recti muscles and prevention of postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV); strabismus surgery is particularly emetogenic. The majority of ophthalmic surgery is not particularly painful, and simple analgesia with paracetamol and NSAIDs is sufficient. Regional ophthalmic blocks, such as sub-Tenons, can supplement or offer an alternative to opiates when additional analgesia is required. This has the added advantage of producing akinesis of the globe and a beneficial reduction in PONV and the OCR.
Edited by
James Ip, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Grant Stuart, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Isabeau Walker, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Ian James, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London
Cleft lip and palate is a relatively common congenital condition presenting for surgical correction. Anaesthetic management has some specific considerations involving airway surgery in infants and young children who may have other associated anomalies. Surgical care pathway and approaches are discussed as relevant to anaesthesiologists. Perioperative management, including preassessment of the child, optimisation prior to surgery, intraoperative and postoperative care, is presented. The importance of a multidisciplinary approach, good communication, shared airway management and adequate multimodal analgesia with the avoidance of respiratory depression are highlighted. Anaesthesia for secondary speech surgery is also presented.
Edited by
James Ip, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Grant Stuart, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Isabeau Walker, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London,Ian James, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London
This chapter covers principles of anaesthesia for children with congenital and inherited disease, with specific consideration of some conditions of particular relevance to paediatric anaesthetists, including the muscular dystrophies, malignant hyperthermia and the mucopolysaccharidoses.
The sutureless repair technique has been favoured due to its purported reduction in post-operative pulmonary venous obstruction rates. This study aims to compare the outcomes of conventional versus sutureless repair techniques in Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Drainage.
Methods:
In this retrospective single-centre analysis (2012–2022), we evaluated children who underwent conventional or sutureless repair for isolated total anomalous pulmonary venous drainage, excluding complex cardiac anomalies and incomplete data. Patients were categorised into conventional (Group C, n = 58) and sutureless (Group S, n = 41) groups. Primary outcomes included mortality, morbidity, and post-operative complications. Statistical analysis included Mann–Whitney U, chi-square, and Fisher’s exact tests where appropriate.
Results:
Supracardiac type predominated in both groups (53.4% in Group C and 70.7% in Group S), with higher cardiac type frequency in Group C (24.1% versus 2.4%, p = 0.016). Early complications occurred in 58.5% versus 53.4% of cases in Groups S and C, respectively (p = 0.767). The mortality rate (17.2% versus 14.6%, p = 0.944) and post-operative pulmonary venous obstruction (21.2% versus 19.0%, p = 0.809) were higher in Group C, though not significantly. Mean cardiopulmonary bypass times were comparable between groups (105 versus 89 minutes, p = 0.424).
Conclusions:
In this comprehensive analysis of paediatric Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Drainage repair, both conventional and sutureless techniques demonstrated comparable safety profiles and clinical outcomes. These findings suggest that surgical approach selection should be individualised based on patient characteristics and surgeon expertise. Further prospective studies with larger cohorts are needed to validate these observations.
The current study is an attempt to explore under-five child malnutrition in a low-income population setting using the Extended Composite Index of Anthropometric Failure (ECIAF).
Design:
Data from the Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey 2017-18 were analyzed. Malnutrition using ECIAF was estimated using stunting, wasting underweight and overweight. Multilevel logistic regression models identified factors associated with malnutrition. Geospatial analysis was conducted using R programming.
Setting:
Bangladesh.
Participants:
Children under five years of age.
Results:
In Bangladesh, as indicated by the ECIAF, approximately 40.8% (95% Confidence interval (CI): 39.7, 41.9) of children under-five experience malnutrition where about 3.3% (95% CI: 2.9, 3.7) were overweight. Children of parents with no formal education (56.3%, 95% CI: 50.8, 61.8), underweight mothers (53.4%, 95% CI: 50.4, 56.3), belonging to the lowest socio-economic strata (50.6%, 95% CI: 48.3, 53.0), residing in rural areas (43.3%, 95% CI: 41.9, 44.6), and aged below three years (47.7%, 95% CI: 45.2, 50.2) demonstrated a greater age and sex adjusted prevalence of malnutrition. The Sylhet division (Eastern region) exhibited a higher prevalence of malnutrition (>55.0%). Mothers with no formal education (Adjusted odds ratio (AOR): 1.51, 95% CI: 1.08, 2.10), underweight mother (AOR: 1.54, 95% CI: 1.03, 1.83), poorest socio-economic status (AOR: 2.14, 95% CI: 1.64, 2.81), children age 24-35 months of age (AOR: 2.37, 95% CI: 1.97, 2.85), and fourth and above birth order children (AOR: 1.41, 95% CI: 1.16, 1.72) were identified key factors associated with childhood malnutrition while adjusting community and household level variations.
