HEALTH
SERVICES RESEARCH
Saturday, 5/3/2003
8:30am–11:30am
3150—Handheld
Computing for the Pediatrician (Part I) PDA 101:
Introduction To Handheld Computing for the Pediatrician
PAS
Mini Course
Chairs: K. Johnson, Vanderbilt
University, Nashville, TN and A. Meyers, Boston University
Medical Center, Boston, MA
The use of handheld computers in medicine has grown
dramatically. This session is intended for those who have
a handheld computer (Palm or Pocket PC), or are
considering purchasing one, but who have not yet learned
how to use it. The goal of the session is to help the
beginner achieve a working familiarity with handheld
computing such that they will leave the session ready,
able and eager to use their own device in their daily life
and clinical practice. Ideally, all participants should
bring their own handheld. The session will include an
overview of the devices and their desktop software;
mastery of the basic (built-in) functions: datebook/calendar,
address book, memo pad, to-do lists; and add-on
applications: where to find them, how to install them and
what applications are available specific to clinical
pediatrics. Participants should be familiar with the use
of personal computers and the Internet, but no prior
knowledge of handheld computing is assumed.
Introductions and Overview of Mini Course
Lecture (with Audience Participation)—PDA Basics,
Hardware and Software, the Palm OS and Its Functions
Palm OS Functions, Continued; PPC OS
Medical and Pediatric Applications for the PDA
8:30am–11:30am
3199c—Applying
for NIH Research Grants
Educational
Workshop
Pedro A. José, Professor of
Pediatrics and Physiology and Biophysics, Georgetown
University Medical Center, Washington, DC, Anshumali
Chaudhari, Scientific Review Administrator, Experimental
Cardiovascular Sciences Study Section, National Institutes
of Health, Bethesda, MD, Terry Rogers Bishop, Training and
Careers Program Director and Erythroid Lineage Genomics (ELGAP),
National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD and Linda L.
Wright, Deputy Director, Center for Research for Mothers
and Children, National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD
In the current climate of funding opportunities, the
ability to successfully obtain extramural support involves
applying for grants that are appropriate for an
investigator's career stage and drafting a clear and
focused application. In this session, we will discuss
career-stage-appropriate funding opportunities from the
NIH. We will also address how to write a grant
application, focusing on strategies with proven success.
The working of NIH study sections will be reviewed along
with how to best address the concerns of review panels. We
will also focus on how to obtain funding for fellowship
postdoctoral training and early stages of an academic
career.
8:30am–11:30am
3201—Beyond
p Values—Inference in Clinical Research
Educational
Workshop
R. Wright and D. Shay, Department
of Pediatrics, Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA and
Centers for Disease Control
Background: Observational research studies have become
increasingly complex. The results of observational
research studies can be driven by properties other than
chance or causation. While these factors may drive the p
values of the results, they also change the appropriate
interpretation.
Workshop Methods: In the first half of this workshop,
we will formally define confounding, effect modification,
restriction vs. heterogeneity of exposure, intermediate
variables, selection bias and differential vs.
nondifferential information bias. In the second half, we
will use a case-based approach to illustrate examples of
studies in which the results are driven by these factors
and compare differences in the appropriate interpretation
in the presence and absence of these factors. Minimal math
skills will be needed, however, familiarity with basic
concepts of study design and data analysis (case control
vs. cohort study, interpretation of Ors, etc.) is
recommended. We will specifically illustrate examples of
effect modification vs. confounding, intermediate
variables vs. confounding, selection bias, underpowered
studies, and the role of measurement error in determining
effect estimates.
8:30am–11:30am
3204—Pediatrics
and Public Health—Working at the Local Interface To
Improve Child Health Outcomes
Educational
Workshop
J. Goldhagen Department of
Pediatrics, University of Florida, Jacksonville, FL and M.
A. Abrams, Department of Pediatrics, Mercy Medical Center,
Des Moines, IA
To improve child health outcomes, pediatricians will
need to expand their expertise to include population-based
knowledge and skills. Collaboration with local health
departments and public health practitioners can provide
assets and resources to pediatricians to support them in
these efforts. This workshop will: (a) establish a
framework for linking pediatrics and public health on the
local level; (b) identify and demonstrate the inventory,
relevance and use of public health resources to child
advocacy, clinical pediatrics and population-based child
health; and (c) develop approaches for practitioners and
pediatric educators that integrate pediatrics and public
health to improve child health. Healthy People 2010 and
Community Oriented Primary Care will be used to provide
context to the discussion.
After an introductory didactic presentation,
participants will be engaged in an interactive case study
and scenario development process to demonstrate and
generate potential strategies to improve child health.
This will include: access to data relevant to clinical
practice and child advocacy, introduction of
population-based practices into clinical practice and the
application of the principles and practice of public
health to common health issues affecting children, e.g.,
asthma, obesity, diabetes, infant mortality, substance
use. Names of local health officials in communities and a
set of relevant websites will be provided.
9:30am–11:30am
3352c—Risk
Adjustment in Health Services and Outcomes Research
Educational
Workshop
Christopher B Forrest, Associate
Professor, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD and Uma
R. Kotagal, Director, Health Policy and Clinical
Effectiveness, Cincinnati Children's Hospital, Cincinnati,
OH
One of the greatest challenges to researchers who
conduct observational studies or quasi-experimental
evaluations is controlling for differences in health
status between groups. A variety of new methodologies—generally
called "risk adjustment" techniques—have been
developed to address this problem. Risk adjustment tools
provide measures of morbidity burden, medical and social
complexity, co-morbidity, disease severity and
self-assessed health. They may be based on routinely
collected clinical information (e.g., diagnostic data),
patient-reported survey results, practitioner completed
questionnaires or interviewer assessments. This workshop
will provide attendees with an in-depth tour of (1) the
conceptual basis of risk adjustment, (2) common tools
available to researchers, (3) reliability and validity of
measures, (4) application of the measures and (5) an
in-depth look at the tools available for neonatal
populations.
