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Eugene Dinkevich a Department
of Pediatrics, State University of New York at Brooklyn, Brooklyn, New
York, NY11203, USA, b Division of General Pediatrics,
University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL 60612, USA, c Center for Population Health and Evidence Based Medicine,
Department of Pediatrics, University of Texas at Houston, TX 77030, USA Correspondence to: V A Moyer Virginia.A.Moyer{at}uth.tmc.edu
Your primary
care paediatric practice has recently decided to review its
preventive care practices before deciding which to include in a new
computerised record system. You know that these practices vary
considerably among group members, even as to how many check ups a child
really needs. The value of some specific manoeuvres, such as the Adams
forward bend test for scoliosis, for which adolescents are often
referred from school, is doubted. You determine to find the best
evidence for common preventive health interventions for children.
Routine checks on apparently healthy children are an important
part of preventive services available for children. In developed countries outside the United States, paediatricians are trained to
practise as hospital based specialists providing clinical care, while
general practitioners and public health nurses are responsible for
preventive care, including care of healthy children.1 In the United States, general paediatricians provide both preventive and
clinical care and spend as much as 40% of their time checking healthy
children.2
The major objective of these check ups is maintenance of health and
prevention of disease. This is traditionally accomplished by repeated
evaluations of healthy children under five heads: screening, health
promotion, disease prevention, patient management, and follow up.
A routine check up includes history taking, physical examination,
observation of parent-child interaction, and laboratory testing. All of
these are forms of screening but little is known about their
effectiveness at different ages. Guidelines developed by the American
Academy of Pediatrics3 recommend the topics to review
during history taking, but time is often short and topics that interest
the paediatrician do not always interest the parents.4 The
recommendations for screening physical examinations of the American
Academy of Pediatrics, the Canadian Task Force on Periodic Health
Examination,5 and the British Royal College of General Practitioners6 differ greatly. The American academy
recommends a complete examination at each visit, while the Canadian and
British agencies recommend only specific forms of physical examination on each occasion. The discrepancy between the recommendations and
variability among practice styles are due to the scarcity of evidence
linking the well child examination to measurable clinical outcomes.7
Health promotion and disease prevention include age specific
counselling called anticipatory guidance. Although practices vary with
different settings and paediatricians, a number of studies have
attempted to measure the effectiveness of anticipatory guidance. Patient management and follow up are also important parts of well child
care. There is a growing body of clinical evidence specifically on
these components of the health supervision visit (see below).
The situation outlined above and the brief background overview suggest
a number of questions about well child care and its effectiveness. You
wish to use an evidence based approach, so you formulate three
questions in a manner that maximises the yield from searching: each
question includes the population, the intervention, and the outcome of
interest. You look first for high quality systematic reviews and
evidence based guidelines to answer your questions in one or more of
the Cochrane Library, the Best Evidence database, Medline (Ovid), and
PubMed Clinical Queries.
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THE CASE
Top
THE CASE
Background
Summary of evidence
Applying the evidence
Conclusion
References
Summary points
Fewer visits than in the standard schedules for children up to
age 2 years are sufficient to detect physical abnormalities and
psychosocial and developmental outcomes
Group care is as effective as individual care for routine checks
The Adams forward bend test is not accurate enough for screening for
idiopathic scoliosis
Proving the value of check ups for healthy children and finding new and
more effective ways to provide preventive care to all children remain
major challenges
![]()
Background
Top
THE CASE
Background
Summary of evidence
Applying the evidence
Conclusion
References
Search: Cochrane Library: "well child care"; "well baby care"; "child health supervision"; Best Evidence: "well child care"; "well baby care"; "child health supervision"; Medline (Ovid): "number of well child visits"; "number of well baby visits"; "number of health supervision visits"
Search: Medline (Ovid): "group well child care"; "group health supervision"
Search: Cochrane Library: "scoliosis"; "cobb";
"spine"; Best Evidence: "scoliosis"; "cobb"; "spine";
PubMed: Clinical Queries
Diagnosis
Specificity: "scoliosis"
and "forward bend".
You find no reviews or citations in the Cochrane Library or the Best Evidence database. Your search of Medline yields eight documents for the first question, two of which seem pertinent. 8 9 The strategy for the search on group well child care brings up 12 citations, of which two look both relevant and methodologically sound. Two of the four studies of the Adams test are directly relevant to your question. You call the library and order all of the articles as well as the US Preventive Services Task Force report on scoliosis that one of your colleagues says he uses as the basis for not performing this test.
