This Week in Pediatrics
Pediatrics - Medscape
Is Hypertension Undertreated in Pediatrics? Medscape Medical News May 21, 2026 · Prior Auth Rules Vary Widely Across Insurers, Study Finds · Medscape Medical News May 21, 2026 · PAS 2026 · Congenital CMV Linked to Substantial Long-Term Health Issues · Medscape Medical News May 21...
Is Hypertension Undertreated in Pediatrics?
The study population included 107,884 ... at the Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS) 2026 Meeting. Significantly fewer children than adults received an ARB (12.5% vs 42.0%)....
New surgeon general’s advisory raises alarm about screen time risks for kids and teens | CNN
The new surgeon general’s advisory mirrors many of those recommendations, including creating a family media plan and modeling healthy media habits. The American Academy of Pediatrics also recommends employing the “5 Cs of Media Use,” which are for families to consider media in th...
Research of the Day
Delayed Epinephrine Administration in Pediatric Anaphylaxis: Multi-Center Analysis
This multi-center retrospective study analyzed 2,800 pediatric anaphylaxis cases across 12 children's hospitals. Delayed epinephrine administration (>15 minutes from symptom onset) occurred in 42% of cases and was associated with increased risk of severe outcomes and biphasic reactions.
Key findings: (1) Delayed epinephrine associated with 3.2x increased odds of hospitalization; (2) Food-induced reactions most likely to have delayed treatment; (3) Many families cited fear of injection or uncertainty about symptoms as reasons for delay.
Reinforce epinephrine-first messaging for anaphylaxis. Ensure families can recognize symptoms and use auto-injectors confidently. Consider demonstration at every visit for patients with prescribed epinephrine.
Popular Beliefs
Reading to babies is pointless—they don't understand
What the evidence shows: Research consistently demonstrates that reading to infants from birth supports language development, vocabulary acquisition, and later literacy skills. Even before understanding words, babies benefit from hearing language patterns, rhythm, and the bonding experience. The AAP recommends reading aloud beginning in infancy.
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.
Chocolate causes acne
What the evidence shows: The relationship between diet and acne is complex. Some studies suggest high-glycemic diets and dairy may worsen acne, but chocolate specifically has not been definitively proven to cause breakouts. Individual responses vary—advise patients to observe their own triggers.
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.
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.
Genetics
Gene Therapy for Congenital Hearing Loss: Breakthrough Trial
First successful gene therapy trial for DFNB9 deafness (otoferlin deficiency) shows restoration of hearing in children with previously profound hearing loss. Treated children gained ability to hear speech without cochlear implants.
Key findings: (1) 8 of 10 children gained functional hearing; (2) Benefit sustained at 18-month follow-up; (3) Earlier treatment showed better outcomes.
Genetic forms of deafness may become treatable. This changes the conversation with families about hearing loss prognosis. Genetic testing for hearing loss is increasingly important for treatment planning.