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Characteristics of infants or children presenting to outpatient bronchopulmonary dysplasia clinics in the United States.

Joseph M CollacoAmit AgarwalEric D AustinLystra P HaydenKhanh LaiJonathan LevinWinston M ManimtimPaul E MooreCatherine A SheilsMichael C TracyStamatia AlexiouChristopher D BakerAura Ioana CristeaJulie L FierroLawrence M RheinNatalie VillafrancoLeif D NelinSharon A McGrath-Morrow
Published in: Pediatric pulmonology (2021)
This examination of a multicenter collaborative registry of children born prematurely with respiratory disease demonstrates a diversity of management strategies among geographically distinct tertiary care BPD centers in the United States. This study reveals that the majority of children followed in these clinics were nonwhite and that neither variation in management nor severity of BPD at 36 weeks influenced outpatient acute care utilization. These findings suggest that post-neonatal intensive care unit factors and follow-up may modify respiratory outcomes in BPD, possibly independently of severity.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • acute care
  • tertiary care
  • primary care
  • preterm infants
  • gestational age
  • type diabetes
  • metabolic syndrome
  • quality improvement
  • insulin resistance
  • preterm birth