MCH Alert


Maternal and Child Health Library

This and past issues of the MCH Alert are available at http://www.mchlibrary.info/alert/archives.html


June 11, 2010

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Special Notice: MCHB Customer Satisfaction Survey

You recently received an e-mail requesting your participation in the Health Resources and Services Administration's Maternal and Child Health Bureau (MCHB) customer satisfaction survey of its Resource Center, Maternal and Child Health Library. To those of you who have already responded, thank you very much. If you have not yet had a chance to participate in the survey, we would appreciate it if you would take a few minutes to complete the survey via the internet by clicking on the link below.

https://svy.cfigroup.com/cgi-bin/qwebcorporate.dll?idx=S59BJQ

The survey will take approximately 10 minutes to complete. The CFI Group, an independent research and consulting firm, is conducting this survey for the MCHB. The survey is hosted via a secure server and your participation will remain anonymous. If you have any technical questions or issues while taking the survey, please contact MCHBsurvey@mail.cfigroup.com

Thank you in advance for your participation.

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Multimedia Featured Resource: The Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the Office of Medical Applications of Research of the National Institutes of Health convened a Consensus Development Conference on March 8-10, 2010, in Bethesda, Maryland, to provide health professionals and the general public with an assessment of data on vaginal birth after cesarean (VBAC). The final statement, program and abstracts, archived Webcast, and evidence report are available at http://consensus.nih.gov/2010/vbac.htm

In Pinn Point on Women's Health: Vaginal Birth after Cesarean Section, Vivian W. Pinn, M.D., director of the Office of Research on Women's Health at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and Caroline Signore, M.D., M.P.H., a board certified obstetrician-gynecologist at the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development at NIH, explore VBAC and the systemic barriers that need to be overcome to make this delivery option available to more women. The podcast is one in a series of broadcasts hosted by Dr. Pinn that looks at developments in women's health and research on women’s health. The podcast is available at http://orwh.od.nih.gov/podcast/Pinncast2010-05.mp3. The transcript is available at http://orwh.od.nih.gov/podcast/VBAC-Signore.pdf

1. Booklet Focuses on Skills Development in Nutrition and Feeding of Children with Special Health Care Needs
2. Journal Supplements Provide Portrait of the Social Determinants of Children's Health
3. Report from the American Academy of Pediatrics Task Force on Mental Health Care Featured in Journal Supplement
4. CDC Releases 2009 Data on Health-Risk Behaviors Among Youth
5. Journal Presents Approach to Managing Neurodevelopmental Disorders in Primary Care
6. Article Assesses Infants' Ability to Self-Regulate Milk Intake Depending on Feeding Mode in Early Infancy

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1. BOOKLET FOCUSES ON SKILLS DEVELOPMENT IN NUTRITION AND FEEDING OF CHILDREN WITH SPECIAL HEALTH CARE NEEDS

Nutrition Interventions for Children with Special Health Care Needs 3rd edition, 2010 addresses the growth, nutrition, and feeding of children with or at increased risk for a broad range of chronic illnesses or conditions who require intervention beyond basic, routine, pediatric care. The new edition of the booklet, published by the Washington State Department of Health, is divided into three sections and includes new chapters on breastfeeding, physical activity, and autism spectrum disorders. Section 1 outlines procedures for nutrition screening and assessment and development of a nutrition intervention care plan. Section 2 addresses nutrition-related problems across a wide range of diagnoses. Section 3 examines nutrition management related to specific diseases and disorders that have strong nutrition components. Each chapter contains intervention strategies, outcomes, and references. Additional tools are included in the appendix. The booklet is available at http://here.doh.wa.gov/materials/nutrition-interventions

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2. JOURNAL SUPPLEMENTS PROVIDE PORTRAIT OF THE SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF CHILDREN'S HEALTH

The supplement to the May 2010 issue of the Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved focuses on the social determinants of health among children from immigrant, minority, and other low-income populations in the developed world. The supplement is the second volume in a set produced with support from the W. K. Kellogg Foundation. The first volume, published in November 2009, addresses global perspectives. The current volume contains 11 articles on the following topics: rural African-American youths' perceptions about the role of community social institutions in addressing HIV; access to care among immigrant children by region of birth; social determinants of mental health treatment among Haitian, African-American, and white youth in community health centers; racial and ethnic differences in social consequences of early-onset psychiatric disorder; access to and use of oral health care by children and families who are homeless; savings attributable to guidelines-based asthma care in the pediatric medical home; school-based obesity-prevention programming for low-income, minority children; the impact of health insurance coverage on undocumented and other low-income children; nativity status and self-reported asthma in children and adolescents; pregnancy among young women who are homeless; and clinic- and hospital-based legal services. Abstracts are available at http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_health_care_for_the_poor_and_underserved/toc/hpu.21.2A.html

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3. REPORT FROM THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS TASK FORCE ON MENTAL HEALTH CARE FEATURED IN JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT

The June 2010 supplement to Pediatrics is designed to help pediatricians and other primary care clinicians (family physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants who provide primary care to infants, children, and adolescents) enhance the mental health care they provide. The supplement addresses three goals determined by the American Academy of Pediatrics Task Force on Mental Health to accomplish its purpose: to facilitate system changes, build skills, and incrementally change practice. In the first article of the supplement, the task force proposes strategies that primary care clinicians can use with their partners at the community level, collectively, to foster resilience in children, to address factors that increase children's risk of developing mental problems, to enhance or expand services, and to facilitate systemic changes that foster collaboration between primary care clinicians and others who are important to children's mental health and care. The second article describes practice enhancements necessary for effective mental health care. These enhancements envision that primary care clinicians will gain the capacity to apply medical home or chronic care principles to the care of children with identified psychosocial problems and mental disorders as they would to the care of children with other special health care needs such as asthma or diabetes. The third article summarizes key features of a clinical process for delivering mental health services in pediatric primary care settings. The process is represented in algorithms annotated with the procedure codes applicable to each step. The supplement is available (at no charge) at http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/vol125/Supplement_3

