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Pediatrician by Tio Manolo

Monday, April 6, 2026 Edition XXXVI
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This Week in Pediatrics

Q1 2026 recap: Top videos in pediatric care | Contemporary Pediatrics

The SMART trial serves as a pivotal study to bridge efficacy data from healthy infants, established in the CLEVER trial, to those with complex medical needs. Because clesrovimab is designed to target the viral F protein without interacting with the host, clinical protection is de...

Pediatrics: Weekly Events Digest - Yale School of Medicine

Breakthroughs in research and clinical care for children with complex motor stereotypies · The event will be held at Yale's Anlyan Center for Medical Research and Education in New Haven, Conn. Register in advance by April 3, 2026.

Pediatrics - Medscape

Your one-stop resource for medical news, clinical reference, and education. Sign up for FREE ... The ‘Peanut Panic’ was a self-fulfilling prophecy. Dr Christopher Labos discusses the pediatric food allergy epidemic and how we’re finally reversing the trend.

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Research of the Day

School Start Times and Adolescent Mental Health: A Natural Experiment

This natural experiment followed 50,000 high school students before and after a district-wide shift to later school start times (8:30am vs 7:15am). Students gained an average of 45 minutes of sleep per night and showed significant improvements in mental health markers over the 2-year study period.

Key findings: (1) 27% reduction in depressive symptoms; (2) 34% decrease in suicidal ideation reports; (3) Improved academic performance and attendance. Effects were most pronounced in students getting 8+ hours of sleep.

🩺 What this means for your practice:

These data support advocating for developmentally appropriate school start times. Middle and high school students need 8-10 hours of sleep—counsel families on sleep hygiene and the importance of adequate rest for mental health.

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Popular Beliefs

Teething causes high fevers and diarrhea

What the evidence shows: While teething may cause mild symptoms (gum irritation, drooling, slight temperature elevation), it does not cause high fever (>102°F/38.9°C) or diarrhea. These symptoms should prompt evaluation for other causes. Attributing significant illness to teething may delay diagnosis of serious conditions.

Eating carrots dramatically improves vision

What the evidence shows: While carrots contain vitamin A important for eye health, eating extra carrots won't improve normal vision or eliminate the need for glasses. Vitamin A deficiency can cause vision problems, but this is rare in developed countries with varied diets.

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.

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Behaviors

Green Space Exposure and Mental Health in Urban Adolescents

This longitudinal study followed 5,000 urban adolescents over 4 years, using GPS tracking to measure green space exposure. Greater exposure to parks and nature was associated with lower rates of depression and anxiety, independent of socioeconomic factors.

Key findings: (1) 20% lower depression risk with daily green space exposure; (2) Benefits dose-dependent—more exposure meant better outcomes; (3) Active use (sports, walking) showed greater benefits than passive exposure.

🩺 What this means for your practice:

Encourage outdoor time as part of mental health promotion. For families in urban areas, identify nearby parks and green spaces. Nature exposure is an accessible, cost-effective mental health intervention.

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Genetics

Newborn Screening: Recommended Uniform Screening Panel Updates

The Recommended Uniform Screening Panel (RUSP) has been updated to include three additional conditions: Pompe disease, MPS I, and X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy. States are implementing expanded screening with early treatment implications.

Key findings: (1) Early identification allows treatment before symptom onset; (2) Cost-effectiveness demonstrated for new conditions; (3) Primary care providers need to understand screening results and follow-up.

🩺 What this means for your practice:

Know your state's newborn screening panel. Ensure timely follow-up of abnormal screens. Early treatment dramatically improves outcomes for many of these conditions.

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Did You Know? Numbers & Statistics

73%
Children 19-35 months with complete recommended vaccinations
CDC NIS, 2024
84%
Infants ever breastfed in the US
CDC Breastfeeding Report Card, 2024
17 tsp
Average daily added sugar intake by children 2-19
CDC NHANES, 2024
5.4M
Children under 18 with asthma in the United States
CDC, 2024