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:: It’s Not All in Your Head

:: Asthma Management and Evaluation

:: Criteria Developed to Detect Bone Mass Deficiencies in Children

:: Monkeys Use ‘Baby Talk’ to Interact with Infants

:: Thanks Trekking

:: Caffeine to Regulate Breathing of Preterm Babies

:: Pediatric Ritalin Use May Affect Developing Brain

:: Respiratory Weakness in ICU Morbidity

:: Sleep Apnea Duration More Affecting Than Severity

:: Breath Test Sniffs out Cystic Fibrosis

:: Toying Around

:: CAM Therapies High Among Those with OSAHS

:: Children’s Early Skills Predict Later School Success

:: A Lot to Swallow

:: The Big Question

:: Detecting Disease Using Portable, Precise Gas Sensor

:: Baby's Breath

:: At the Crossroads of Therapy Intelligence

:: Risk Management

:: Bridging the Breathtaking Divide

:: Doubts About the Accepted Origin of Pulmonary Embolism

:: Common Surgical Procedure Effective Treatment for Sleep Apnea

:: Palliative Care in Respiratory Therapy

:: Farm Therapy

:: Respiratory Failure in Patients with Chronic Respiratory Disorder

:: Children at Play

:: Potential For A Fast, Accurate Urine Test For Pneumonia

:: Culturally Speaking

:: Innovative Approach to Identify and Treat Lung Fibrosis

:: What Happened to the Flu?

:: Air Pollution in Tunnels Concentrated by up to 1000 Times

:: Swine Flu Fears Close More Summer Camps

:: Childhood Social Skills Linked to Learning Abilities

:: Adults With Asthma Not Getting Their Flu Shots

:: Risk Factors For Sleep Disordered Breathing In Children: Waist Size And Body Mass Index

:: Considerations for Better Breathing

:: Need for Emergency Airway Surgery for Hard-to-Intubate Patients Reduced

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:: How Carbon Nanotubes Can Affect Lining of the Lungs

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:: Discovery Of Increased ‘Sibling Risk’ Of Obstructive Sleep Apnea In Children

:: Air Pollution Linked To Hospitalizations For Pneumonia In Seniors

:: Bronchoscopic Combo Effective Lung Lesion Diagnosis

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:: Breathing the Right Number of Sighs of Relief

:: A Breathtaking Gender Divide

:: Ibuprofen: Slower Lung Decline in Children with CF

:: Newborns: Can You Hear Me Now?

:: Study Touts Benefits of Autologous Cell Transplantation Therapy

:: Getting to the Root of Stuttering

:: Yoga Helps Asthma Patients In 10 Weeks

:: Mountaineers Measure Lowest Human Blood Oxygen Levels on Record

:: Asthma patients' immune systems respond differently with allergies

:: Intervention in Infants with Cystic Fibrosis Key to Slowing Progression

:: Listen Up

:: Inappropriate Sepsis Therapy Leads to Fivefold Reduction in Survival

:: Enzyme And Vitamin Define The Yin And Yang Of Asthma

:: Over-reacting Can Make Stuttering Worse

:: Even Healthy Lungs Labor At Acceptable Ozone Levels

:: Experts Cite Pediatric Pain, Palliative Care Shortcomings

:: Obstructive Sleep Apnea May Worsen Diabetes

:: When Breathing Needs a Tune-Up

:: Noninvasive Ventilation Should be Used in Epidemics

:: Use Your Head Gear

:: Patients with CRS Have Increased Incidence of Other Chronic Illnesses

:: Signals Point to Enhanced Ventilators

:: Planting The Seeds For Rehabilitation

:: Crossing International Lines

:: Cell Phones Will Help Scientists Monitor Air Pollution in San Diego

:: Low Birth Weight, High Risk for Hyperactivity

:: The Ins and Outs of Cystic Fibrosis Care

:: Teens' Fruit, Veggie Intake Decreasing

:: CPAP May Help Preemies Breathe Easier

:: One Therapist, Under Law

:: CMS Issues Memo on Oxygen Storage

:: Beyond Tradition

:: Immigrant Children Sluggishly Scale Language Barrier

:: Addressing Stigma of Pediatric Mental Health Conditions

:: Block-Play May Improve Toddler Language Development

:: Unexplained Respiratory Infections Lead to New Discovery

:: Intense Cessation Treatment Successful in High-Risk Smokers

:: Men with severe sleep breathing disorder have higher risk of heart problems

:: Pulmonary Expert Comments on Lung Transplants Study

:: A Matter of Life and Breath

:: A Breath of Life

:: Gesturing Helps Grade-Schoolers Solve Math Problems

:: The Sound Benefits of Music

:: Head Injury Greater in High School Football

:: Nosespray Vaccine Using Aloe Vera Has Potential

:: Researchers Track Down Protein Responsible for Chronic Rhinosinusitis with Polyps

:: Breaking the Silence

:: How Language Impairments Affect Child’s Story Telling

:: Game Pain Away

:: Early Bird Gets the Word

:: Turning off the Cystic Fibrosis Switch

:: Breathe Easy

:: Breathlessness Eased in Patients with Rare, Often Fatal Disease

:: More Than 30 Percent of Common Children's Vision Disorders Missed

:: American Lung Association Calls For Tighter Nitrogen Dioxide Air Pollution Standard

