2024
“Let Us Take Care of the Medicine”: A Qualitative Analysis of Physician Communication When Caring for Febrile Infants
Gutman C, Fernandez R, McFarlane A, Krajewski J, Lion K, Aronson P, Bylund C, Holmes S, Fisher C. “Let Us Take Care of the Medicine”: A Qualitative Analysis of Physician Communication When Caring for Febrile Infants. Academic Pediatrics 2024, 24: 949-956. PMID: 38458491, DOI: 10.1016/j.acap.2024.03.002.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchPatient-centered communicationPatient-centerednessPhysicians' assumptionsEmergency departmentThematic analysis of interview transcriptsParent-physician interactionsAnalysis of interview transcriptsAcademic pediatric emergency departmentIdentification of themesPediatric emergency departmentHealth inequalitiesPhysician communicationThematic saturationPhysicians' perceptionsED physiciansHealth careSemistructured interviewsInfant guidelinesThematic analysisInterview transcriptsPhysiciansCareHealthMethods approachManagement of febrile infants
2023
Racial and Ethnic Differences in Insurer Classification of Nonemergent Pediatric Emergency Department Visits
Pomerantz A, De Souza H, Hall M, Neuman M, Goyal M, Samuels-Kalow M, Aronson P, Alpern E, Simon H, Hoffmann J, Wells J, Shanahan K, Gutman C, Peltz A. Racial and Ethnic Differences in Insurer Classification of Nonemergent Pediatric Emergency Department Visits. JAMA Network Open 2023, 6: e2311752. PMID: 37140920, PMCID: PMC10160869, DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.11752.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsUnique ED visitsED visitsPediatric ED visitsClaims algorithmHispanic childrenMore visitsReimbursement reductionsHispanic pediatric patientsNonemergent ED visitsCurrent Procedural Terminology codesEmergency department visitsPediatric emergency departmentPrimary care servicesProcedural Terminology codesWhite childrenProfessional reimbursementCommercial health insurerRetrospective cohortDate of birthDepartment visitsPediatric patientsStudy cohortEmergency departmentMedicaid databaseDiagnosis codes149 A Mixed Methods Analysis of Disparities in the Management of Low-Risk Febrile Infants
Gutman C, Aronson P, Lion K, Fisher C, McFarlane A, Bylund C, Fernandez R. 149 A Mixed Methods Analysis of Disparities in the Management of Low-Risk Febrile Infants. Journal Of Clinical And Translational Science 2023, 7: 45-45. PMCID: PMC10129715, DOI: 10.1017/cts.2023.230.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchLow-risk febrile infantsStandard of careFebrile infantsPhysician-parent communicationMulticenter cross-sectional studyInvasive bacterial infectionsPediatric emergency departmentCross-sectional studyEmergency departmentLumbar puncturePhysician interviewsModifiable targetsModifiable driversProfessional interpretationInfant raceInfantsBacterial infectionsPhysician behaviorHealth disparitiesLogistic regressionHealth equityFuture interventionsCareInfluence management decisionsResults/
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
2018
Epidemiology and Etiology of Invasive Bacterial Infection in Infants ≤60 Days Old Treated in Emergency Departments
Woll C, Neuman MI, Pruitt CM, Wang ME, Shapiro ED, Shah SS, McCulloh RJ, Nigrovic LE, Desai S, DePorre AG, Leazer RC, Marble RD, Balamuth F, Feldman EA, Sartori LF, Browning WL, Aronson PL, Collaborative F, Alpern E, Hayes K, Lee B, Lumb C, Mitchell C, Peaper D, Rooholamini S, Shin S, Williams D. Epidemiology and Etiology of Invasive Bacterial Infection in Infants ≤60 Days Old Treated in Emergency Departments. The Journal Of Pediatrics 2018, 200: 210-217.e1. PMID: 29784512, PMCID: PMC6109608, DOI: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2018.04.033.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsInvasive bacterial infectionsThird-generation cephalosporinsMicrobiology laboratory databaseEmergency departmentBacterial infectionsBacterial meningitisPediatric emergency departmentCombination of ampicillinAntimicrobial treatment regimenCross-sectional studyGroup B streptococciElectronic medical record systemEmpiric treatmentMedical record systemTreatment regimenChildren's HospitalMost infantsMedical recordsB streptococciCerebrospinal fluidCommon pathogensInfantsAntimicrobial susceptibilityDay oldsInfection
2014
Variation in Care of the Febrile Young Infant <90 Days in US Pediatric Emergency Departments
Aronson PL, Thurm C, Alpern ER, Alessandrini EA, Williams DJ, Shah SS, Nigrovic LE, McCulloh RJ, Schondelmeyer A, Tieder JS, Neuman MI. Variation in Care of the Febrile Young Infant <90 Days in US Pediatric Emergency Departments. Pediatrics 2014, 134: 667-677. PMID: 25266437, DOI: 10.1542/peds.2014-1382.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsFebrile young infantsPediatric emergency departmentUS pediatric emergency departmentsHospital-level variationEmergency departmentHospitalization ratesInterhospital variationYoung infantsAge groupsSignificant interhospital variationRetrospective cohort studyCerebrospinal fluid testingProportion of patientsQuality of careDays of ageInfants 29Substantial patientCohort studyED visitsOverall cohortPatient ageED managementDiagnosis codesInclusion criteriaModifiable source