(Press-News.org) CHAPEL HILL, NC – Historically, most children in the United States who needed to be hospitalized were treated at general hospitals that treat both children and adults. But the number of hospitals providing inpatient care for children has decreased over the last decade, and many of them struggled to keep up with the demand for children’s care during a viral infection surge in the fall of 2022.
Now children are much more likely to be treated at children’s hospitals that are concentrated into fewer locations, according to a new study led by UNC School of Medicine researchers.
“The inpatient care of children has shifted dramatically over the past 20 years,” said Michael Steiner, MD, MPH, lead author of the study, which was published October 30 in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
“Children are much less likely now to be hospitalized at their local hospitals that care for both children and adults, and much more likely to be hospitalized in higher volume children’s specialty centers. Additionally, other than neonates after birth, fewer older children are having inpatient admissions. These changes have important implications for hospital planning and readiness, systems to provide high-quality child-specific transport, and capacity needs at children’s hospitals,” said Steiner, who is pediatrician-in-chief at UNC Children’s Hospital, Vice Chair of Clinical Affairs in the Department of Pediatrics, and Michael F. Durfee Distinguished Professor of Pediatrics at the UNC School of Medicine.
Steiner and his study co-authors reached these conclusions after analyzing data of pediatric inpatient discharges from nearly 4,000 hospitals in 48 states across the country between 2000 and 2019. More than 14 million discharges were included in their analysis. Birth hospitalization discharges were not included.
They found that annual inpatient discharges decreased from 2000 to 2019 by 26.5%. But during the same period, discharges from children’s hospitals increased from 58.9% of total discharges in 2000 to 81.8% in 2019.
In addition, they found an increase in the number of children who were transferred from one hospital to another prior to their discharge. In 2000, 6.1% of pediatric patients experienced an interfacility transfer. In 2019, that increased to 18.8%, and 88% of these children were transferred to a children’s hospital.
Study co-authors from UNC’s Department of Pediatrics are Ashley G. Sutton, MD; John R. Stephens, MD; and Lindsay Chase, MD. Co-authors from outside UNC are Matt Hall, PhD, of the Children’s Hospital Association; JoAnna K. Leyenaar, MD, PhD, MPH, of the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth; and Corrie E. McDaniel, DO, of the University of Washington School of Medicine.
END
Hospital care for children has shifted from general hospitals to children’s hospitals over last 20 years
Children’s hospital care is now concentrated in fewer locations, and this has important implications for hospital planning and readiness, according to a new study led Michael Steiner, MD, MPH, of UNC Health.
2023-10-30
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
The brain may learn about the world the same way some computational models do
2023-10-30
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- To make our way through the world, our brain must develop an intuitive understanding of the physical world around us, which we then use to interpret sensory information coming into the brain.
How does the brain develop that intuitive understanding? Many scientists believe that it may use a process similar to what’s known as “self-supervised learning.” This type of machine learning, originally developed as a way to create more efficient models for computer vision, allows computational models to learn about visual scenes based solely on the similarities and differences between them, with no ...
Largest brain autopsy study of female intimate partner violence decedents reveals brain injury pathology unlike that seen among male contact sports athletes
2023-10-30
The largest brain autopsy study of women who had experienced intimate partner violence reveals substantial vascular and white matter damage in the brain, but no evidence of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), the neurodegenerative disease recognized among male contact sports athletes who sustain repeated head trauma.
The international collaboration, led by a team from the Brain Injury Research Center of Mount Sinai in collaboration with the New York City Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, appears in the most recent issue of Acta Neuropathologica.
Importantly, ...
Soy expansion in Brazil linked to increase in childhood leukemia deaths
2023-10-30
URBANA, Ill. – Over the past decades, Brazil has become the world’s leading soybean producer, as well as the leading consumer of pesticides. Despite concerns about potential public health consequences, little is known about the effects of pesticide exposure in the general population. A new study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign in collaboration with the University of Denver and University of Wisconsin-Madison looks at how soy expansion and increased pesticide use in Brazil’s Cerrado and Amazon biomes correlate with increased childhood cancer mortality.
“The Brazilian Amazon region is undergoing a transition ...
Amazon deforestation linked to long distance climate warming
2023-10-30
Deforestation in the Amazon causes land surfaces up to 100 kilometres away to get warmer, according to a new study.
The research, by a team of British and Brazilian scientists, led by Dr Edward Butt at the University of Leeds, suggests that tropical forests play a critical role in cooling the land surface - and that effect can play out over considerable distances.
It is known that when tropical forests are cleared, the climate in the immediate vicinity gets warmer.
In this latest study, the researchers wanted to know if deforestation in the Amazon was resulting in climate warming further afield, and the study examined the impact of forest loss on sites up to ...
NYU Abu Dhabi researchers reveal how common desert shrub efficiently harvests water from the air
2023-10-30
Abu Dhabi, UAE, October 2023: A team of scientists, led by Post-Doctoral Associate Marieh Al-Handawi and Professor of Chemistry Panče Naumov from NYU Abu Dhabi’s Smart Materials Lab and NYU Abu Dhabi Institute’s Center for Smart Engineering Materials (CSEM) has revealed the mechanism a desert plant native to the United Arab Emirates uses to capture moisture from the desert air in order to survive. The identification of this unique mechanism, in which the plant excretes salts to extract and condense water onto the surface of its leaves, has the potential to inspire ...
