Journal of pediatric surgery
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To characterize variation in practice patterns and resource utilization associated with the management of intussusception at Children's Hospitals. ⋯ Significant variation in practice patterns and resource utilization exists between Children's Hospitals in the management of intussusception. Prospective analysis of practice variation and appropriately risk-adjusted outcomes through a collaborative quality-improvement platform could accelerate the dissemination of best-practice guidelines for optimizing cost-effective care.
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Multicenter Study
American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Pediatric: a beta phase report.
The American College of Surgeons (ACS) National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Pediatric (NSQIP-P) expanded to beta phase testing with the enrollment of 29 institutions. Data collection and analysis were aimed at program refinement and development of risk-adjusted models for inter-institutional comparisons. ⋯ This report represents the first risk-adjusted hospital-level comparison of surgical outcomes in infants and children using NSQIP-P data. Programmatic and analytic modifications will improve the impact of this program as it moves into full implementation. These results indicate that NSQIP-P has the potential to serve as a model for determining risk-adjusted outcomes in the neonatal and pediatric population with the goal of developing quality improvement initiatives for the surgical care of children.
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Review Case Reports
Medullary thyroid carcinoma in ethnic Chinese with MEN2A: a case report and literature review.
Medullary Thyroid Carcinoma (MTC) is the most common cause of death in MEN patients. It is curative by prophylactic total thyroidectomy, but controversies remain as to the optimal timing for prophylactic thyroidectomy. ⋯ We report a case of an ethnic Chinese girl with MEN2A codon 634 (C634R) mutation, whose operative specimen at prophylactic thyroidectomy at 4 years 8 months showed MTC. We advocate that management of MEN2A patients should be codon-directed, regardless of ethnicity.
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Current healthcare reform efforts have highlighted the potential impact of insurance status on patient outcomes. The influence of primary payer status (PPS) within the pediatric surgical patient population remains unknown. The purpose of this study was to examine risk-adjusted associations between PPS and postoperative mortality, morbidity, and resource utilization in pediatric surgical patients within the United States. ⋯ Primary payer status is associated with risk-adjusted postoperative mortality, morbidity, and resource utilization among pediatric surgical patients. Uninsured patients are at increased risk for postoperative mortality while Medicaid patients accrue greater morbidity, hospital lengths of stay, and total charges. These results highlight a complex interaction between socioeconomic and patient-related factors, and primary payer status should be considered in the preoperative risk stratification of pediatric patients.
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Comparative Study
Pedicled skin flap of foreskin for phalloplasty in the management of completely concealed penis.
To evaluate the effect of pedicled skin flap of foreskin for phalloplasty in the management of completely concealed penis. ⋯ Numerous operative procedures have been described and adopted for the management of completely concealed penis, but the pedicled skin flap phalloplasty can achieve maximum utilization of prepuce to assure coverage of the exposed penile shaft. It has fewer complications, achieving marked aesthetics and often functional improvement. This suggests pedicled foreskin skin flap for phalloplasty is a relatively ideal means for treating completely concealed penis.