12:00pm–3:00pm
3501—Handheld
Computing for the Pediatrician (Part II) PDA 102:
Intermediate/Advanced Handheld Computing for the
Pediatrician
PAS
Mini Course
Chair: K. Johnson, Vanderbilt
University, Nashville, TN and A. Meyers, Boston University
Medical Center, Boston, MA
The field of medicine is replete with examples of ways
that handheld computers may be used to educate, organize
and inform clinicians. There are also examples of how
researchers may benefit from this technology. During this
more advanced session, we will discuss some of these uses
of handheld computers. We will provide examples of
software in a variety of domains and discuss their
historical, current and future use. We also will
demonstrate some future technology and discuss its
implications. At the conclusion of this session,
participants will have increased familiarity with
state-of-the-art applications, techniques to install them
and the future of handheld computers and wireless
networking.
Introductions and Overview of Mini Course
Lecture with Audience Participation: The Top 10 Novel
Uses of PDAs in Health Care
Exercises and Demonstrations
12:00pm–3:00pm
3555—Hospitalization
Use of Children and Adolescents in the US: Application of
the New AHRQ KID Database
Educational
Workshop
J. W. Thompson and J. M. Tilford,
Department of Pediatrics, University of Arkansas for
Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR and A. Elixhauser,
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD
This session will provide an overview of the Healthcare
Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP)—a family of
databases and tools maintained by the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)—and will include
presentations by child health services researchers of
their projects utilizing one of HCUP’s databases, the
Kid’s Inpatient Database (KID). The KID is a unique and
powerful database of hospital inpatient stays for children
age 0–18 years. The KID was specifically designed to
permit researchers to study a broad range of conditions
and procedures related to child health issues. Researchers
and policymakers can use the KID to identify, track and
analyze national trends in health care utilization,
access, charges, quality and outcomes. The KID contains
approximately 1.9 million hospital discharges for children
and includes a sample of pediatric discharges from over
2,500 U.S. hospitals. Since the KID has a large sample
size it can be used for analyses of both common and rare
conditions such as congenital anomalies, uncommon
treatments and organ transplantation. Users will receive
detailed packets of information about KID products.
Research studies on congenital birth defects, hypoplastic
left heart syndrome, adolescent depression and others will
be used to illustrate application of the KID data and
tools.
1:00pm–3:00pm
3681—Historical
Perspectives
Original
Science Abstracts - Poster Symposium
Moderators: Stanford T. Shulman
and E. Richard Stiehm
1:00pm–3:00pm
3704c—So
You Want To Be an Author
Educational
Workshop
Catherine D. DeAngelis,
Editor-in-Chief, JAMA, Chicago, IL
This interactive session will provide the attendee with
basic information on publication of a manuscript, as
derived from the perspective of an editor. Issues (with
data provided when possible) to be discussed are:
A. View From the Inside
- Characters involved
- Manuscript flow
- Peer review process
- Working with the author
B. View From the Outside
- How to choose the right journal for your paper
- How to prepare the cover letter
- How to prepare the abstract
- How to prepare the body of the manuscript
- How to prepare the references
C. Conflict of Interest and Ethics
3:15pm–5:15pm
3750—Health
Care for Children in Foster Care
PAS
Topic Symposium
Chair: Steven Blatt, ENHANCE
Services for Children in Foster Care, Upstate Medical
University, Syracuse, NY
With their numbers continuing to grow at an alarming
rate, health care needs of the more than 500,000 children
in foster care often remain unmet. Children in foster care
suffer from inordinately high rates of acute and chronic
illnesses, lack of preventive health care, mental illness
and developmental delays. Inefficient child welfare
agencies, inadequate health care funding and a dearth of
qualified health care and mental health care professionals
willing to treat this population of children compound the
problems.
Foster Care: An Overview
Steven D. Blatt, ENHANCE Services
for Children in Foster Care, Upstate Medical University,
Syracuse, NY
Health Care Standards for Children in Foster Care
Moira Szilagyi, Foster Care
Pediatrics, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY
Child Development and Mental Health Needs of Children
in Foster Care
Mark Simms, Child Development
Center, Children's Hospital of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI
Audience Questions
Discussion ,
Successful Models of Health Care Delivery for Children
in Foster Care
Victoria Meguid, ENHANCE Services
for Children in Foster Care, Upstate Medical University,
Syracuse, NY
Establishing Networks of Health Care Delivery for
Children in Foster Care in Large Cities
Heather Campbell Forkey, Safe Place:
The Center for Child Protection and Health, Children's
Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA
Audience Questions
3:15pm–5:15pm
3801—Developmental/Behavioral
Pediatrics
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Paul H. Dworkin and
Terry Stancin
3:15pm–5:15pm
3805—Nephrology
I
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Samir S. El-Dahr and
Kathy L. Jabs
3:15pm–5:15pm
3809—Public
Health and Prevention I
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Felix Okah and Tosan
Oruwariye
3:15pm–5:15pm
3850c—An
Innovative Approach to Self-Directed Professional
Development and Lifelong Learning
Educational
Workshop
Henry H. Bernstein, Associate
Professor of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston,
MA and Carol Carraccio, Professor of Pediatrics,
University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD
The 21st century heralds a paradigm shift in medical
education with a focus turned to competence and outcomes.