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Summary of evidence |
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Frequency of health supervision visits
In a randomised controlled trial of healthy full term infants
carried out in the United States from 1971 to 1973, investigators
compared a schedule of three health supervision visits in the first
year with the existing standard six visits (to either a paediatrician
or a paediatric nurse practitioner). The three visit schedule included
two additional visits to a nurse for immunisation, but no additional
visits to a paediatrician or paediatric nurse practitioner.
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Group well child care
In group well child care, the provider facilitates discussion of child rearing issues with a group of parents of similarly
aged children. Two randomised trials have compared the effectiveness of
group and individual well child care for infants in the first year of
life in households with middle and low incomes. Rice et
al11 randomised patients in groups of four to assure similar ages for each well child care group, while Taylor et
al12-14 randomised individual subjects. Study completion
rate was 88% in the study by Rice et al, but 67% in the
study by Taylor et al. Both studies used an intention to
treat analysis, but owing to the nature of the study, neither the
subjects nor the investigators were blind to the relevant intervention.
In the study by Taylor et al, the same nurse practitioners provided
care for both groups, so observer bias may have been introduced if the
nurse practitioners treated the two groups differently. No report of
concomitant interventions was given for either study, and the groups
were similar in most respects at the beginning of the study. There were
no significant differences between the groups in utilisation measures,
maternal-child interaction, child development, or maternal
outcomes. These two studies show that group well child care is as
effective as individual care in low risk middle class and high
risk socioeconomically disadvantaged families.
Adams forward bend test for scoliosis
The first of the two useful studies of the Adams test
retrieved, by Cote et al, using a referral population at a university
hospital, deals directly with your question.15 Two
independent investigators examined 105 consecutively referred patients
(87 girls) with a mean age of 15.5 (SD 4.8) years. All but two (with
congenital scoliosis) had adolescent idiopathic scoliosis and 26 had already undergone some treatment for the condition. The gold
standard for the diagnosis of scoliosis was a Cobb angle measurement of
20° on full spine x ray (determined by a third
investigator). A positive forward bend test was defined as the
appearance, to both examiners, of any trunk asymmetry.
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40° at the time of diagnosis or subsequently) than in
the study by Cote et al was used to define clinically significant
scoliosis. Those who had negative results were followed up for four
years. Of 8686 girls initially enrolled, 5179 (59%) were re-examined
four years later. Only this cohort was used to assess the diagnostic
characteristics of the screening test. As in the study by Cote et al,
negative results by the Adams test were found to be more reliable for
clinical purposes than a positive results (table). This was true even
though the likelihood ratio for a positive Adams test was relatively
high at 8.5. The key to understanding this apparent anomaly lies in
considering both the prevalence of scoliosis in the study cohort and
the severity of disease as defined by the investigators. The prevalence
of curvature
40° in the Dublin school population who attended long term follow up was 0.1%. Given this low prevalence, patients with a
positive Adams test would have a 1% chance of having significant scoliosis. It is doubtful that an increase in disease probability from
0.1% to 0.9% would cross a test or treatment threshold. In the case
of a negative test, the upper end of the 95% confidence interval is
not very different from 1. You conclude that the disease severity is
likely to be similar to your setting and the Adams test does not appear
adequate to confidently rule scoliosis
40° in or out.
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Applying the evidence |
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At your next staff meeting, you report that you found little specific evidence for the overall effectiveness of well child care, and no evidence was found to support the current American Academy of Pediatrics recommendation for 20 visits by the 21st birthday. The two relevant studies concluded that a schedule with fewer visits had no detrimental effect on child health. In addition, group well child care was shown to be as effective as individual care. You also report that, for reasons of spectrum bias and small or imprecise likelihood ratios, neither of the two recent studies you reviewed about the Adams test provided sufficient evidence to recommend the test. You agree to review the literature periodically for newly published studies on this topic.
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The search criteria given in these articles are intended to illustrate principles: they are not likely to be precisely replicable, as the literature is continually being updated. Readers interested in designing their own searches may find the explanatory chapter in the book from which this series has been taken useful.20 |
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Conclusion |
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Well child care incorporates many screening tests (history and
physical examination) and therapeutic interventions (anticipatory guidance, etc). Unfortunately almost no evidence is available to
validate most of what goes to make up the health supervision visit.