Conclusion:
In Bangladesh, two out of five children were malnourished and one in 35 children was overweight. Continuous monitoring of the ECIAF over time would facilitate tracking changes in the prevalence of different forms of malnutrition, helping to plan interventions and assess the effectiveness of interventions aimed at addressing both undernutrition and overweight.
A hospital based cross sectional study involving children aged 2-15 years attending the obesity clinic of a tertiary care hospital from January 2016 to March 2018 was carried out to study carotid intima media thickness (cIMT) and its association with cardiometabolic risk factors in children with overweight and obesity. Secondary objective was to compare children with elevated (EcIMT) and normal cIMT (NcIMT). Out of 223 patients enrolled for the study, 102 (45.7%) had elevated cIMT. Mean cIMT of the study participants was 0.41 ± 0.13 mm. Median alanine transaminase levels (27 vs. 24, p=0.006) and proportion of patients with fatty liver (63.7% vs 48.8%, p=0.025) and ≥ 3 risk factors (80.4% vs. 66.1%, p=0.003) were higher in the EcIMT group compared to NcIMT group. Proportion of patients with hypercholesterolemia (36.4% vs. 16%, p=0.024), elevated LDL-C (38.6% vs. 16%, p=0.013), low HDL-C (40.9% vs. 20%, p= 0.027) and dyslipidemia (84.1% vs. 58%, p=0.006) were higher in the pubertal EcIMT group and those with fatty liver (63.8% vs. 45.1%, p=0.034) was higher in the prepubertal EcIMT group compared to pubertal and prepubertal NcIMT groups respectively. No significant correlations were observed between cIMT and various cardiometabolic parameters. Our finding of elevated cIMT in nearly half of the study participants including young children is very concerning as these children are at increased risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease in adulthood. Interventions starting at a young age are important when trajectories are likely to be more malleable and adverse cardiometabolic phenotypes and subclinical atherosclerosis are reversible.
Explore humanitarian healthcare professionals’ (HCPs) perceptions about implementing children’s palliative care and to identify their educational needs and challenges, including learning topics, training methods, and barriers to education.
Methods
Humanitarian HCPs were interviewed about perspectives on children’s palliative care and preferences and needs for training. Interviews were transcribed, coded, and arranged into overarching themes. Thematic analysis was performed using qualitative description.
Results
Ten healthcare workers, including doctors, nurses, psychologists, and health-project coordinators, were interviewed. Participants identified key patient and family-related barriers to palliative care in humanitarian settings, including misconceptions that palliative care was synonymous with end-of-life care or failure. Health system barriers included time constraints, insufficient provider knowledge, and a lack of standardized palliative care protocols. Important learning topics included learning strategies to address the stigma of serious illness and palliative care, culturally sensitive communication skills, and pain and symptom management. Preferred learning modalities included interactive lectures, role-play/simulation, and team-based case discussions. Participants preferred online training for theoretical knowledge and in-person learning to improve their ability to conduct serious illness conversations and learn other key palliative care skills.
Significance of results
Palliative care prevents and relieves serious illness-related suffering for children with life-threatening and life-limiting conditions; however, most children in humanitarian settings are not able to access essential palliative care, leading to preventable pain and suffering. Limited palliative care knowledge and skills among HCPs in these settings are significant barriers to improving access to palliative care. Humanitarian HCPs are highly motivated to learn and improve their skills in children’s palliative care, but they require adequate health system resources and training. These findings can guide educators in developing palliative care education packages for humanitarian HCPs.
Looking at Canadian provincial pediatric health care policies and laws, the best interest standard (BIS) enjoys support. Within philosophy, however, the BIS faces serious opposition. Granted, there remain a few fervent defenders of the BIS in the contemporary literature; however, I argue that while some authors nominally defend the BIS, my analysis reveals that what they really defend is at best a watered down version of it. In this article, I argue that not only must the BIS be understood narrowly, but a substitute decision-maker (SDM) must satisfy the BIS — for an SDM is her patient's fiduciary.
Caring for children with solid tumors (STs) can impact caregiver’s physical and mental health. Caregiver mastery, which influences psychological well-being, is vital in improving outcomes for both caregivers and children. The study aimed to investigate the relationship between caregiver mastery, anxiety, depression, fear of disease progression (FoP), caregiver burden, and the quality of life (QOL) of children with ST.