The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)
is spearheading a competency-based system of graduate
medical education coincident with the American Board of
Pediatrics’ (ABP) initiative to transition from periodic
"recertification" to "maintenance of
certification." Our greatest challenge as educators
lies in developing tools to evaluate competence during
training and to equip all trainees with the skills
necessary to achieve quality continuous professional
development in order to maintain their certification in
pediatrics.
The overarching goal of this workshop is to explore the
value of using technology as a tool for promoting
self-assessment and lifelong learning in continuous
professional development. We will demonstrate how
physicians can use an innovative web-centered tool to
document competence in practice-based learning and
improvement. Participants will discover how to create and
manage a personal list of educational needs based on their
professional experiences, develop individualized learning
plans to address these needs and then document the impact
of learning on their practice.
The outcome of implementing this web-based technology
will be the ability to demonstrate competence of our
trainees in the domain of practice-based learning and
improvement to the ACGME and the preparation of tomorrow’s
physicians to demonstrate evidence of continuous
professional development in maintaining their
certification.
3:15pm–5:15pm
3853c—Who
Decides? Bioethical Dilemmas in Pediatrics
Educational
Workshop
Susan Albersheim, Clinical
Professor, Department of Pediatrics, British Columbia's
Children's Hospital, Vancouver, BC, Canada and Joel E.
Frader, Professor of Pediatrics/Medical Ethics and
Humanities, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern
University, Chicago, IL
What should you do when parents want you to continue
burdensome treatments, which you think are futile? What
should you do when parents want you to stop intensive care
treatment, the continuation of which you think is in the
best interests of the child? Who ought to make decisions
for the not yet competent? Is it the parents, the doctors,
the ethics committee, society or some other disinterested
third party? The goal of this seminar is to consider the
complexity of these difficult decisions, looking at
factual and evaluative considerations. Through interactive
case discussion we will identify the problems and
potential pitfalls in decision-making for the pediatric
population.
Sunday, 5/4/2003
8:00am–10:00am
4101—Pediatrics
and Public Health
PAS
Topic Symposium
Chair: Ruth A. Etzel, The George
Washington University School of Public Health and Health
Services, Washington, DC
The purpose of this symposium is to describe the
benefits to pediatricians of collaborating with public
health specialists and to offer examples of some effective
collaborations. Speakers will identify resources available
to pediatricians who want to engage in public health
efforts.
How Pediatricians Can Use Healthy People 2010
Objectives for the Nation
Peter C. van Dyck, Health Resources
and Services Administration, Rockville, MD
Using Principles of Population-Based Medicine To
Implement Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
Strategies in Pediatric Practice
Arthur B. Elster, American Medical
Association, Chicago, IL
Pediatrician Involvement in Prevention of Violence
Katherine Kaufer Christoffel,
Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University,
Children's Memorial Institute for Education &
Research, Chicago, IL
Integration of Pediatrics and Public Health—An
Academic Medicine-Public Health Health Model
Jeffrey L. Goldhagen, University of
Florida, Jacksonville, Florida
Discussion
8:00am–10:00am
4102—Smallpox
and Bioterrorism Preparedness Planning
PAS/PIDS
Topic Symposium
Chair: John F. Modlin, Children's
Hospital at Dartmouth/Dartmouth Medical School, Lebanon,
NH
This program will give a "pediatric
perspective" to smallpox bioterrorism preparedness
planning efforts now under way within federal, state and
local public health agencies. It will include a review of
smallpox epidemiology, clinical disease, smallpox (vaccinia)
vaccine and lessons learned from the WHO Smallpox
Eradication Program. The nature of the current threat and
responses to that threat will be discussed.
Smallpox Epidemiology and Clinical Disease
Walter A. Orenstein, National
Immunization Program, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, Atlanta, GA
Surveillance/Control Methods
J. Michael Lane, Formerly Director,
Smallpox Eradication Program, CDC, Atlanta, GA
Smallpox (Vaccinia) Vaccine: Efficacy and Complications
John M. Neff, Children’s Hospital
and Regional Medical Center, Seattle, WA
Smallpox Bioterrorism Preparedness Planning
John F. Modlin, Children's Hospital
at Dartmouth/Dartmouth Medical School, Lebanon, NH
Sponsored jointly with the Pediatric Infectious
Diseases Society
8:00am–10:00am
4150—Asthma:
Etiology, Epidemiology, Management and Quality of Life
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Edgar K. Marcuse and
Sharon R. Smith
8:00am–11:00am
4302—Open/Advanced
Access II: Improving Patient Access and Care While
Increasing Physician and Patient Satisfaction
Educational
Workshop
J. A. Swanson, Mayo Clinic,
Rochester, MN, G. Randolph, J. Brown and D. Laraque
The Institute of Medicine has challenged health care
leaders to redesign health care systems to achieve care
that is more patient centered, timely, efficient,
effective, equitable and safe (in "Crossing the
Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st
Century"). Dramatic improvements in patient care, in
alignment with the IOM challenge can be made with
innovative clinical models. At the Open Access Workshop at
the 2002 PAS meeting, the basics of the Open Access
concept were presented. Improvements include increased
access to care and productivity, optimal utilization,
decreased urgent care visits and improved preventative
health care outcomes. At this session, participants will
understand the Open/Advanced Access model applications.
