2023
Effect Modifiers of the Association of High-Flow Nasal Cannula and Bronchiolitis Length of Stay.
Winer J, Richardson T, Berg K, Berry J, Chang P, Etinger V, Hall M, Kim G, Meneses Paz J, Treasure J, Aronson P. Effect Modifiers of the Association of High-Flow Nasal Cannula and Bronchiolitis Length of Stay. Hospital Pediatrics 2023, 13: 1018-1027. PMID: 37795554, PMCID: PMC10593863, DOI: 10.1542/hpeds.2023-007295.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsEffect of HFNCICU servicesEffect modifiersHigh-flow nasal cannula therapyMulticenter retrospective cohort studyPediatric Health Information SystemAge groupsHigh-flow nasal cannulaNon-ICU patientsRetrospective cohort studyComplex chronic conditionsMultivariable Poisson regressionFuture prospective studiesPotential effect modifiersInitial desaturationInitial tachypneaCohort studyClinical factorsNasal cannulaHospital recordsProspective studyHospitalized childrenChronic conditionsHFNCPatients
2022
Injury-Related Pediatric Emergency Department Visits in the First Year of COVID-19.
Wells J, Rodean J, Cook L, Sills M, Neuman M, Kornblith A, Jain S, Hirsch A, Goyal M, Fleegler E, DeLaroche A, Aronson P, Leonard J. Injury-Related Pediatric Emergency Department Visits in the First Year of COVID-19. Pediatrics 2022, 150 PMID: 35836331, DOI: 10.1542/peds.2021-054545.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsInjury-related visitsInjury-related ED visitsHospital emergency departmentEmergency departmentED visitsSARS-CoV-2 pandemic periodAcute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 pandemicSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) pandemicChildren's hospital emergency departmentPediatric Health Information SystemUnited States children's hospitalsPrimary discharge diagnosisMechanism of injurySprains/strainsPediatric emergency departmentCoronavirus 2 pandemicCross-sectional studySARS-CoV-2 pandemicFirst yearPatient characteristicsChildren's HospitalDischarge diagnosisInjury patternsInjury typeAdministrative databases
2015
Association of clinical practice guidelines with emergency department management of febrile infants ≤56 days of age
Aronson PL, Thurm C, Williams DJ, Nigrovic LE, Alpern ER, Tieder JS, Shah SS, McCulloh RJ, Balamuth F, Schondelmeyer AC, Alessandrini EA, Browning WL, Myers AL, Neuman MI, Collaborative F. Association of clinical practice guidelines with emergency department management of febrile infants ≤56 days of age. Journal Of Hospital Medicine 2015, 10: 358-365. PMID: 25684689, PMCID: PMC4456211, DOI: 10.1002/jhm.2329.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAnti-Bacterial AgentsBlood Chemical AnalysisCeftriaxoneCerebrospinal FluidCost ControlCross-Sectional StudiesEmergency Service, HospitalFeverGuideline AdherenceHealth Care SurveysHealth Information SystemsHospitals, PediatricHumansInfantInfant, NewbornPractice Guidelines as TopicRetrospective StudiesUnited StatesUrinalysisConceptsClinical practice guidelinesCeftriaxone useCPG recommendationsInfants 29CSF testingHealthcare costsED dischargeFebrile infantsPractice guidelinesInstitutional clinical practice guidelinePediatric Health Information SystemRetrospective cross-sectional studyCerebrospinal fluid testingEmergency department managementCross-sectional studyLower healthcare costsRate of urineDiagnosis of feverDays of ageED visitsPractice variationDepartment managementAge groupsHealth information systemsFluid testing