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Pediatrician by Tio Manolo

Monday, March 30, 2026 Edition XXIX
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This Week in Pediatrics

Experts establish standardized protocols for pediatric recurrent wheezing diagnosis

These guidelines have been published in the journal Pediatric Investigation on March 5, 2026. Led by Professor Kunling Shen, a leading pediatric respiratory medicine expert from the National Center for Children's Health, Beijing, and Professor Yunxiao Shang from the Shengjin...

Pediatric Antibiotics Market Overall Study Report 2026-2033 | Johnson & Johnson, Astellas Pharma, Inc, Pfizer Inc.

Press release - Coherent Market Insights - Pediatric Antibiotics Market Overall Study Report 2026-2033 | Johnson & Johnson, Astellas Pharma, Inc, Pfizer Inc. - published on openPR.com

Doctors worry about FDA scrutiny of RSV shots to protect babies | KRWG Public Media

"Some of these children are sometimes on ventilators. And they can be on oxygen because they really can't breathe with this virus," says Dr. Yvonne Maldonado, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at Stanford University.

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Research of the Day

Bedtime Screen Use and Sleep Quality in School-Age Children: Actigraphy Study

Using wrist actigraphy and sleep diaries, this study objectively measured sleep in 800 children ages 6-12 with varying bedtime screen habits. Screen use within 1 hour of bedtime significantly delayed sleep onset and reduced total sleep time.

Key findings: (1) 30-minute average delay in sleep onset with bedtime screens; (2) 45-minute reduction in total sleep time; (3) Blue light filtering partially but not fully mitigated effects.

🩺 What this means for your practice:

Recommend screen-free wind-down periods of 1+ hours before bed. Counsel families on device-free bedrooms. Address screen habits as part of sleep hygiene discussions.

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Popular Beliefs

ADD/ADHD is caused by poor parenting or too much sugar

What the evidence shows: ADHD has strong genetic and neurobiological components. While environment can influence symptom severity, poor parenting and diet do not cause ADHD. Evidence-based treatments include behavioral therapy and, when appropriate, medication. Blaming parents is harmful and delays effective intervention.

Warm milk helps children sleep

What the evidence shows: While milk contains tryptophan (a sleep-promoting amino acid), the amount is modest. Any sleep benefit likely comes from the comforting ritual and warmth rather than pharmacologic effect. A consistent bedtime routine matters more than any single component.

Too many vaccines overwhelm a child's immune system

What the evidence shows: Children's immune systems handle vastly more antigens daily from the environment than from vaccines. Today's vaccines contain far fewer antigens than older versions despite protecting against more diseases. Studies show no increased infection rates in vaccinated children—vaccines strengthen, not weaken, immunity.

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Behaviors

Family Meal Frequency and Obesity Risk: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

This meta-analysis synthesized 45 studies examining the relationship between family meal frequency and childhood obesity. Children who shared regular family meals had significantly lower obesity risk and healthier eating patterns.

Key findings: (1) 3+ family meals/week associated with 12% lower overweight/obesity; (2) Higher fruit/vegetable intake and lower fast food consumption; (3) Protective effect independent of family structure or income.

🩺 What this means for your practice:

Encourage family meals as part of healthy lifestyle counseling. Even a few shared meals per week make a difference. Focus on the ritual and connection, not just nutrition.

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Genetics

Genetic Testing in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: Sports Participation Guidance

Updated guidelines incorporate genetic testing results into sports participation decisions for young athletes with HCM. Some genetically positive but phenotypically negative individuals may safely participate in athletics with appropriate monitoring.

Key findings: (1) Risk stratification improved with genetic markers; (2) Shared decision-making framework more nuanced than previous blanket restrictions; (3) Regular cardiac monitoring essential regardless of sport participation.

🩺 What this means for your practice:

Genetic testing can refine, but not eliminate, cardiac risk assessment. Refer to cardiology for any athlete with suspected or confirmed HCM. Shared decision-making with families is appropriate.

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Did You Know? Numbers & Statistics

50M
Antibiotic prescriptions to children annually in US
CDC, 2024
17 tsp
Average daily added sugar intake by children 2-19
CDC NHANES, 2024
10%
High school students reporting current e-cigarette use
CDC YRBS, 2024
23%
High school students getting 8+ hours of sleep
CDC YRBS, 2024