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Dive into the research topics where Alan R. Schroeder is active.

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Featured researches published by Alan R. Schroeder.


Journal of Hospital Medicine | 2013

Choosing wisely in pediatric hospital medicine: Five opportunities for improved healthcare value

Ricardo A. Quinonez; Matthew D. Garber; Alan R. Schroeder; Brian Alverson; Wendy Nickel; Jenna Goldstein; Jeffrey S. Bennett; Bryan R. Fine; Timothy H. Hartzog; Heather S. McLean; Vineeta Mittal; Rita Pappas; Jack M. Percelay; Shannon Phillips; Mark W. Shen; Shawn L. Ralston

BACKGROUND Despite estimates that waste constitutes up to 20% of healthcare expenditures in the United States, overuse of tests and therapies is significantly under-recognized in medicine, particularly in pediatrics. The American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation developed the Choosing Wisely campaign, which challenged medical societies to develop a list of 5 things physicians and patients should question. The Society of Hospital Medicine (SHM) joined this effort in the spring of 2012. This report provides the pediatric work groups results. METHODS A work group of experienced and geographically dispersed pediatric hospitalists was convened by the Quality and Safety Committee of the SHM. This group developed an initial list of 20 recommendations, which was pared down through a modified Delphi process to the final 5 listed below. RESULTS The top 5 recommendations proposed for pediatric hospital medicine are: (1) Do not order chest radiographs in children with asthma or bronchiolitis. (2) Do not use systemic corticosteroids in children under 2 years of age with a lower respiratory tract infection. (3) Do not use bronchodilators in children with bronchiolitis. (4) Do not treat gastroesophageal reflux in infants routinely with acid suppression therapy. (5) Do not use continuous pulse oximetry routinely in children with acute respiratory illness unless they are on supplemental oxygen. CONCLUSION We recommend that pediatric hospitalists use this list to prioritize quality improvement efforts and include issues of waste and overuse in their efforts to improve patient care.


Pediatric Anesthesia | 2005

Prolonged infusion of dexmedetomidine for sedation following tracheal resection

Gregory B. Hammer; Bridget M. Philip; Alan R. Schroeder; Frederick S. Rosen; Peter J. Koltai

Dexmedetomidine is a centrally acting alpha‐2 adrenergic agonist that is currently approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for short‐term use (≤24 h) to provide sedation in adults in the ICU. This drug has been shown to be efficacious in adult medical and surgical patients in providing sedation, anxiolysis, and analgesia. Dexmedetomidine has been associated with rapid onset and offset, hemodynamic stability, and a natural, sleep‐like state in mechanically ventilated adults. To date, there are few publications of the use of this drug in children, and prolonged infusion has not been described. We report our use of dexmedetomidine in a child during a 4‐day period of mechanical ventilation following tracheal reconstruction for subglottic stenosis.


Pediatrics | 2014

Overdiagnosis: How Our Compulsion for Diagnosis May Be Harming Children

Eric R. Coon; Ricardo A. Quinonez; Virginia A. Moyer; Alan R. Schroeder

Overdiagnosis occurs when a true abnormality is discovered, but detection of that abnormality does not benefit the patient. It should be distinguished from misdiagnosis, in which the diagnosis is inaccurate, and it is not synonymous with overtreatment or overuse, in which excess medication or procedures are provided to patients for both correct and incorrect diagnoses. Overdiagnosis for adult conditions has gained a great deal of recognition over the last few years, led by realizations that certain screening initiatives, such as those for breast and prostate cancer, may be harming the very people they were designed to protect. In the fall of 2014, the second international Preventing Overdiagnosis Conference will be held, and the British Medical Journal will produce an overdiagnosis-themed journal issue. However, overdiagnosis in children has been less well described. This special article seeks to raise awareness of the possibility of overdiagnosis in pediatrics, suggesting that overdiagnosis may affect commonly diagnosed conditions such as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, bacteremia, food allergy, hyperbilirubinemia, obstructive sleep apnea, and urinary tract infection. Through these and other examples, we discuss why overdiagnosis occurs and how it may be harming children. Additionally, we consider research and education strategies, with the goal to better elucidate pediatric overdiagnosis and mitigate its influence.


