From the category archives:

Societal Issues

Tonight at 8 pm, HBO will debut a four-part documentary series, The Weight of the Nation, an unflinching look at the severity of the obesity crisis in America, and its crippling effect on our nation’s health and economy.

HBO and the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences have joined forces to bring together the nation’s foremost experts on weight and weight loss for a frank and educational look at obesity in America. The series explains how weight became such an issue in this country and provides answers for how we can get to a healthy weight by overcoming the forces that drive us to eat too much and move too little. Full story »

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Dr. Claire McCarthy is a primary care physician and the Medical Communications Editor at Children’s Hospital Boston. Along with her blogs here on Thriving, you can find her at the Huffington Post and Boston.com. Follow her on Twitter @drClaire.

A couple of months ago, we sat down as a family to watch the five o’clock news. We never do this, but my 11-year-old had been interviewed and we wanted to watch it together. We were told it would be on in the five o’clock hour, but of course it didn’t come on until 5:55. In those 55 minutes, my 6-year-old watched news about:

  • A shooting at a school
  • A suicide bomb in Afghanistan that killed civilians
  • A policeman shooting another policeman and then shooting himself
  • A video of teen girls fighting in a high school
  • A man who escaped from a mental hospital, prompting the community to tell all children to stay inside
  • A child molester on the loose, including a picture of him
  • A trial of two men accused of killing four people, including a toddler. Full story »

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Study reveals the social justice problem of autism

by Claire McCarthy on April 3, 2012

Dr. Claire McCarthy is a primary care physician and the Medical Communications Editor at Children’s Hospital Boston. Along with her blogs here on Thriving, you can find her at the Huffington Post and Boston.com. Follow her on Twitter @drClaire.

A child with autism is more likely to do well if his mother is white and educated.

This is the message of a study just released in the journal Pediatrics, and it’s something we need to pay attention to—now. Full story »

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Children’s helps school take a stand against bullying

by Tripp Underwood on March 8, 2012

If your child were being bullied, would you know about it? Most of us would like to believe that if our kids were being targeted at school they’d tell us right away, but unfortunately that’s not always the case. Data shows that many bullying victims fail to report their harassment. This could be for any number of reasons, but in many cases the victim stays silent because he’s scared that telling someone will make the bullying worse, is embarrassed about being picked on or thinks the adults in his life can’t do anything to stop it.

It’s a difficult cycle to break, but it’s not impossible. To help, Children’s Hospital Boston has teamed up with teachers, administrators and students in one Boston school to empower kids to take a stand against bullying. Full story »

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Dr. Claire McCarthy is a primary care physician and the Medical Communications Editor at Children’s Hospital Boston. Along with her blogs here on Thriving, you can find her at the Huffington Post and Boston.com. Follow her on Twitter @drClaire.

Those of us who do primary care often feel like Rodney Dangerfield: we get no respect. Compared to the specialists, our job is thought of as, well, lowly and ordinary.

But that’s changing—and Children’s Hospital Boston is leading the way. The primary care departments of Children’s, Children’s Hospital Primary Care Center (CHPCC) and Martha Eliot Health Center (MEHC), have been chosen by Harvard Medical School to take part in its Center for Primary Care’s Academic Innovation Collaborative. They have been awarded $900,000 over two years, to be matched by the hospital, to work with the Collaborative to transform primary care delivery and education. Full story »

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Studies explore gender identity and children

by Tripp Underwood on February 24, 2012

The journal Pediatrics released two studies this week that focused on the mental and physical wellbeing of children who don’t conform to typical gender roles.

The first study, led by Children’s Hospital Boston researcher S. Bryn Austin, ScD, indicates that kids who fail to adapt traditional gender stereotypes as children are at a significantly greater risk for physical, sexual and psychological abuse during childhood. These children are also more likely to develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in young adulthood.

The study was funded by the National Institute of Health and compiled data from almost 9,000 young adults. Participants were asked to recall their childhood experiences, including their favorite toys and games growing up. The types of charters they related to as children, which roles they adopted during pretend play and their earliest understanding of masculinity and femininity where all reported on as well. Researchers also asked participants to disclose information about any physical, sexual or emotional abuse they experienced at the hands of parents, other adults or older children. Finally, participants were screened for PSTD. Full story »

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Confession: this pediatrician is a sleep softie

by Claire McCarthy on January 31, 2012

Dr. Claire McCarthy is a primary care physician and the Medical Communications Editor at Children’s Hospital Boston. Along with her blogs here on Thriving, you can find her at the Huffington Post and Boston.com. Follow her on Twitter @drClaire.

This may not be a great confession to make as a pediatrician, but when it comes to sleep and kids, I am a total softie.

Our kids slept in our bed. We slept in theirs (which was very cramped in the toddler bed, and didn’t do great things to the frame)—or lay next to them as they drifted off to sleep. We sat on the floor, telling stories and singing lullabies and slowly edging out of the bedroom as their breathing got deep and regular. We went in again and again to retrieve the stuffed animal from under the bed or to investigate the scary noise or possible spider. When they woke in the middle of the night, we held them until they went back to sleep—sometimes night after night. Full story »

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Sandra Fenwick, president and COO

I’ve worked at Children’s Hospital Boston for more than a decade, and I’m still inspired every day by the hope and strength I see on the faces of our patients and their families. As Children’s navigates a challenging and evolving health care landscape, I draw on that inspiration and determination, especially when many in our industry seem to imply that cost is the only measure of a hospital’s worth.

At Children’s, our worth—our value—is so much more than just dollars and cents. It means being treated by pediatric experts—doctors, nurses and support staff—who understand that children are not small adults and their care needs to reflect that fact. It’s a commitment to care and innovation that produces programs like our Community Asthma Initiative, which helps children with asthma have fewer attacks so they miss less school and their parents miss fewer days of work.

And it’s about a commitment to constantly improving the quality of the care we deliver. To that end, I am pleased to announce that we have signed an innovative new contract with the state’s largest health insurance provider, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts (BCBSMA).

This agreement, known as an Alternative Quality Contract (AQC), calls for us to reach quality targets based on national pediatric quality benchmarks—the first such contract in the country—and keeps the contract value well below medical inflation

The AQC has specific quality measures in the areas of primary care (prevention and treatment), effectiveness of treatment for patients with certain conditions or needs (cystic fibrosis, dialysis or general surgery needs) and safety (central line infections). In addition, we have agreed to accept a 0 percent rate increase in the first year and an average 1.5 percent annual increase over the three years of the contract.

Since 2009, Children’s has taken more than $125 million out of the health care system to benefit insurers, employers and consumers

This contract is aligned with our efforts over the last three years to improve quality  while slowing the rising cost of care delivery. Since 2009, Children’s has taken more than $125 million out of the health care system to benefit insurers, employers and consumers. We have reduced insurers’ rates and prices, become more efficient and have innovated new ways to deliver care that improve quality while lowering costs. In addition, we have moved care to lower-cost settings within the hospital and to our less expensive suburban satellites and community hospital partners, and have improved care integration between primary care physicians and hospital subspecialists.

As far as I’m concerned, the greatest indication of Children’s value is the trust of the parents who place more than 170,000 children in our care each year. Whether they come to us from around the block, or the other side of the world, Children’s takes great pride in knowing that every patient who comes through our doors will receive the same level of world-class care that has made Children’s a leader in pediatrics for more than 140 years.

For more on the Blue Cross Blue Shield deal, read Sandra Fenwick’s interview with WBUR.

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