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Pediatrician by Tio Manolo

Monday, May 4, 2026 Edition XXXXXXIV
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This Week in Pediatrics

Contemporary Pediatrics – Clinical News & Pediatrician Practice Tips

Donna Hallas, PhD, PPCNP-BC, CPNP, ... Pediatrics, focused on nutrition. ... The FDA cleared a generic Infuvite Pediatric injection for children receiving parenteral nutrition, adding a new option for hospital supp...

Reactions to the CDC changing the childhood vaccine schedule | Contemporary Pediatrics

Click on the video above to watch our 2025 recap and what further may be in store as we begin 2026. ... Fitch J. CDC changes childhood vaccine schedule, recommends fewer vaccines for all children. Contemporary Pediatrics. January 5, 2026.

Home | AAP

2026 Section/Council Elections are underway. Continuing Medical Education from AAP helps you stay current in practice and provides tools and resources for every stage of your career.

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Research of the Day

Early Antibiotic Exposure and Neurodevelopmental Outcomes: A Population-Based Cohort Study

This large population-based cohort study examined over 1.2 million children to investigate the association between antibiotic exposure in the first year of life and subsequent neurodevelopmental outcomes. The researchers found a modest but statistically significant association between early broad-spectrum antibiotic use and increased risk of ADHD and autism spectrum disorder diagnoses, though the absolute risk increase remained small.

Key findings include: (1) Children exposed to antibiotics in the first year had a 12% increased relative risk of ADHD diagnosis; (2) The association was stronger with repeated courses of broad-spectrum antibiotics; (3) The effect persisted after adjusting for maternal infections and other confounders.

🩺 What this means for your practice:

While the study shows an association, causation is not established. The findings support judicious antibiotic use in infants—prescribing when clinically indicated, but avoiding unnecessary courses.

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Popular Beliefs

Organic food is significantly more nutritious

What the evidence shows: Organic foods have lower pesticide residues, but studies show minimal nutritional differences compared to conventional foods. What matters most for health is eating a variety of fruits and vegetables, whether organic or conventional.

Children outgrow ADHD

What the evidence shows: While symptoms often change with age, approximately 60% of children with ADHD continue to have symptoms into adulthood. Hyperactivity typically decreases, but inattention and impulsivity often persist. Ongoing monitoring and treatment adjustment is important across the lifespan.

Green mucus means bacterial infection requiring antibiotics

What the evidence shows: Mucus color changes naturally during viral infections and does not reliably distinguish viral from bacterial causes. Green/yellow mucus indicates immune cell activity, which occurs in both viral and bacterial infections. Antibiotics should be prescribed based on clinical criteria, not mucus color.

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Behaviors

Screen Time and Executive Function in Preschoolers: A Longitudinal Analysis

This prospective cohort study followed 850 children from ages 2 to 5 years, examining the relationship between screen time exposure and executive function development. Researchers used validated parent-report measures and direct assessments of working memory, inhibitory control, and cognitive flexibility.

Children with more than 2 hours of daily screen time at age 2 showed lower scores on executive function measures at age 5. Notably, the type of screen content mattered—educational programming showed smaller associations than passive entertainment viewing. Joint parent-child viewing partially mitigated negative effects.

🩺 What this means for your practice:

These findings support counseling families on the AAP recommendation of less than 1 hour per day of high-quality programming for children 2-5 years. Emphasize co-viewing and educational content when screens are used. Executive function is crucial for school readiness and later academic success.

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Genetics

CRISPR Gene Editing for Sickle Cell Disease: Long-Term Follow-Up

Long-term data from CRISPR-edited sickle cell patients shows durable remission of vaso-occlusive crises in 95% of treated patients at 4-year follow-up. The one-time treatment has transformed the disease trajectory for participants.

Key findings: (1) No vaso-occlusive crises in 95% of patients; (2) Hemoglobin levels maintained in normal range; (3) No off-target editing effects detected. Access and affordability remain challenges.

🩺 What this means for your practice:

Curative therapy for sickle cell disease is now reality, though access barriers remain. Stay informed about treatment centers and insurance coverage in your area. Early referral for evaluation is appropriate.

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Did You Know? Numbers & Statistics

84%
Infants ever breastfed in the US
CDC Breastfeeding Report Card, 2024
42%
High school students reporting persistent sadness or hopelessness
CDC YRBS, 2024
8%
Children with food allergies
CDC NCHS, 2024
24%
Children meeting 60 min/day physical activity guideline
CDC YRBS, 2024