:: Clearing the Air about Women Smokers and Lung Cancer

:: Dendritic Cells Spark Inflammation in Smokers’ Lungs

:: Transplants Trending Upward

:: Positive Effects of Poisonous Gas

:: A Resounding Goal

:: Childhood Sleep Apnea Linked to Brain Damage, Lower IQ

:: Asthmatic Teens Welcome Web-based Management

:: Normalizing School-Based Therapy

:: A New Twist to Speech Therapy

:: Reading Between the Language Acquisition Lines

:: Acute Respiratory Disease Poses Significantly Greater Risk for Black Americans

:: Delivering Preterm Pulmonary Findings

:: Study Reveals Long Lasting Airway Blockages in Medicated Asthma Patients

:: A Lung Lethal Combination

:: BAC to the Future

:: Helium Helps Lung Patients Breathe Easier

:: Travelers Clear the Air on Smoking Regulations

:: An Eye for an Eye Movement

:: Building Baby Brain Connections

:: Predicting the Risk of Death in COPD May Help Physicians to Individualize Treatment

:: Study Finds Link Between Parental Stress, Air Pollution, And Children’s Risk For Developing Asthma

:: Adding a New Dimension to Learning

:: Gene Stops Excess Mucus in Respiratory Disease

:: Breathless Babies: Preemies’ Lung Function Shows Prolonged Impairment

:: Getting to the Root of Rett

:: Helping Children Get Chatty

:: New Approach to Cystic Fibrosis Treatment

:: Steroids Don’t Work in Childhood Respiratory Infections

:: How Coughing is Triggered by Environmental Irritants

:: The Healthy Senior

:: Classroom of the Future to Reshape Young Waistlines

:: A Breath of Fresh Ideas

:: One-Third of U.S. Children Regularly Take Dietary Supplements

:: Beyond the Flu

:: Some Children are Born with Temporary Deafness

:: Federal Resources for Children Face Challenges

:: COPD Patients Feel the Burn

:: Animals Linked to Human Chlamydia Pneumoniae

:: Self-Treatment Results in Lower Overall Healthcare Costs for COPD Sufferers

:: Spiritual Healing

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Milk Does the Respiratory System Good
02.13.06

Article available online at: http://www.therapytimes.com/021306RT


Babies fully breastfed for six months are less likely to suffer from respiratory illnesses in their first two years than babies fully breastfed for only four months, according to research conducted by investigators at UC Davis Children’s Hospital, the University of Rochester and the American Academy of Pediatrics, Center for Child Health Research.

“We found that babies who received an additional two months of full breastfeeding were over four times less likely to contract pneumonia and half as likely to suffer recurrent ear infections,” says lead author Caroline Chantry, a pediatrician with UC Davis Children’s Hospital. Chantry and her colleagues found that the health benefits of the additional two months of full breastfeeding continued to protect babies from respiratory illnesses through their second birthdays.

“This finding adds to the mounting evidence that the longer a mother breastfeeds her infant, the greater the health benefits,” Chantry says. Previous research by others has shown that exclusive breastfeeding for six months also provides greater protection against gastrointestinal infections, she adds.

The current findings appear in the February 2006 issue of Pediatrics. They were first reported in 2002 at a joint meeting of the Pediatric Academic Societies and American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) in Baltimore, Md. Since then, those preliminary findings have been used to support the recommendation that women breastfeed exclusively for the first six months of their baby’s lives. The AAP first began making that recommendation in 1997.

As recently as 2005, however, the AAP Committee on Nutrition says more research was needed to support the position on breastfeeding. Chantry says she hopes the peer-reviewed publication of her research will finally settle the lingering controversy over the advice American women receive from their physicians and organizations like the AAP.

In the published study, Chantry and her colleagues conducted an analysis of a nationally representative, cross-sectional survey of 2,277 children between the ages of 6 and 24 months. They identified five groups – formula-fed only, full breastfeeding for less than one month, full breastfeeding from one to four months, full breastfeeding from four to less than six months and full breastfeeding for six months or more. Full breastfeeding allows for the use of formula on less than a daily basis.

The researchers then looked at the percent of children in each group who experienced pneumonia, wheezing and recurrent (three or more) colds or ear infections. The results showing the protective effects of the additional two months of breastfeeding held even when the data were adjusted for age, birth weight, ethnicity, poverty, two-parent household, parental education, family size, child care and passive smoke exposure.

Despite the proven benefits of breastfeeding, the reality for many women is that breastfeeding is difficult to maintain after going back to work. By law, employers only have to give women six weeks of maternity leave.

“It may become burdensome to pump regularly even if a woman has an accommodating employer,” Chantry says.

Chantry says research here and in other countries has shown that longer maternity leaves, pump-friendly workplaces and child care in the workplace all result in longer lengths of breastfeeding. In addition, employers who provide clean, comfortable places to pump and on-site child care save money due to decreases in absenteeism due to child illness, lower employee turnover due to dissatisfaction and lower direct health care costs.

While many women need support to continue breastfeeding when returning to work, others need help right from the start.

“Most women experience difficulties when they leave the hospital. These challenges often lead to premature weaning,” Chantry explains. Women need access to lactation consultants and others who can support their efforts to fully breastfeed their babies. Supporting women early on, she adds, means healthier babies and children in the long run.

Source: UC Davis Children’s Hospital


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AccuMed Technology Solutions at CSM 2010
Bill Cummins, MS, CCC-SLP, discusses the Cypress Therapy software from AccuMed Technology Solutions, which provides a library of documentation templates, including daily notes, weekly summaries, initial and monthly plans of progress, and discipline-specific evaluations, as well as Cypress Mobile software in which therapists enter treatment data as they work with patients, running on any handheld device using the Windows Mobile® operating system Cypress Therapy software integrates, manages, and displays information for therapists, managers, and business office staff.
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