Lessons learned from the Institute for Healthcare
Improvement (IHI) National Initiatives, along with Mayo
Clinic experience in primary care and specialty care
areas, will be shared. Implementation in primary care and
specialty clinics, as well as academic settings, will be
reviewed. The format for the session will be highly
interactive with the understanding that many pediatricians
already have substantial understanding and experience with
the Open/Advanced Access model of care.
2:00pm–4:00pm
4631c—The
Art of Lecturing
Educational
Workshop
Beverly Wood, Professor of
Radiology & Pediatrics, Keck School of Medicine,
University of Southern California
Receive helpful pointers to make your talks memorable
and useful. This session will introduce methods of
planning and organizing presentations, preparing and
designing visual aids, handouts and clear delivery.
2:00pm–5:00pm
4662—Community
Interventions: Design, Implementation and Evaluation
Educational
Workshop
B. E. Ebel, T. D. Koepsell and F.
P. Rivara, Harborview Injury Prevention and Research
Center, Department of Epidemiology and Department of
Pediatrics, University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Many of the leading causes of childhood illness and
death are potentially preventable. Yet knowledge of how to
encourage healthier behaviors has lagged behind knowledge
of potential therapies and prevention strategies.
Community intervention trials are the "gold
standard" for large-scale health behavior change.
This workshop is designed for those interested in
conducting community interventions. The workshop will have
three sections: The first section discusses the design of
intervention trials, including theory-based strategies,
selection of relevant control groups and effectiveness
measures. The second section reviews successful
implementation strategies with illustrative examples. The
third section reviews the evaluation of community trials,
including the analysis of clustered data and time trends.
Participants will work in teams to develop intervention
trials to illustrate the concepts presented. Participants
can expect to acquire practical skills and resources to
aid in conducting a community intervention.
2:00pm–5:00pm
4666—Methods
To Assess Causes of Pediatric Adverse Outcomes and Improve
Patient Safety
Educational
Workshop
P. Hain, D. Hamming, J. Hathaway,
C. Nguyen, S. Bledsoe, C. Irwin, G. Hickson and J. Pichert,
Vanderbilt Univ. Medical Center, Nashville, TN
This workshop is designed to help pediatricians
identify and address common causes of adverse outcomes and
threats to patient safety. A pediatric department’s
experience at an academic medical center will be described
and its methods for reviewing and aggregating data about
causes of adverse events will be taught. Claims files
opened by the institution’s insurer were analyzed to
determine causes of pediatric adverse outcomes. Files were
reviewed by a committee including a pediatrician and nurse
risk managers. Events and outcomes for each file were
outlined on a "cause-effect" diagram to identify
events associated with adverse outcomes. Codes were
assigned by consensus for each contributor to the event.
Codes were analyzed via descriptive statistics. Poor
communication, medication errors, housestaff supervision
and IV monitoring were associated with a large proportion
of adverse outcomes and risk management activity.
Following description of the methods, workshop
participants will be assigned to small groups where they
will identify, aggregate and analyze patterns of causes of
adverse events associated with six hypothetical cases
derived from actual files. A subsequent large group
session will address how solutions to problem patterns
might be achieved. Reviews of risk management files offer
one source of data for driving patient safety and quality
improvement efforts and, perhaps, reducing malpractice
risk in pediatrics.
2:00pm–5:00pm
4668—Terrorism
and Children
Educational
Workshop
R. Leggiadro, A. Fine, S. Shelov
and G. Foltin, Hackensack University Medical Center,
Hackensack, NJ, New York City Dept of Health, New York,
NY, Maimonides Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY and NYU School
of Medicine, New York, NY
The 2001 World Trade Center and anthrax attacks
established terrorism as a reality in this country. In
addition to anthrax, critical biological agents include
smallpox, plague, tularemia, botulinum toxin, and viral
hemorrhagic fever. Release of sarin nerve gas in the Tokyo
subway system by the Aum Shinrikyo cult in 1995 resulted
in some 5,000 casualties, including 12 deaths, and the
threat of a radiation incident perpetrated by terrorists
is also real. Pediatricians have a key role in the
management of illness after a terrorist incident,
including biological, chemical or nuclear releases.
Effective preparedness requires an increased index of
suspicion for unusual diseases or clusters of illness,
with prompt reporting to public health authorities to
facilitate recognition of an outbreak and subsequent
intervention. Psychological effects of a domestic
terrorist disaster on children will also need to be
managed appropriately. This workshop will address the
epidemiologic, clinical, preparedness and response issues
relevant to biological, chemical and nuclear threats to
children, who are especially vulnerable. Specific and
detailed diagnostic and management information will be
provided, as well as emergency contact and educational
resource information.
2:00pm–5:00pm
4670—Understanding
Multivariate Regression Analysis: A Case-Based Approach
Educational
Workshop
R. Wright, J. Grupp and N.
Kupperman, Divisions of Emergency Medicine, Children’s
Hospital, Boston, MA, University of Cincinnati Medical
School, Cincinnati, OH and University of California-Davis
Objective: Enable clinicians to evaluate and interpret
results of studies which utilize mulitvariate regression
techniques. Introduction: Medical journals increasingly
publish studies which utilize complex statistical
analyses. Because treatment recommendations may be based
on such studies, clinicians need to understand the
principles of multivariate regression to evaluate and
interpret these results. Course: This workshop will
utilize a case-based teaching approach to illustrate how
multivariate regression techniques work and are
interpreted. Emphasis will be on evaluation and
interpretation rather than conducting a multivariate
analysis. Necessary skills in computers and math will be
minimal. We will begin by defining confounding and how it
is distinguished from bias. Next we will define/calculate
beta coefficients and crude odds ratios using datasets
from studies of common pediatric emergency diagnoses as
examples. We will then explain and demonstrate the results
from the same datasets using logistic and multiple linear
regression to adjust for confounding. We also will discuss
examples of inappropriate use of multivariate regression,
including lack of model diagnostics, unstable models, and
co-linearity.