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4. CDC RELEASES 2009 DATA ON HEALTH-RISK BEHAVIORS AMONG YOUTH

Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance -- United States, 2009 summarizes data from the national Youth Risk Behavior Survey, 42 state surveys, and 20 local surveys of students in grades 9 through 12 conducted during September 2008 through December 2009. The report, published in the June 4, 2010, issue of Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report Surveillance Summaries, also presents trends in risk behaviors during 1991-2009. The report addresses six categories of priority health-risk behaviors among adolescents and young adults; these behaviors contribute to unintentional injuries and violence, tobacco use, alcohol and other drug use, sexual behaviors that can result in unintended pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases (including HIV infection), unhealthy dietary behaviors, and physical inactivity. Additional topics include obesity, overweight, and weight control and asthma. The report is available at http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/pdf/ss/ss5905.pdf

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5. JOURNAL PRESENTS APPROACH TO MANAGING NEURODEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS IN PRIMARY CARE

Development Disabilities Across the Lifespan, the June 2010 issue of Disease-a-Month, is designed to provide primary care health professionals with an overview of major neurodevelopmental disorders and a review of selected concepts related to their management. The issue is based on the premise that all primary care health professionals will encounter these disorders in all age ranges, with diverse presentations and stages of progression, and that intervention requires a multidisciplinary team approach involving a variety of professionals and agencies. The content addresses neurodevelopmental disorders comprising a range of intellectual, cognitive, learning, language, and psychosocial capabilities. Topics include the following:
Patel DR, Greydanus DE, Calles JL, et al. 2010. Developmental disabilities across the lifespan. Disease-a-Month 56(6):305-397. Available at http://www.diseaseamonth.com/current

Readers: More information is available from the following MCH Library resources:

- Emotional, Behavioral, and Mental Health Challenges in Children and Adolescents: Knowledge Path at
http://mchlibrary.info/KnowledgePaths/kp_Mental_Conditions.html

- Child Developmental Screening: Bibliography of Materials from MCHLine at
http://mchlibrary.info/databases/bibliography.php?target=auto_search_devscrn

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6. ARTICLE ASSESSES INFANTS' ABILITY TO SELF-REGULATE MILK INTAKE DEPENDING ON FEEDING MODE IN EARLY INFANCY

"Infants at the breast learn and develop better control of their milk intake, whereas bottle-feeding may decrease infants' abilities to self-regulate milk intake," write the authors of an article published in the June 2010 issue of Pediatrics. The estimated percentage of children ages 2-5 and 6-11 in the United States classified as overweight increased from 5.0 percent and 6.5 percent, respectively, in 1980 to 12.4 percent and 17.0 percent, respectively, in 2006. The increase in childhood obesity was also observed in children ages 6-23 months, from 7.2 percent in 1980 to 11.6 percent in 2000. Many studies have shown that breastfed infants have a continued lower risk of obesity later in childhood. The purpose of the study described in this article was to explore whether infants' self-regulation of milk intake is a possible mechanism behind the relationship between breastfeeding and childhood obesity.

The study sample came from the Infant Feeding Practices Study (IFPS) II, a U.S. population-based longitudinal study (2005-2007). The IFPS II sample was drawn from a U.S. national consumer-opinion panel and consisted of mothers ages 18 or older with healthy newborns whose gestational age at birth was 35 or more weeks and whose birthweight was 5 or more pounds. Infants were followed longitudinally with questionnaires mailed almost monthly until age 12 months. The authors included 1,597 infants for whom there were data on how often the infant emptied the milk in the bottle or cup offered during the second half-year of infancy; of these infants, there were complete data for 1,250 infants for the analysis. To examine whether infants' self-regulation in the second half-year of infancy was affected by how milk was delivered in the first half-year, feeding mode (breast only, bottle and breast, or bottle only) and bottle-feeding intensity (the percentage of milk feeds given by bottle) were used as main exposure variables.

The authors found that
The authors conclude that "infants fed directly at the breast have better self-regulation, which in turn could mediate the relationship between breastfeeding and childhood obesity." They continue, "our results also indicate that bottle-feeding may be more important than the type of milk in the bottle in limiting infants' ability to self-regulate milk intake."

Li R, Fein SB, Grummer-Strawn LM. 2010. Do infants fed from bottles lack self-regulation of milk intake compared with directly breastfed infants? Pediatrics 125(6):e1386-e1393. Available at http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/abstract/125/6/e1386

Readers: More information is available from the following MCH Library resource:

- Breastfeeding: Resource Brief at
http://mchlibrary.info/guides/breastfeeding.html

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MCH Alert © 1998-2010 by National Center for Education in Maternal and Child Health and Georgetown University. MCH Alert is produced by Maternal and Child Health Library at the National Center for Education in Maternal and Child Health under its cooperative agreement (U02MC00001) with the Maternal and Child Health Bureau, Health Resources and Services Administration, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The Maternal and Child Health Bureau reserves a royalty-free, nonexclusive, and irrevocable right to use the work for federal purposes and to authorize others to use the work for federal purposes.
 
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The editors welcome your submissions, suggestions, and questions. Please contact us at the address below.

EDITOR/ADMINISTRATOR: Jolene Bertness, M.Ed.
CO-EDITOR: Tracy Lopez, M.S.L.S.
COPYEDITOR/WRITER: Ruth Barzel, M.A.
WRITER: Beth DeFrancis, M.L.S.

MCH Alert
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