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Objectives. Review standard sources for standardized well-child examinationsEvaluate commonly used history questions, physical exam points, and counseling/anticipatory guidance and identify which have good evidence that they affect health outcomes for childrenPresent an efficient approach to conducting well-child examinations.
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1. Evidence BasedWell Child Visits Robert L. Ringler, Jr., MD, FAAFP
Portsmouth Family Medicine Residency
Eastern Virginia Medical School
15 March 2008, 1500 – USAFP, Portland, OR
3. Bright Futures American Academy of Pediatrics
www.brightfutures.aap.org
Guidelines for Health Supervision of Infants, Children, Adolescents – 3rd edition
Bright Futures Pocket Guide
Bright Futures Toolkit
4. Promoting Healthy Outcomes Disease Prevention
Health Promotion and Anticipatory Guidance
Early Detection of Disease
5. Well Child Visits Parent and youth concerns
Preventive services
Structured developmental screening
Establish community linkages
Recall and reminder system
Practice detects special health care needs & ensures they receive preventive services
6. Health Outcomes Healthy weight and BMI
Normal BP, vision, hearing
Pursuing healthy behaviors:
Nutrition
Physical activity
Safety
Sexuality
Substance use
7. Health Outcomes Accomplishing developmental tasks:
Social connections
Competence
Autonomy
Empathy
Coping skills
Loving responsible family, supported by a safe community
Children with special needs should be able to achieve self-management skills
8. Health Promotion Themes Promoting Family Support
Promoting Child Development
Promoting Mental Health
Promoting Healthy Weight
Promoting Healthy Nutrition Promoting Physical Activity
Promoting Oral Health
Promoting Healthy Sexual Development & Sexuality
Promoting Safety & Injury Prevention
Promoting Community Relationships and Resources
9. Promoting Healthy Weight Normal or healthy weight: BMI <85th
Overweight: BMI =85th but <95th
Obese: =95th
% rising rapidly between
1988-2004
10. Screening for Overweight and Obesity One or more parents are obese
One or more siblings are obese
Family with low income
Chronic disease or disability that limits mobility
BMI for age
Comprehensive physical assessment
11. Second level assessment & screening Family Hx: early CVD, lipids, obesity, DM2
BP for age, gender, height
>90th – prehypertensive
>95th – HTN
FLP – Total >200, low HDL, high trig
Large ? in BMI: 2-3 points in 1 yr
Concern about weight
12. Actions for providers Plot BMI routinely
Address BMIs before they reach 95%
Identify “at risk” children
13. The Well Child (Health Supervision) Visit Disease detection
Disease prevention
Health promotion
Anticipatory guidance
14. The Well Child (Health Supervision) Visit Subjective:
Parent and child concerns
Surveillance of development
Nutrition, activity, sleep
Home, school, mental health, strengths
Safety, substances, puberty
Objective:
BMI, vision, hearing, other screening
Physical Examination
15. The Well Child (Health Supervision) Visit Assessment:
Well child
Normal physical and emotional development
Plan:
Anticipatory Guidance
Immunizations
16. Bright Futures Visit Context: review of development and milestones for age
Priorities for visit:
Attend to concerns of parents
5 additional priorities for each visit
Health Supervision
History
Observation of child-parent interaction
Surveillance of development
Physical examination
Assessment of growth
Exam for age
17. Bright Futures Visit Health Supervision
Screening
Universal screening
Selective screening
Risk assessment
Action if risk assessment positive
Immunizations
Other practice-based interventions
Anticipatory Guidance
For provider
Visit related health promotion questions
For parent and child
18. Rationale for clinical decisions Clinical evidence
Practice guidelines
Colleagues
Decision support systems
Experience
Habit
Judgment
Preferences
19. Evidence basis for preventive health issues Evidence-informed rather than evidence-driven
Satisfactory studies uncommon
Few studies evaluate effectiveness of components of PE (considered screening interventions) and counseling interventions
20. Evidence Based Recommendations USPSTF strongly recommends for:
Screening for cervical cancer in women who are sexually active and have a cervix
Good evidence that screening reduces incidence of and mortality from cervical cancer
Begin within 3 yrs of onset of sexual activity or age 21, whichever comes first; and screening every 3 years
21. Evidence Based Recommendations USPSTF recommends:
Structured breastfeeding education and behavioral counseling programs to promote breastfeeding (B recommendation)
22. Evidence Based Recommendations USPSTF: Evidence is insufficient to recommend for or against:
Routine clinical breast exam (CBE) alone to screen for breast CA
ACS recommends CBE as part of periodic health exam every 3 yrs in 20’s and 30’s
Teaching or performing regular self-breast-exam (BSE)
23. Evidence Based Recommendations USPSTF recommends against:
Routine screening for testicular cancer
Routine screening of asymptomatic adolescents for idiopathic scoliosis
24. Universal Screening – Bright Futures Newborn Metabolic and Hemoglobinopathy
Essential public health responsibility
State laws
Development – 9/18/30m
Standardized tests
25. Universal Screening – Bright Futures Autism (18/24m) – AAP
Specific autism screening in addition to general developmental screening
Oral Health (As early as 6m, 6 mos after 1st tooth erupts, NLT 12m) – American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry
Risk assessment
Vision
USPSTF – Screening for amblyopia, strabismus, and visual acuity defects in children <5
AAP – 3/4/5/6/8/10y, early/mid/late adolescence
26. Universal Screening – Bright Futures Hearing (NB, 1w, 1/2m, 4/5/6/8/10y) – AAP
Universal screening of all infants
Periodic screening throughout adolescence
Anemia (9-12m) – AAP
Measurement of HCT or HGB for all full-term infants
Lead (12m, 2y hi prevalence or Medicaid) – AAP
Universal screening beginning at 9-12 mos and repeated at 2 yrs (blood levels peak)
Dyslipidemia (Older adolescents) – NCEP
Over age 20 should have FLP every 5 yrs
27. Selective Screening Oral Health [Dental Home] (12/18m, 2/2.5/3/6y) – Bright Futures
Referral based on risk assessment
Oral Health [Fluoride] (12/18m, 2/2.5/3/6y)
USPSTF – Supplement if 1o water supply deficient in fluoride, starting @ 6m
AAP – Supplement until 16y or 2nd molars, whichever is first
28. Selective Screening BP (children under 3 with risks) - NHBPEP
Prematurity, VLBW, other NICU
Congenital HD, repaired or not
Recurrent UTI, hematuria, proteinuria
Known renal dz or urologic malform
FHx of cong renal dz
Solid organ transpl
Malignancy or bone marrow transpl
Rx with drugs that raise BP
Other systemic dz assoc with HTN (neurofibromatosis, tuberous sclerosis, etc.)
Evidence of ? ICP
BP – children over 3 is part of routine PE
29. Selective Screening Vision (NB, 1w, 1/2/4/6/9/12/15/18m, 2/2.5/7/9y, adolescents {11-21y})
Very prem
FHx cong cataract, retinoblastoma, and metabolic/genetic dz
Signif develop delay or neuro prob
Systemic dz assoc with eye abnorm
30. Selective Screening Hearing (4/6/12/15/18m, 2/2.5y) – Joint Committee on Infant Hearing
Caregiver concern*
FHx* of perm childhood hearing loss
NICU >5d
In utero infections (CMV*, herpes, rubella, syphilis, toxo)
Craniofacial abnl
Physical findings like white forelock
Syndromes assoc with hearing loss or progressive/late onset hearing loss*
Neurodegenerative disorders*
Culture-positive postnatal infx assoc with sensorineural hearing loss - meningitis (bacterial, herpes, varicella)
Head trauma req hosp, esp basal skull/temporal bone fx*
Chemotherapy*
* Delayed onset hearing loss
31. Selective Screening Anemia (4m) – AAP
Prematurity
LBW
Use of low-iron form, infants not getting iron-fortified form
Early introduction of cow’s milk
Anemia (18m, annual 2y+) – AAP
Special health needs
Low-iron diet (eg, non-meat diet)
Environment (eg, poverty, limited food)
32. Selective Screening Anemia (6-10y visits) – AAP
Strict vegetarian diet, not on iron supplement
Anemia (11-21y visits) – CDC
All non-pregnant women every 5-10y throughout childbearing
Annually for women with risk factors (extensive blood loss, low iron intake, previous dx of Fe-defic anemia)
33. Selective Screening Lead (6/9m, 12m {low prev, not on Medicaid}, 18m, 2y {low prev, not on Medicaid}, 3/4/5/6y) – CDC
Does your child live in or regularly visit a house or facility built before 1950?