2:00pm–5:00pm
4703—Health
Services Research
Special
Interest Group
Chair: Lawrence C. Kleinman, lawrence.kleinman@lvh.com
2:30pm–4:30pm
4760—The
Changing Spectrum of Pediatric Specialty Care: Implication
for Pediatric Generalist and Specialist
PAS
State of the Art
Chair: Russell Chesney,
University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN
In the face of dramatic alterations in health care
delivery during the 1990s, the roles of pediatric
generalists and subspecialists have changed. This has led
to national debate as to how general pediatricians and
subspecialists should be trained, how they should interact
and what final product or solution is desired. Both the
United States and Canada are affected by these changes. In
this session three experts will cover important aspects of
this emerging problem.
Overview
Russell W. Chesney, University of
Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN
Distribution of Generalist and Subspecialist Care for
Children: A Moving Target
Julia A. McMillan, Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD
Subspecialty Pediatrics in Canada
Robert H.A. Haslam, University of
Toronto, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario,
Canada
Who Cares for Children with Chronic Conditions?
James M. Perrin, Mass General
Hospital for Children, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA
Discussion
Sponsored jointly with the Public Policy Council of the
APS, AMSPDC, SPR and the Public Policy Committee of the
APA
3:15pm–6:15pm
4800—Getting
the Fat Out: A Practical Approach to Pediatric Lipid
Disorders
PAS/LWPES
Mini Course
Chairs: Brian W. McCrindle, The
Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada and
Charlotte M. Boney, Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, RI
This course will review the evaluation and treatment of
lipid disorders in children. Although diet and obesity are
the most common causes of lipid disorders in children, the
practitioner needs to be able to distinguish familial from
acquired hyperlipidemias. The format will include four
speakers who will present 1) lipoprotein biosynthesis and
metabolism, primary (familial) versus secondary (acquired)
disorders and selective screening; 2) dyslipidemia of
obesity and insulin resistance; 3) non-pharmacologic
treatments of managing dietary changes and obesity; and 4)
the pharmacologic treatment of primary hyperlipidemias.
Each session will include examples of the practical
application of the material. The course will conclude with
a panel discussion of the speakers with plenty of time for
questions.
Overview of Lipoprotein Biosynthesis, Metabolism and
Disorders and Screening
Ellis J. Neufeld, Children's
Hospital, Boston, MA
The Dyslipidemia of Obesity and the Insulin Resistance
Syndrome
Julia Steinberger, University of
Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN
Non-Pharmacologic Treatment of Hyperlipidemias
Barbara A. Dennison, Research
Institute, Bassett Healthcare, Cooperstown, NY
The Pharmacologic Treatment of Hyperlipidemias
Brian W. McCrindle, The Hospital for
Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Discussion
Sponsored jointly with the Lawson Wilkins Pediatric
Endocrine Society
4:15pm–6:15pm
4865—Nephrology
II
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Susan L. Furth and
Patricio E. Ray
Monday, 5/5/2003
8:00am–10:00am
5152—Immunization
Delivery
Original
Science Abstracts - Poster Symposium
Moderators: Robert M. Jacobson
and Lance E. Rodewald
9:00am–12:00pm
5203—Family
Presence for Procedures—Trying To Please Everyone
Educational
Workshop
S. Selbst, K. Bradford, A. Pratt,
S. Kost and A. Renwick, A.I. duPont Hospital for Children,
Wilmington, DE and Jefferson Medical College,
Philadelphia, PA
Family presence for procedures is a relatively new
concept in pediatric medicine. Studies have shown that
many parents prefer to be with their children when they
undergo painful or invasive procedures. Some physicians
are reluctant to accept this break with tradition and
refuse to allow parents in the room. The purpose of this
workshop is to develop an approach to successful
procedures with parental presence. Workshop leaders
(including physicians, social work, housestaff) will
address critical issues such as:
- Review of the literature—what do parents/families
want?
- What is best for the children?
- What rights do the parents have? How about the
physicians?
- Are some situations/procedures (i.e.,
resuscitations) "off-limits"?
- How can we instill confidence in trainees when the
family is watching?
- Can we preserve teaching opportunities?
- Are there safety risks? Legal issues?
- Enlisting the help of others: the role of liaisons,
social workers, therapists
Using case scenarios and role-playing, workshop leaders
will address the pros and cons of family presence for
procedures. Participants will be expected to share their
experiences and ideas to move forward with this
"unconventional" approach to medical care. It is
expected that through discussion and debate we will
implement a system for success.