Methods
This cross-sectional study was conducted from June 2022 to April 2023 at a Grade A tertiary hospital in Shandong. Family caregivers of children with ST completed several validated measures, including the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL) 3.0 Cancer Module, the Fear of Progression Questionnaire-parent version (FoP-Q-SF/PR), the Zarit Burden Interview Scale (ZBI), the hospital anxiety and depression scale (HADS), and the Caregiver Mastery Scale. Multiple linear regression analyses assessed the relationships between FoP, caregiver burden, anxiety, depression, caregiver mastery, and children’s QOL. Results were expressed as β and 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
Results
A total of 454 caregivers participated. Caregiver mastery was positively correlated with children’s QOL (β = 0.80, 95% CI: 0.20 to 1.39). Depression (β = −0.64, 95% CI: −0.83 to −0.45), anxiety (β = −0.67, 95% CI: −0.85 to −0.49), caregiver burden (β = −1.20, 95% CI: −1.60 to −0.80), and FoP (β = −0.04, 95% CI: −0.05 to −0.03) were negatively related to children’s QOL. Caregiver mastery moderated the associations between depression, caregiver burden, FoP, and children’s QOL, while also improving the effect of mild anxiety on QOL.
Significance of results
The study underscores the importance of fostering caregiver mastery to mitigate the negative impact of caregiver distress on children’s QOL and improve outcomes for both caregivers and children with solid tumors.
Conclusion
Caregiver mastery moderates the effects of anxiety, depression, FoP, and caregiver burdenon children’s QOL. Supporting caregiver mastery can alleviate caregiver burden and enhance both caregiver and child well-being.
We measure time preferences in a sample of 561 children aged 7–11 years. Using a within-subject design, we compare the behavior of our subjects using two distinct experimental measures of time preferences: a standard choice list with multiple decisions and a single choice time-investment-exercise requiring one decision only. We find that both measures yield very similar aggregate results, correlate significantly within subjects and can be explained by basically the same explanatory variables. Advantages and disadvantages of both measures are discussed. Our findings are relevant for the design of experiments to measure time preferences.
Sub-Sahara Africa (SSA) children are at high-risk neurodevelopmentally due to the prevalence of infectious disease, nutritional deficiencies and compromised caregiving. However, few mental health screening measures are readily available for general use. The Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) has been used as a mental health screening measure in the SSA, but its psychometric properties are not well understood. Five hundred and sixty-six mothers completed the SDQ for their 6-year-old children in rural Benin north of Cotonou. These were mothers who had been part of a malarial and intestinal parasite treatment program and micronutrient fortification intervention program during pregnancy for these children. Their study children (N = 519) completed the computerized Tests of Variables of Attention (TOVA-visual) as a performance-based screening assessment of attention deficit and hyperactivity disorders. In evaluating the relationship between the SDQ and TOVA, we controlled for maternal risk factors such as depression, poor socioeconomic status and educational level, along with the child’s schooling status. TOVA measures of impulsivity were significantly related to SDQ emotional and hyperactivity/inattention difficulties. TOVA inattention was related to SDQ emotional difficulties. The triangulation of maternal risk factors (e.g., depression), the SDQ and the TOVA can provide effective screening for mental health issues in SSA children.
Low vegetable consumption among school-age children and adolescents puts them at risk of micronutrient malnutrition and non-communicable diseases. There is a dearth of synthesised literature on vegetable intake and interventions to promote increased consumption among this age group in West Africa. This study pooled evidence on vegetable consumption and interventions to promote vegetable consumption among school-age children and adolescents (6–19 years) in West Africa. Quantitative and qualitative studies from 2002 to 2023 were electronically searched in PubMed, African Journals Online (AJOL) and Google Scholar databases. The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses system was adhered to in reporting this review (PROSPERO ID: CRD42023444444). The Joanna Briggs Institute critical evaluation tool was used to appraise the quality of studies. Forty (40) studies met the search criteria out of n 5080 non-duplicated records. Meta-analysis was not possible due to high heterogeneity. Low vegetable consumption expressed in frequency or amounts was recorded among school-age children and adolescents in the reviewed studies. Intervention studies were mostly among adolescents; the most common type of intervention was the use of nutrition education. Insufficient evidence and high heterogeneity of studies reflect the need for more high-quality interventions using globally identified standards but applied contextually. School-age children appear to be an under-served population in West Africa with regard to nutrition interventions to promote vegetable consumption. There is a need for multi-component intervention studies that encourage vegetable consumption as a food group. Gardening, parental involvement, gamification and goal setting are promising components that could improve the availability, accessibility and consumption of vegetables.
This important contribution to children's rights scholarship brings fresh eyes to the complicated relationship between domestic law and international law in the practice of domestic courts. Through a critical assessment of the judicial application of the Convention on the Rights of the Child in four jurisdictions (Australia, France, South Africa and the United Kingdom), the book demonstrates that the traditional rules of reception remain an essential starting point in understanding how national courts apply the Convention but are unable to explain all forms of judicial engagement therewith. The book shows that regardless of the legal system (monist, dualist, hybrid), courts can apply the Convention meaningfully especially when the domestic structure of reception converges with it. The comparative international law perspective used in the book and the heterogenous sample of jurisdictions analysed enabled the author to distil insights valid for other jurisdictions.