Pediatric Critical Care Medicine | 2010

A continuous heparin infusion does not prevent catheter-related thrombosis in infants after cardiac surgery.

Alan R. Schroeder; David M. Axelrod; Norman H. Silverman; Erika Rubesova; Elisabeth Merkel; Stephen J. Roth

Objective: To determine whether a continuous infusion of heparin reduces the rate of catheter-related thrombosis in neonates and infants post cardiac surgery. Central venous and intracardiac catheters are used routinely in postoperative pediatric cardiac patients. Catheter-related thrombosis occurs in 8% to 45% of pediatric patients with central venous catheters. Design: Single-center, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blinded trial. Setting: Cardiovascular intensive care unit, university-affiliated childrens hospital. Patients: Children <1 yr of age recovering from cardiac surgery. Interventions: Patients were randomized to receive either continuous heparin at 10 units/kg/hr or placebo. The primary end point was catheter-related thrombosis as assessed by serial ultrasonography. Results: Study enrollment was discontinued early based on results from an interim futility analysis. Ninety subjects were enrolled and received the study drug (heparin, 53; placebo, 37). The catheter-related thrombosis rate in the heparin group, compared with the placebo group, was 15% vs. 16% (p = .89). Subjects in the heparin group had a higher mean partial thromboplastin time (52 secs vs. 42 secs, p = .001), and this difference was greater for those aged <30 days (64 secs vs. 43 secs, p = .008). Catheters in place ≥7 days had both a greater risk of thrombus formation (odds ratio, 4.3; p = .02) and catheter malfunction (odds ratio, 11.2; p = .008). We observed no significant differences in other outcome measures or in the frequency of adverse events. Conclusions: A continuous infusion of heparin at 10 units/kg/hr was safe but did not reduce catheter-related thrombus formation. Heparin at this dose caused an increase in partial thromboplastin time values, which, unexpectedly, was more pronounced in neonates.


Pediatrics | 2015

Diagnostic Accuracy of the Urinalysis for Urinary Tract Infection in Infants <3 Months of Age

Alan R. Schroeder; Pearl Chang; Mark W. Shen; Eric Biondi; Tara L. Greenhow

BACKGROUND: The 2011 American Academy of Pediatrics urinary tract infection (UTI) guideline suggests incorporation of a positive urinalysis (UA) into the definition of UTI. However, concerns linger over UA sensitivity in young infants. Infants with the same pathogenic organism in the blood and urine (bacteremic UTI) have true infections and represent a desirable population for examination of UA sensitivity. METHODS: We collected UA results on a cross-sectional sample of 276 infants <3 months of age with bacteremic UTI from 11 hospital systems. Sensitivity was calculated on infants who had at least a partial UA performed and had ≥50 000 colony-forming units per milliliter from the urine culture. Specificity was determined by using a random sample of infants from the central study site with negative urine cultures. RESULTS: The final sample included 245 infants with bacteremic UTI and 115 infants with negative urine cultures. The sensitivity of leukocyte esterase was 97.6% (95% confidence interval [CI] 94.5%–99.2%) and of pyuria (>3 white blood cells/high-power field) was 96% (95% CI 92.5%–98.1%). Only 1 infant with bacteremic UTI (Group B Streptococcus) and a complete UA had an entirely negative UA. In infants with negative urine cultures, leukocyte esterase specificity was 93.9% (95% CI 87.9 – 97.5) and of pyuria was 91.3% (84.6%–95.6%). CONCLUSIONS: In young infants with bacteremic UTI, UA sensitivity is higher than previous reports in infants with UTI in general. This finding can be explained by spectrum bias or by inclusion of faulty gold standards (contaminants or asymptomatic bacteriuria) in previous studies.


