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The Rise In Chronic Conditions Among Infants, Children, And Youth Can Be Met With Continued Health System Innovations
233
Citations
34
References
2014
Year
Social Determinants Of HealthMental Health ConditionsAdolescent Chronic IllnessPrimary CareChronic Disease ManagementPreventive PediatricsPediatric EpidemiologyPublic HealthHealth Services ResearchHealth EducationCongenital Heart DiseaseHealth PolicyHealth PromotionPrimary Health CareHealth SystemsChild HealthPediatricsPublic Health InnovationsChild Health PolicyChronic ConditionsMedicine
Medical and public health innovations since the early twentieth century have transformed child health, reducing infectious diseases and improving survival for serious illnesses, but chronic conditions such as asthma, obesity, mental health disorders, and neurodevelopmental disorders have risen steadily over the past fifty years. This article examines the epidemiological shift in child health, identifies sociodemographic and other contributing factors, and explores how health systems are reorganizing and innovating in response. Concentrating subspecialty care at regional centers improves outcomes for children with rare complex conditions, while primary care expansion of diagnosis, treatment, and management options shows promise for the larger population with common chronic conditions.
Since the early twentieth century, medical and public health innovations have led to dramatic changes in the epidemiology of health conditions among infants, children, and youth. Infectious diseases have substantially diminished, and survival rates for children with cancer, congenital heart disease, leukemia, and other conditions have greatly improved. However, over the past fifty years chronic health conditions and disabilities among children and youth have steadily risen, primarily from four classes of common conditions: asthma, obesity, mental health conditions, and neurodevelopmental disorders. In this article we describe the epidemiological shift among infants, children, and youth and examine sociodemographic and other factors contributing to it. We describe how health systems are responding by reorganizing and innovating. For children with rare complex conditions, concentrating subspecialty care at regional centers has been effective. For the much larger numbers of children with common chronic conditions, primary care providers have expanded diagnosis, treatment, and management options in promising ways.
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