Infectious Diseases in Children Current Issue
The following articles appeared in the print edition of Infectious Diseases in Children.
Table of Contents
- The 2010-2011 influenza vaccine and related matters
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- Children who eat school-purchased lunches more likely to be overweight, obese
- Climate changes may alter pollen counts
- Cotreating children receiving ART for TB may reduce viral suppression
- Current research for rhinovirus interventions remains sparse
- Folate levels related to pediatric asthma
- HAART decreased viral load in pregnant women
- Immunotherapy as prevention for asthma remains debatable
- Lessons learned from response to H1N1 pandemic
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- Maternal use of HAART may cause multidrug resistance in breast-feeding infants
- Mothers may prevent development of food allergies in children
- Panel endorses preparticipation sports physicals for every child
- Pediatric asthma management remains challenging for physicians
- Physician work hours dropped in last decade
- Respiratory synctial virus epidemiology patterns remain stable
- U.S. asthma prevalence increased from 2000 to 2008
- Would you support routine ECG screening for young competitive athletes?
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- 12-year-olds more likely to use deadly inhalants than cigarettes or marijuana
- Ethosuximide named most effective treatment for childhood epilepsy
- Gene linked to allergic inflammatory diseases
- San Diego measles outbreak highlights consequences of intentional undervaccination
- Screening for infant hearing loss increased in the United States
- Stress during pregnancy may alter child's immune system
- Study suggests that MS may be caused by Epstein-Barr virus
- WHO releases new malaria guidelines
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- AOM: Guideline use and antibiotic choice differ among clinicians
- Comparing the HPV vaccines
- 17-year-old patient with fever and rash
- 16-year-old with lacerations to the eye