Pediatrics | 2013

Apnea in Children Hospitalized With Bronchiolitis

Alan R. Schroeder; Jonathan M. Mansbach; Michelle D. Stevenson; Charles G. Macias; Erin Stucky Fisher; Besh Barcega; Ashley F. Sullivan; Janice A. Espinola; Pedro A. Piedra; Carlos A. Camargo

OBJECTIVE: To identify risk factors for inpatient apnea among children hospitalized with bronchiolitis. METHODS: We enrolled 2207 children, aged <2 years, hospitalized with bronchiolitis at 16 sites during the winters of 2007 to 2010. Nasopharyngeal aspirates (NPAs) were obtained on all subjects, and real-time polymerase chain reaction was used to test NPA samples for 16 viruses. Inpatient apnea was ascertained by daily chart review, with outcome data in 2156 children (98%). Age was corrected for birth <37 weeks. Multivariable logistic regression was performed to identify independent risk factors for inpatient apnea. RESULTS: Inpatient apnea was identified in 108 children (5%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 4%–6%). Statistically significant, independent predictors of inpatient apnea included: corrected ages of <2 weeks (odds ratio [OR] 9.67) and 2 to 8 weeks (OR 4.72), compared with age ≥6 months; birth weight <2.3 kg (5 pounds; OR 2.15), compared with ≥3.2 kg (7 pounds); caretaker report of previous apnea during this bronchiolitis episode (OR 3.63); preadmission respiratory rates of <30 (OR 4.05), 30 to 39 (OR 2.35) and >70 (OR 2.26), compared with 40 to 49; and having a preadmission room air oxygen saturation <90% (OR 1.60). Apnea risk was similar across the major viral pathogens. CONCLUSIONS: In this prospective, multicenter study of children hospitalized with bronchiolitis, inpatient apnea was associated with younger corrected age, lower birth weight, history of apnea, and preadmission clinical factors including low or high respiratory rates and low room air oxygen saturation. Several bronchiolitis pathogens were associated with apnea, with similar apnea risk across the major viral pathogens.


Clinical Pediatrics | 2013

Fever literacy and fever phobia.

Matthew B. Wallenstein; Alan R. Schroeder; Michael K. Hole; Christina Ryan; Natalia Fijalkowski; Elysia Alvarez; Suzan L. Carmichael

Objective. To identify the percentage of parents who define the threshold for fever between 38.0°C and 38.3°C, which has not been reported previously, and to describe parental attitudes toward fever and antipyretic use. Study Design. Thirteen-question survey study of caregivers. Results. Overall, 81% of participants defined the threshold for fever as <38.0°C, 0% correctly defined fever between 38.0°C and 38.3°C, and 19% defined fever as >38.3°C. Twenty percent of children brought to clinic for a chief complaint of fever were never truly febrile. Ninety-three percent of participants believed that high fever can cause brain damage. For a comfortable-appearing child with fever, 89% of caregivers reported that they would give antipyretics and 86% would schedule a clinic visit. Conclusion. Our finding that 0% of parents correctly defined fever is both surprising and unsettling, and it should inform future discussions of fever between parents and clinicians.


JAMA Pediatrics | 2011

Impact of a More Restrictive Approach to Urinary Tract Imaging After Febrile Urinary Tract Infection

Alan R. Schroeder; Jennifer M. Abidari; Rashmi Kirpekar; John R. Hamilton; Young S. Kang; VyThao Tran; Stephen J. Harris

