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Suboptimal Clinical Documentation in Young Children with Severe Obesity at Tertiary Care Centers

Authors :
Nancy A. Crimmins
Todd Lingren
Nandan Patibandla
Jessica G. Woo
John B. Harley
Ingrid A. Holm
Stephanie Kennebeck
Imre Solti
Cassandra Brady
Jonathan Bickel
Guergana Savova
Vidhu V Thaker
Ashton Roach
Bahram Namjou-Khales
Isaac S. Kohane
Source :
International Journal of Pediatrics, International Journal of Pediatrics, Vol 2016 (2016)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background and Objectives.The prevalence of severe obesity in children has doubled in the past decade. The objective of this study is to identify the clinical documentation of obesity in young children with a BMI ≥ 99th percentile at two large tertiary care pediatric hospitals.Methods.We used a standardized algorithm utilizing data from electronic health records to identify children with severe early onset obesity (BMI ≥ 99th percentile at age Results.A total of 9887 visit records of 2588 children with severe early onset obesity were identified. Based on predefined criteria for documentation of obesity, 21.5% of children (13.5% of visits) had positive documentation, which varied by institution. Documentation in children first seen under 2 years of age was lower than in older children (15% versus 26%). Documentation was significantly higher in girls (29% versus 17%,p<0.001), African American children (27% versus 19% in whites,p<0.001), and the obesity focused specialty clinics (70% versus 15% in primary care and 9% in other subspecialty clinics,p<0.001).Conclusions.There is significant opportunity for improvement in documentation of obesity in young children, even years after the 2007 AAP guidelines for management of obesity.

Details

ISSN :
16879740
Volume :
2016
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal of pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dce49496015a33dc52870912e0dc393e