Does your child live in or regularly visit a house or facility built before 1978 that is being or has recently been renovated or remodeled (within last 6m)?
Does your child have a sibling or playmate who has or did have lead poisoning?
34. Selective Screening TB (1/6/12/18m, annually @2y) – AAP
Annual skin test:
HIV-infected children
Incarcerated adolescents
Risk factor questions:
Has a family member or contact had TB?
Has a family member had a positive TB skin test?
Was your child born in a high-risk country (other than US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Western Europe)
Has your child traveled (had contact with resident populations) to a high-risk country for >1 wk?
35. Selective Screening Dyslipidemia (2/4/6/8/10y, adolescents 11-21) – AAP
Parents/grandparents = 55y had cath or had CAD (includes angioplasty/CABG)
Parents/grandparents = 55y had documented MI, angina, PVD, cerebrovascular dz, sudden cardiac death
Parent had ? Chol (=240)
Parental hx unobtainable (provider choice)
High risk children
Smoking
HTN
DM
Physical inactivity
? Sat fat diet, Overweight
36. Selective Screening Dyslipidemia (2/4/6/8/10y, adolescents 11-21) – Expert Committee Recommendations on assessment, prevention, and treatment of child and adolescent overweight and obesity.
BMI for age and sex 85th-94th% (overweight) with no risk factors – FLP
BMI for age and sex 85th-94th% with risk factors on HX or PE – FLP, AST, ALT, FBS
BMI for age and sex =95th% (obese), even w/o risk factors – FLP, AST, ALT, FBS, BUN, creat
37. Selective Screening Chlamydia (11-21y visits, if sexually active) – USPSTF
Routinely screen all sexually active women under 25, and others at ? risk for STDs
Chlamydia (11-21y visits, if sexually active) – AAP
Screen at least annually, even if asymptomatic and even if barrier contraception reported
38. Selective Screening Gonorrhea (11-21y visits, if sexually active) – USPSTF
Routinely screen all sexually active women under 25, and others at ? risk for STDs
39. Selective Screening HIV Testing (11-21y visits, if sexually active) – USPSTF
Past or present injection drug use
M who have had sex with M
M and F having unprotected sex with multiple partners
M and F who exchange sex for money or drugs, or have sex partners who do
Past or present sex partners were HIV-infected, bisexual, or injection drug users
Persons being Rx for STDs
Persons who request HIV test despite reporting no risk factors
Persons who report no risk factors but are seen in high-risk or high-prevalence clinical settings
STD clinics, correctional facilities, homeless shelters, TB clinics, clinics serving M who have sex with M, adolescent health clinics with ?prevalence of STDs
High prevalence (CDC) - =1% prevalence of infection among population being served
40. Selective Screening HIV Testing (13-21y visits) – CDC
Routine screening unless prevalence documented <0.1% (1 per 1000)
Discussed with all adolescents; encouraged for all who are sexually active
41. Selective Screening Syphilis (11-21y visits, if sexually active) – USPSTF
M who have sex with M and engage in high-risk sexual behavior
Commercial sex workers
Persons who exchange sex for drugs
Those in adult correctional facilities
42. Selective Screening Alcohol or drug use (11-21y visits) – Bright Futures
Have you ever had an alcoholic drink?
Have you ever used marijuana or any other drug to get high?
43. Efficient Well Child Visits Staff training
Weights and measures
Standard weights (kg or lbs)
Measuring length/height accurately
Measuring HC accurately
BP measurement on at-risk infants and all children =3y
Vision/hearing screens
Documentation
Plotting growth curves
Ht for age, wt for age, wt for ht
BMI calculation
BMI for age
44. Efficient Well Child Visits Patient preparation
Denver Developmental screening
Lead screening (high risk areas)
Screening questionnaires
CHAT questionnaire
Pediatric Symptom Checklist: cognitive, emotional, and behavioral problems
CRAFFT: screen for drug and alcohol use
45. Efficient Well Child Visits Well child forms
EMR or Paper forms
Reminders for appropriate history
Reminders for physical examination
Reminders for anticipatory guidance
Reminders for immunization, screening tests
46. Efficient Well Child Visits Patient education handouts
Appropriate reading levels
Age appropriate
Things to watch for before next visit
47. Questions?