9:00am–12:00pm
5206—Navigating
the Legal Waters in Clinical Medicine: A Primer for
Pediatricians
Educational
Workshop
J. Klig, M. Flomenbaum, L.
Arnold, C. Baum, K. Bechtel, K. Santucci and M. D. Baker,
Section of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Yale-New Haven
Children’s Hospital, New Haven, CT and Office of Chief
Medical Examiner, New York, NY
The incidence of lawsuits in the United States
continues to rise. Within this environment, pediatricians
are vulnerable to litigation yet often have limited
experience and information about the legal process and
relevant principles of law. Legal dilemmas are
particularly common in acute care settings and frequently
are managed without the immediate advice of counsel. In
this workshop, participants will explore basic legal
issues that impact on medical practitioners, gain
familiarity with the litigation process and examine
strategies for testifying in court. A team of specialists
in pediatric emergency medicine, malpractice issues, court
testimony and forensic medicine will begin the workshop
with an interactive presentation of case scenarios that
highlight common statutory dilemmas, malpractice issues
and the litigation process (civil and criminal).
Participants will then view videotapes of court testimony
and discuss strategies for testifying as a fact or expert
witness. Workshop leaders and participants will conclude
the session with small group discussions of individual
experiences with civil or criminal proceedings and legal
testimony. A complete syllabus will be provided for the
workshop that is designed for use as a teaching manual.
9:00am–12:00pm
5208—Pediatric
Clinical Research: Challenges, Approach and Study Designs
Educational
Workshop
C. H. Cole, R. D. Sege and P.
Hibberd, Department of Pediatrics and General Clinical
Research Center, Tufts-New England Medical Center, Boston,
MA
Research in infants and children requires special
consideration of scientific, ethical and legal issues.
Each of these issues, along with logistical and technical
considerations, may require innovative study design. The
practical and scientific implications of these
modifications in clinical research will be discussed.
Within this context, this interactive workshop will
address approaches to clinical research, including
development of research questions, subject selection and
highlight consideration of study design with safe and
effective solutions. This workshop will use didactic
presentations, discussions and structured small group
sessions. Participants in the small group sessions will
actively evaluate selected research topics and present
their considerations and clinical research proposal for
discussion. A wide range of designs will be addressed,
including translational research, all phases of clinical
trials and observational studies. This interactive
workshop is intended for fellows and junior faculty
embarking upon a career in pediatric clinical research.
Participants are encouraged, but not required, to bring
clinical research ideas for discussion.
10:15am–12:15pm
5404—General
Pediatrics II
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Carol D. Berkowitz
and David P. McCormick
10:15am–12:15pm
5405—Health
Services Research: Access to Care
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Thomas McInerny and
James M. Perrin
10:15am–12:15pm
5406—Interventions
and Outcomes in Underserved Populations
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Jay H. Mayefsky and
Peter Sherman
10:15am–12:15pm
5407—Public
Health and Prevention II
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Deborah Moss and Iman
Sharif
12:15pm–1:00pm
5525—2003
Special Presentation: Responding to the Quality Crisis
PAS
Special Presentation
Chair: Carden Johnston,
President-elect, American Academy of Pediatrics
Overview
Carden Johnston, The Children's
Hospital, Birmingham, AL
Al Aynsley-Green, National Clinical Director for
Children, Department of Health, Her Majesty's Government,
Nuffield Professor of Child Health, The Institute of Child
Health, University College London
University of London, Director of Clinical Research &
Development, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children and
The Institute of Child Health, London
Discussion
What happens when there is a public national concern
about excessive poor outcomes at a Children's Medical
Center? This was the scenario in Bristol, England, where a
crisis in the outcome of children after cardiac surgery
developed even when well–trained, committed, concerned
clinicians and subspecialists were intimately involved.
Because of this, Professor Al Aynsley-Green, President of
the Academic Paediatricians, was appointed to the new post
of National Clinical Director for Children by Parliament
and to Chair a Children's Taskforce to answer the question
of how can such a negative experience like this be turned
into positive outcomes for children? He is charged to
secure the health and well-being of all children
throughout childhood into adult life by developing a
National Service Framework for children's services across
health, social care and education.
Lessons he has learned and experiences he has lived
will be shared to help pediatricians around the world with
our quest to improve the lives and health of children. The
goals, activities and experiences of the Children's
Taskforce, as well as six external working groups, are
exportable, practical and logical. Strategies used for
developing opportunities not only to improve child health
at a local level but also at a national level will be
discussed.
Opportunities for questions and discussion will be
provided so attendees can share effective techniques to
improve child life and health.
Sponsored jointly with the American Academy of
Pediatrics
3:00pm–5:00pm
5652—Newborn
Screening: Challenges and Controversies
PAS/LWPES
Topic Symposium
Chair: Edward R. B. McCabe, David
Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Mattel Children's
Hospital, Los Angeles, CA
Newborn screening programs, which have been in place
for more than 40 years, are facing major challenges.
Technological advances permit the addition of an
increasing number of diseases, including many for which
the benefits are not as clear-cut as for PKU, congenital
hyperthyroidism or sickle cell disease. As pilot projects
evaluate the addition of new tests, the importance of
involving parents in decision-making is being actively
discussed. Originally established with a "public
health imperative," the predominant state model has
been one of "informed dissent." Various models
for informing and involving parents will be discussed, as
well as their feasibility and cost. There are a number of
legislative developments under consideration locally and
nationally, and these will be presented and analyzed. As
new diseases are considered for addition to screening
batteries, it is possible to screen for disorders that
have no effective interventions defined. It is clear that
if we do not screen for these diseases, no improvements in
care will advance. We will discuss whether such arguments
justify screening. In summary, technological advances are
forcing policy decisions. We will discuss the impacts of
these challenges.
Overview of Newborn Screening in 2003
Edward R. B. McCabe, David Geffen
School of Medicine at UCLA, Mattel Children's Hospital,
Los Angeles, CA
Parental Consent: Necessary or Sufficient?