OBJECTIVES To determine the impact of using an algorithm requiring selective rather than routine urinary tract imaging following a first febrile urinary tract infection (UTI) on imaging use, detection of vesicoureteral reflux (VUR), prophylactic antibiotic use, and UTI recurrence within 6 months. DESIGN Retrospective review comparing outcomes during periods before algorithm use (September 1, 2006, to August 31, 2007) and after algorithm use (September 1, 2008, to August 31, 2009). The new algorithm, which adapted recommendations from the United Kingdoms National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence 2007 guidelines, was implemented in 2008. The algorithm calls for renal ultrasonography in most cases and restricts voiding cystourethrography for use in patients with certain risk factors. SETTING County health system. PARTICIPANTS Children younger than 2 years with a first febrile UTI. INTERVENTION Selective algorithm for urinary tract imaging. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Urinary tract imaging use, detection of VUR, prophylactic antibiotic use, and UTI recurrence within 6 months. RESULTS After introduction of the new algorithm, voiding cystourethrography and prophylactic antibiotic use decreased markedly. Rates of UTI recurrence within 6 months and detection of grades 4 and 5 VUR did not change, but detection of grades 1 to 3 VUR decreased substantially. Patients in the prealgorithm group with grades 1 to 3 VUR who would have been missed with selective screening underwent no interventions other than successive urinary tract imaging and prophylactic antibiotic use. CONCLUSIONS By restricting urinary tract imaging after an initial febrile UTI, rates of voiding cystourethrography and prophylactic antibiotic use decreased substantially without increasing the risk of UTI recurrence within 6 months and without an apparent decrease in detection of high-grade VUR. Clinicians can be more judicious in their use of urinary tract imaging.


Pediatrics | 2011

Safely Doing Less: A Missing Component of the Patient Safety Dialogue

Alan R. Schroeder; Stephen J. Harris; Thomas B. Newman

The American Academy of Pediatrics Steering Committee on Quality Improvement and Management and the Committee on Hospital Care recently published an updated policy statement on pediatric patient safety in Pediatrics .1 The statement is thorough, and it accurately summarizes salient principles. However, like many discussions surrounding patient safety, a key component of the dialogue is missing from the statement. In addition to asking “What more can we do to reduce harm?” we should also be asking “How can we safely do less?” Despite impressive national efforts to improve patient safety over the last decade, rates of harm do not seem to have changed.2 Further increases in awareness and knowledge, as suggested by the policy statement, are unobjectionable, but often the best way to prevent avoidable harm from medical interventions is to avoid the interventions in the first place. The risks of overtesting and overtreatment have … Address correspondence to Alan R. Schroeder, MD, Department of Pediatrics, Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, 751 S Bascom Ave, San Jose, CA 95128. E-mail: alan.schroeder{at}hhs.sccgov.org


Current Opinion in Pediatrics | 2014

Recent evidence on the management of bronchiolitis.

Alan R. Schroeder; Jonathan M. Mansbach

Purpose of review Bronchiolitis is a common condition in children less than 2 years of age and is a leading cause of infant hospitalization. Although there is significant variability in testing and treatment of children with bronchiolitis, diagnostic testing rarely improves care, and no currently available pharmacologic options have been proven to provide meaningful benefits or improve outcomes. Recent findings Beta-agonists continue to be used frequently despite evidence that they do not reduce hospital admissions or length of stay. In general, therapies initially considered promising were subsequently proven ineffective, a pattern seen in studies on corticosteroids, and more recently with nebulized racemic epinephrine and hypertonic saline. Recent research has improved our understanding of the viral epidemiology of bronchiolitis, with increasing recognition of viruses other than respiratory syncytial virus and better awareness of the role of viral coinfections. How these findings will translate into improved outcomes remains uncertain. Summary Much of the emphasis of the last few decades of bronchiolitis clinical care and research has centered on the identification and testing of novel therapies. Future quality improvement efforts should focus more on the limitation of unnecessary testing and treatments. Future research should include identification of subgroups of children with bronchiolitis that may benefit from focused clinical interventions.

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Mark W. Shen

University of Texas at Austin

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Pedro A. Piedra

Baylor College of Medicine

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