Royal Canadian Institute for Science recognizes the unsung heroes of science communication
2023-10-30
The Royal Canadian Institute for Science (RCIScience) awards the 2023 Sandford Fleming Medal for Excellence in Science Communication to independent science writer Terry Collins and the William Edmond Logan Award to the team behind CBC Radio's national weekly science program, Quirks & Quarks.
A knowledge translator for over 27 years, Terry Collins' reporting has been picked up by journalists in Canada and worldwide, awakening public interest in and deepening understanding of diverse sciences, fostering political will and mobilizing resources for change.
Nominator Dr. Peter A. Singer, former Special Advisor to the Director-General of the World Health Organization, ...
Institute for Systems Biology and NED Biosystems announce collaboration to show how cancer’s onset may be reversed
2023-10-30
SEATTLE – Leroy Hood, MD, PhD, co-founder of Seattle’s Institute for Systems Biology (ISB) and a pioneer in systems biology, and Rebecca Lambert, founder and CEO of NED Biosystems, Inc. (NED), a public benefit corporation that is developing the first oral “systems treatment” for cancer, have entered into a memorandum of understanding to collaborate on a clinical trial to show how cancer’s onset may be reversed.
NED’s cancer treatment, NED-170, takes a systems approach that combines repurposed, oral agents that are well documented in humans to affect critical cancer disease-driver processes at doses that lack customary toxicity and side effects.
“A ...
Women with physical disabilities are less likely to be screened for cervical cancer than women without disabilities
2023-10-30
Around 11,500 new cases of cervical cancer are diagnosed each year in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). The CDC tracks cervical cancer rates by age, race, and ethnicity, but not by disability type. A 2022 study found that women with disabilities may encounter multiple social and economic barriers to accessing reproductive health care, and a lack of timely access to cervical cancer screening may lead to delayed diagnosis and treatment for cervical cancer.
According to research by Mason PhD in Public Health ...
Department of Energy announces $11.4 million for research on quantum information science for fusion energy sciences
2023-10-30
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Today, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced $11.4 million for six projects in quantum information science (QIS) with relevance to fusion and plasma science.
The Fusion Energy Sciences (FES) program supports fundamental research to expand the understanding of matter at very high temperatures and densities and to build the scientific foundation needed to develop a fusion energy source. The QIS portfolio within FES supports research opportunities outlined in the 2018 Fusion Energy Sciences Roundtable on Quantum Information Science report. It includes science and technology thrusts where QIS might have a transformative impact on FES ...
RIT scientists receive grant to expand work on a sign language lexicon for chemistry
2023-10-30
A team of scientists at Rochester Institute of Technology will expand its work after receiving a large grant from the National Science Foundation to make chemistry more accessible for students who rely on American Sign Language interpreters in class.
Christina Goudreau Collison, professor in the School of Chemistry and Materials Science; Jennifer Swartzenberg, senior lecturer in the National Technical Institute for the Deaf’s Department of Science and Mathematics; Lea Michel, professor in the School of Chemistry and Materials Science; and Pepsi Holmquist, visiting assistant professor in NTID’s Department of Science and Mathematics, have been awarded nearly $380,000 ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
New study finds high concentrations of plastics in the placentae of infants born prematurely
New robotic surgical systems revolutionizing patient care
New MSK research a step toward off-the-shelf CAR T cell therapy for cancer
UTEP professor wins prestigious research award from American Psychological Association
New national study finds homicide and suicide is the #1 cause of maternal death in the U.S.
Women’s pelvic tissue tears during childbirth unstudied, until now
Earth scientists study Sikkim flood in India to help others prepare for similar disasters
Leveraging data to improve health equity and care
Why you shouldn’t scratch an itchy rash: New study explains
Linking citation and retraction data aids in responsible research evaluation
Antibody treatment prevents severe bird flu in monkeys
Polar bear energetic model reveals drivers of polar bear population decline
Socioeconomic and political stability bolstered wild tiger recovery in India
Scratching an itch promotes antibacterial inflammation
Drivers, causes and impacts of the 2023 Sikkim flood in India
Most engineered human cells created for studying disease
Polar bear population decline the direct result of extended ‘energy deficit’ due to lack of food
Lifecycle Journal launches: A new vision for scholarly publishing
Ancient DNA analyses bring to life the 11,000-year intertwined genomic history of sheep and humans
Climate change increases risk of successive natural hazards in the Himalayas
From bowling balls to hip joints: Chemists create recyclable alternative to durable plastics
Promoting cacao production without sacrificing biodiversity
New £2 million project to save UK from food shortages
SCAI mourns Frank J. Hildner, MD, FSCAI: A founder and leader
New diagnostic tool will help LIGO hunt gravitational waves
Social entrepreneurs honored for lifesaving innovations
Aspects of marriage counseling may hold the key to depolarizing, unifying the country, study finds
With $2 million in new funding, Montana State research lab continues explorations into viruses and honeybee health
Scientists chip away at potato storage problems
Research update: Generating electricity from tacky tape
[Press-News.org] Hospital care for children has shifted from general hospitals to children’s hospitals over last 20 yearsChildren’s hospital care is now concentrated in fewer locations, and this has important implications for hospital planning and readiness, according to a new study led Michael Steiner, MD, MPH, of UNC Health.