Edward R. B. McCabe, David Geffen
School of Medicine at UCLA, Mattel Children's Hospital,
Los Angeles, CA
Legislative Impacts in the Nursery
Michele Puryear, Maternal and Child
Health Bureau, Health Resources & Services
Administration, Rockville, MD
Should We Screen for Conditions We Can't Treat?
R. Rodney Howell, University of
Miami School of Medicine, Miami, FL
Roundtable Discussion
Sponsored jointly with the Lawson Wilkins Pediatric
Endocrine Society
3:00pm–5:00pm
5654—Vaccines–2003
PAS/PIDS
Topic Symposium
Chair: Stanley A. Plotkin,
Aventis Pasteur and the University of Pennsylvania,
Doylestown, PA
This symposium covers four issues in vaccination. The
American Academy of Pediatrics and CDC currently are
moving toward a recommendation for universal annual
vaccination of infants with killed or live influenza
vaccine. Why is this? Now that Rotashield is off the
market, a new rotavirus vaccine is needed and may be on
the way. Despite good protection of children by
vaccination, pertussis infections are rising in
adolescents and adults. Can they be controlled? Recent
disruptions in vaccine supply have caused pediatricians
significant problems. What are the causes and solutions?
Universal Influenza Vaccination in Children
W. Paul Glezen, Baylor College of
Medicine, Houston, TX
New Rotavirus Vaccines: After Rotashield
Paul A. Offit, Children's Hospital
of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA
Adolescent and Adult Pertussis Vaccination
Kathryn M. Edwards, Vanderbilt
University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN
Vaccine Shortages: Causes and Effects
Walter A. Orenstein, National
Immunization Program, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, Atlanta, GA
Sponsored jointly with the Pediatric Infectious
Diseases Society
Tuesday, 5/6/2003
8:00am–10:00am
6101—Outcomes
and Translational Research
PAS
Topic Symposium
Chair: James Seidel, Harbor-UCLA
Medical Center, UCLA School of Medicine, Torrance, CA
Outcome measures are a vital part of research design.
Many studies continue to use morbidity and mortality,
admission to the hospital, cost of care and other gross
measures that do not define true outcomes for patients. A
model for outcome determination using disease specific
outcomes that define long-term outcomes, proximate
outcomes, global long term outcomes and global proximate
outcomes can serve as the conceptual framework for
decisions about assigning specific outcome measures for a
study. A conceptual framework using disease-specific and
global outcomes based on diversity and severity of the
process to be studied will be discussed. Quality of Care
Measures will be differentiated from true outcome
measures.
Applying the methods and tools of outcomes research and
the evaluation of the impact of health care on the health
outcomes or "end result" of patients and
populations to various clinical domains are critical to
research design. They are an integral part of
translational research.
Translating, disseminating and implementing research
results and applying them to clinical care and policies
affecting clinical care are critical to improving patient
outcomes. A hierarchy of research impact and an approach
to translational/implementation research will be
discussed. Implementation research examines the science of
translating clinical and organizational research into
practice and policy. Evidence-based implementation
strategies are in turn based on the findings of
implementation research. Results of implementation
research, including research in children’s health care,
will be discussed. Models will be given that can be
applied to research protocols.
Overview
James Seidel, Harbor-UCLA Medical
Center, UCLA School of Medicine, Torrance, CA
Selecting Outcome Measures for Research
Roger J. Lewis, Harbor-UCLA Medical
Center, Torrance, CA; and UCLA School of Medicine, Los
Angeles, CA
Getting to the Top of the Hierarchy of Research Impact:
Examples from Children's Health Research
Denise M. Dougherty, Senior Advisor,
Child Health, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality,
Rockville, MD
Translating Research Into Practice and Policy: Where Do
We Go Next?
Lisa Simpson, All Children's
Hospital, Endowed Chair, Children's Health Policy,
University of South Florida, St. Petersburg, FL
Discussion
Tuesday, 5/6/2003
8:00am–10:00am
6126—Health
Services Research
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Dimitri A. Christakis
and Simon J. Hambidge
8:45am–11:45am
6204—Conflict
of Interest in Pediatric Research
Educational
Workshop
R. A. Etzel and J. Frader, APA
Research Committee
Recent financial scandals affecting successful and
respected companies have focused public attention on
conflicts of interest involving corporate officers,
stockholders, and customers. In the medical research
world, too, recent events have raised questions about
conflicts of interest affecting investigators, research
subjects and patients. Examples of the latter include the
financial interests of gene-transfer experimenters (the
Gelsinger case at the University of Pennsylvania) and
study goals versus individual subject/patient interests in
the Kennedy Krieger law suit (Hopkins lead abatement
study). Despite the potential pitfalls, pediatric
researchers receive only perfunctory training in handling
them. This workshop will provide investigators with a
framework for and experience with considering real and
perceived conflicts of interest in their research. We seek
to provide guidance and support for investigators who need
to recognize and face ethical concerns that may arise from
proposed and actual research. During the workshop, we will
describe potential conflicts of interest affecting: (1)
individual researchers, (2) institutions (hospitals and
universities), (3) research subjects/patients and (4) the
public at large, including the mass media. Short
presentations will set the stage for attendees to
participate in role playing with a variety of scenarios
and to present and discuss their own cases.