Chapter 2 analyzes kinship both between employer and servant and between the female attendant and her other family members in service. Ladies-in-waiting usually owed their positions at court and in great households to connections within their kin group, sometimes through active negotiations and promotions that appear in surviving records, but mostly through maneuverings that occurred behind the scenes. The surviving documents allow me to argue that courtier families used kinship ties to build networks of influence. In return, employers gained new servants from connections already known and trusted. Marriages within the household were well rewarded and female attendants often took advantage of opportunities to wed fellow servants and promote their children, siblings, cousins, and even grandchildren into similar employment. This chapter also asserts that the familial networks of ladies-in-waiting paralleled the dynastic networks that made for effective monarchy. Although only one royal body, usually male, ruled the kingdom, a king could not rule successfully in isolation; rather monarchs employed consorts, siblings, and other kin to govern and enhance royal prestige. Similarly, courtier families worked together to promote members of their kin group and parlay influence into rewards.
To assess the prevalence of obesity and investigate any changes in body mass index in children with CHD compared to age-matched healthy controls, in Southwestern Ontario.
Methods:
The body mass index z-scores of 1259 children (aged 2–18) with CHD were compared with 2037 healthy controls. The body mass index z-scores of children who presented to our paediatric cardiology outpatient clinic from 2018 to 2021 were compared with previously collected data from 2008 to 2010. A longitudinal analysis of patients with data in both cohorts was also completed.
Results:
In total, 21.4% of patients with CHD and 26.6% of healthy controls were found to be overweight or obese (p < 0.001). The 2018–2021 cohort of CHD patients and controls had significantly higher body mass index z-scores compared to the 2008–2010 cohort (p < 0.001). Longitudinal analysis showed that body mass index z-scores significantly increased over time for CHD patients with data in both cohorts (2018–2021: M = 0.59, SD = 1.26; 2008–2010: M = −0.04, SD = 1.05; p < 0.001).
Conclusion:
The prevalence of obesity in all children, irrespective of CHD, is rising. The coexistence of obesity and CHD may pose additional cardiovascular risks and complications.
Estimating the risk of developing bipolar disorder (BD) in children and adolescents (C&A) with depressive disorders is important to optimize prevention and early intervention efforts. We aimed to quantitatively examine the risk of developing BD from depressive disorders and identify factors which moderate this development.
Methods
In this systematic review and meta-analysis (PROSPERO:CRD42023431301), PubMed and Web-of-Science databases were searched for longitudinal studies reporting the percentage of C&A with ICD/DSM-defined depressive disorders who developed BD during follow-up. Data extraction, random-effects meta-analysis, between-study heterogeneity analysis, quality assessment, sub-group analyses, and meta-regressions were conducted.
Results
Thirty-nine studies were included, including 72,371 individuals (mean age=13.9 years, 57.1% females); 14.7% of C&A with a depressive disorder developed BD after 20.4–288 months: 9.5% developed BD-I (95% CI=4.7 to 18.1); 7.7% developed BD-II (95% CI=3.2% to 17.3%); 19.8% (95% CI=9.9% to 35.6%) of C&A admitted into the hospital with a depressive disorder developed BD. Studies using the DSM (21.6%, 95% CI=20.2% to 23.1%) and studies evaluating C&A with a major depressive disorder only (19.8%, 95% CI=16.8% to 23.1%) found higher rates of development of BD. Younger age at baseline, a history of hospitalization and recruitment from specialized clinics were associated with an increased risk of developing BD at follow-up. Quality of included studies was good in 76.9% of studies.
Conclusions
There is a substantial risk of developing BD in C&A with depressive disorders. This is particularly the case for C&A with MDD, DSM-diagnosed depressive disorders, and C&A admitted into the hospital. Research exploring additional predictors and preventive interventions is crucial.
The present study examined whether length of bilingual experience and language ability contributed to cross-situational word learning (XSWL) in Spanish-English bilingual school-aged children. We contrasted performance in a high variability condition, where children were exposed to multiple speakers and exemplars simultaneously, to performance in a condition where children were exposed to no variability in either speakers or exemplars. Results revealed graded effects of bilingualism and language ability on XSWL under conditions of increased variability. Specifically, bilingualism bolstered learning when variability was present in the input but not when variability was absent in the input. Similarly, robust language abilities supported learning in the high variability condition. In contrast, children with weaker language skills learned more word-object associations in the no variability condition than in the high variability condition. Together, the results suggest that variation in the learner and variation in the input interact and modulate mechanisms of lexical learning in children.