Recently, two Canadian physicians, Leslie and James Rourke, have
attempted to develop an evidence based approach to well child care.19 The Rourke baby record, a health supervision guide
for infants and young children, incorporates recommendations of the Canadian task force on periodic health examination which were based on
the available evidence relevant to health screening in infants and
young children. While much of the Rourke baby record is evidence based,
much still has to rely on expert opinion. The record itself has yet to
be evaluated in terms of its effects on clinically relevant
outcomes
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Footnotes |
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Series editor: Virginia A Moyer
Funding: None
Competing interests: None declared.
Evidence Based Pediatrics
and Child Health can be purchased through the BMJ Bookshop
(www.bmjbookshop.com); further information and updates for
the book are available on
www.evidbasedpediatrics.com
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References |
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| 1. | Child health in 1990: the US compared to Canada, England and Wales, France, the Netherlands and Norway. Proceedings of a conference, Washington, DC, March 18 and 19, 1990. Pediatrics 1990;86(suppl):1025-7. |
| 2. | Hoekelman RA. Well child care revisited. Am J Dis Child 1983; 137: 1057-1060[Abstract]. |
| 3. | Committee on Psychosocial Aspects of Child and Family Health. American Academy of Pediatrics (1997) guidelines for health supervision III. Elk Grove Village, IL: American Academy of Pediatrics, 1997. |
| 4. |
Hinkson GB, Altemeier WA, O'Connor S.
Concerns of mothers seeking care in private pediatric offices: opportunities for expanding services.
Pediatrics
1983;
72:
619-624 |
| 5. | Canadian Task Force on the Periodic Health Examination. The Canadian guide to clinical preventive health care. Ottawa: Canadian Government Publishing, 1994. |
| 6. | Office of Technology Assessment, US Congress. Well child care. In: Healthy children: investing in the future. Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office, 1988:121. (Publication OTA-H-345.) |
| 7. | Hoekelman RA. An appraisal of the effectiveness of child health supervision. Curr Opin Pediatr 1989; 1: 146-155. |
| 8. |
Hoekelman RA.
What constitutes adequate well-baby care?
Pediatrics
1975;
55:
313-326 |
| 9. | Gilbert JR, Feldman W, Siegel LS, Mills DA, Dunnett C, Stoddart G. How many well-baby visits are necessary in the first 2 years of life? Can Med Assoc J 1984; 130: 857-861[Abstract]. |
| 10. | Van Doornininck WJ, Caldwell BM, Wright C, Frankernburg WK. The relationship between twelve-month home stimulation and school achievement. Child Dev 1981; 52: 1080-1083[Medline]. |
| 11. |
Rice RL, Slater CJ.
An analysis of group versus individual child health supervision.
Clin Pediatr
1997;
36:
685-689 |
| 12. |
Taylor JA, Davis RL, Kemper KJ.
A randomized controlled trial of group versus individual well child care for high-risk children: maternal-child interaction and developmental outcomes.
Pediatrics
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99:
e9 |
| 13. |
Taylor JA, Davis RL, Kemper KJ.
Health care utilization and health status in high-risk children randomized to receive group or individual well child care.
Pediatrics
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100:
e1 |
| 14. |
Taylor JA, Kemper KJ.
Group well child care for high-risk families: maternal outcomes.
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med
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| 15. | Cote P, Kreitz BG, Cassidy DJ, Dzus AK, Martel J. A study of the diagnostic accuracy and reliability of the scoliometer and Adams forward-bend test. Spine 1998; 23: 796-803[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 16. | Goldberg CJ, Dowling FE, Fogarty EE, Moore DP. School scoliosis screening and the United States Preventive Services Task Force. An examination of long-term results. Spine 1995; 20: 1368-1374[Medline]. |
| 17. | US Preventive Services Task Force. Screening for adolescent scoliosis: review article. JAMA 1993; 269: 2667-2672[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 18. | Goldberg C, Fogarty EE, Blake NS. School scoliosis screening: a review of 21,000 children. Ir Med J 1983; 76: 247-249[Medline]. |
| 19. | Panagiotou L, Rourke LL, Rourke JTB, et al. Evidence-based well-baby care. Part I: Overview of the next generation of the Rourke baby record. Can Fam Physician 1998; 44: 558-567[Medline]. |
| 20. | Logan S, Gilbert R. Framing questions. In: Moyer VA, Elliott E, eds. Evidence based pediatrics and child health. London: BMJ Books, 2000. |
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