10:15am–11:45am
6300—Early
Origins of Later Life Disease
PAS/LWPES
State of the Art
Chair: Sherin U. Devaskar,
University of California, Los Angeles, CA
This session will address the topic of "perinatal
origins of adult disease." The three speakers will
address different aspects related to the early origins of
adult disease. Dr. Kent Thornburg will address the issues
related to the fetal origins of adult-onset cardiovascular
disease, Dr. Guiseppe Colasurdo will discuss the impact on
adult-onset reactive airway disease due to postnatal
exposure to environmental stimulants, and Dr. Pinchas
Cohen will cover the influence of postnatal insulin-like
growth factor on the development of carcinogenesis. All
three speakers will shed light on the mechanisms
underlying the phenomenon of "Perinatal Origins of
Adult Disease" in three different disease states
using various animal models. This session will provide
cutting edge information that will help set the stage for
future interventions targeted at the mechanisms outlined.
Fetal Origins of Later-Life Cardiovascular Disease
Kent L. Thornburg, The Heart
Research Center, Oregon Health & Science University,
Portland, OR
Gene–Environment Interactions in Early Life and
Childhood Asthma: Search For Mechanisms
Giuseppe N. Colasurdo, University of
Texas-Houston Medical School, Houston, TX
The IGF System Through Development and Its Potential
Role in Carcinogenesis
Pinchas Cohen, Mattel Children's
Hospital at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA
Discussion
Sponsored jointly with the Lawson Wilkins Pediatric
Endocrine Society
10:15am–11:45am
6301—Challenges
to Academic Medical Centers: Historical Perspectives and
Responses
PAS
State of the Art
Chair: Larry J. Shapiro,
University of California, San Francisco, CA
Academic Medical Centers (AMCs) are the result of
unique partnerships between medical schools, research
institutes, and teaching hospitals and are among the
treasures of our society. During the past century, AMCs
have evolved in response to need and opportunity as well
as to social and economic forces. They have made possible
unprecedented advances in human health, in biological
sciences, in medical technology, and in the education of a
very specialized and knowledgeable cadre of scientists,
physicians, and other health care professionals. In the
process, AMCs have grown large and ever more complex and
require continuous inputs of resources to sustain them.
Despite the apparent success of AMCs and their widely
appreciated intrinsic value, they are challenged as never
before. The diversity and complexity of missions has
created stresses upon the social order. Financial
pressures resulting from a fragmented, market driven
reimbursement system, lack of adequate attention to
preventive services and to cost of care issues, questions
about true measures of quality, ever more expensive
research infrastructure requirements, changing social
expectations combined with a relative illiteracy regarding
science and health in the general public threaten AMCs
existence as we know them. Despite fears that these
factors have the potential to create a "perfect
storm" that will derail the momentum for progress, a
detailed understanding of AMCs history, current
circumstances, and future prospects gives cause for
optimism. With thoughtful leadership, commitment to
values, and a willingness to lead change in many areas,
AMCs can continue to thrive and achieve even greater
success.
The speakers in this symposium are a practitioner of
medicine and historian who has written two very widely
read and highly acclaimed books about these issues,
Learning to Heal and Time to Heal (Kenneth Ludmerer) and a
former medical school clinician, teacher, investigator,
and dean who is now one of the nations most ardent and
eloquent spokespersons for AMCs in his role as president
of the Association of American Medical Colleges (Jordan
Cohen).
Overview
Larry J. Shapiro, University of
California, San Francisco, CA
Challenges to Academic Medical Centers: Evolution,
Nature and Potential Solutions
Kenneth M. Ludmerer, Washington
University, St. Louis, MO
21st Century Challenges for Academic Medical Centers
Jordan J. Cohen, Association of
American Medical Colleges, Washington, DC
Discussion
Supported by an educational grant from the Columbus
Children's Hospital
12:00pm–1:30pm
Poster
Session I V
Original
Science Abstracts – Poster Session
- Health Services
Research
- Health Services
1:45pm–3:45pm
6601—Health
Care Disparities and Children
PAS
Hot Topic
Chair: David C. Grossman,
University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Over the past several years, it has become increasingly
apparent that there are major disparities in health status
among different segments of our population. This is as
true for children as it is for adults. The causal factors
responsible for these differences are multiple and
complex. They include genetic factors (e.g. susceptibility
to disease, response to environmental challenges, and drug
metabolism), cultural and environmental factors (e.g.
diet, activity, and ecological exposures), and factors
that determine access to health care services. If we are
to have a positive impact on the incidence and outcomes of
many of these major health issues for children, we will
need to better understand the causes of these differences
and to determine which interventions will provide the most
positive results.
All Things Unequal: Mapping and Eliminating Disparities
in the Health Status and Health Care of Children
David C. Grossman, University of
Washington, Seattle, WA
Insurance Coverage and Access Issues for Children
Paul W. Newacheck, Institute for
Health Policy Studies, University of California, San
Francisco, CA
What Is It About Access That Could Reduce Disparities
in Health?
Barbara Starfield, Johns Hopkins
University, Baltmore, MD
Disparities in Outcome for Children with Asthma
Michael Weitzman, Executive Director
of the American Academy of Pediatrics Center for Child
Health Research, and Professor of Pediatrics at University
of Rochester, Rochester, NY
Discussion
1:45pm–3:45pm
6654—Health
Services Research: Quality of Care
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: Denise M. Dougherty
and Judith S. Shaw
1:45pm–3:45pm
6657—Tobacco,
Alcohol and Other Substances
Original
Science Abstracts - Platform Session
Moderators: C. Andrew Aligne and
Dana Best
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