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Dive into the research topics where Barbara Ostfeld is active.

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Featured researches published by Barbara Ostfeld.


Pediatrics | 1998

The Apgar Score and Its Components in the Preterm Infant

Thomas Hegyi; Tracy Carbone; Mujahid Anwar; Barbara Ostfeld; Mark Hiatt; Anne Koons; Jennifer Pinto-Martin; Nigel Paneth

Objective. The Apgar score is well-characterized in full-term infants but not in premature infants. The objective of this study was to assess the Apgar score in preterm infants with respect to the relationships between the 1- and 5-minute scores, the correlation of the Apgar score with pH and with other variables, and the relationship among the individual Apgar components. Methodology. We recorded Apgar scores at 1 and 5 minutes in a population-based cohort of preterm infants (n = 1105) with birth weight <2000 g, from three intensive care nurseries in central New Jersey. Linear correlation analysis was used to examine the relationship between 1- and 5-minute Apgar scores and between the individual components of the Apgar score. Multiple regression analysis was used to explore the relationship between various perinatal characteristics and the Apgar score, and between pH and Apgar score. Stepwise logistic regression analysis was used to assess the determinants of mortality. Results. The 1-minute Apgar score median (25%, 75%) was 6(4,8) and correlated with the 5-minute score of 8(7,9) atr = .78. Slight but significant differences were seen between male (n = 557) and female (n = 508) infants in the 1-minute (6[4,8] and 7[4,8]) Apgar scores. One- and 5-minute scores of white infants (7[4,8] and 8[7,9]; n = 713) were significantly higher than those of black infants (5[3,7] and 8[6,9]; n = 280). Birth weight and gestational age were both linearly related to both Apgar scores. Low Apgar score (<3 at 1 minute and <6 at 5 minutes) was significantly associated with birth weight, gestational age and mode of delivery. Low arterial blood pH (<7.01) at birth was significantly related to low Apgar score. One hundred fifty-nine infants died; these infants were significantly smaller (983 ± 382 vs 1462 ± 369 g), less mature (27 vs 31 weeks), had lower arterial blood pH (7.20 ± 0.18 vs 7.31 ± 0.11), had lower 1- (3[2,6] vs 7[4,8]) and 5-minute Apgar scores (6[4,8] vs 8[7,9]), and a greater incidence of low Apgar score (32% vs 6%) than did survivors. Conclusions. Among the components of the Apgar score, respiratory effort, muscle tone, and reflex activity correlated well with one another; heart rate correlated less well; and color the least. Our data confirms the limited use of the Apgar score in preterm infants and demonstrates the different responses of the Apgar scores components.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1994

Blood pressure ranges in premature infants. I. The first hours of life

Thomas Hegyi; Mary Terese Carbone; Mujahid Anwar; Barbara Ostfeld; Mark Hiatt; Anne Koons; Jennifer Pinto-Martin; Nigel Paneth

We studied blood pressure in the first hours of life in a cohort of 1105 preterm infants weighing 501 to 2000 gm; these infants represented 83% of all births at these weights that resulted in admission to three intensive care nurseries during a 34-month period between 1984 and 1987. To assess the effects of specific risk factors, we identified 244 healthy infants, 164 infants who received mechanical ventilation but had no other conditions, 47 infants whose only risk factor was the presence of hypertension or preeclampsia in the mother, and 86 infants with depressed Apgar scores regardless of the presence of the other conditions. We documented each infants minimum and maximum systolic (Smin, Smax) and diastolic (Dmin, Dmax) pressures during the first 3 to 6 hours of life. In the healthy group, Smin was 47 mmHg; Smax, 59 mmHg; Dmin, 24 mmHg; and Dmax, 35 mmHg. In the ventilation group, Smin was 41 mmHg; Smax, 57 mmHg; Dmin, 22 mmHg; and Dmax, 35 mmHg. The Smin and Dmin values were both significantly lower in infants who received mechanical ventilation than in healthy infants (p < 0.01). In the maternal hypertension group, Smin was 49 mmHg; Smax, 59 mmHg; Dmin, 25 mmHg; and Dmax, 34 mmHg. Only the Smin value was significantly higher than in healthy infants. In the group with low Apgar scores, Smin was 33 mmHg; Smax, 51 mmHg; Dmin, 19 Hg; and Dmax, 34 mmHg. Thus all these values were significantly lower than in all the other groups (p < 0.05). Of infants with low Apgar scores, 20% to 50% had values below the 5th percentile for healthy infants. Birth weight and gestational age correlated with blood pressure limits only in the infants with low Apgar scores. We conclude that in healthy premature infants the limits of systolic and diastolic blood pressure are independent of birth weight and gestational age. Infants with low Apgar scores tend to have lower pressures, and infants whose mothers have hypertension have higher pressures than infants in the healthy cohort.


Pediatrics | 2006

Sleep Environment, Positional, Lifestyle, and Demographic Characteristics Associated With Bed Sharing in Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Cases: A Population-Based Study

Barbara Ostfeld; Harold Perl; Linda Esposito; Katherine Hempstead; Robert Hinnen; Alissa Sandler; Paula Goldblatt Pearson; Thomas Hegyi

BACKGROUND. In 2005, the American Academy of Pediatrics Task Force on Sudden Infant Death Syndrome recommended that infants not bed share during sleep. OBJECTIVE. Our goal was to characterize the profile of risk factors associated with bed sharing in sudden infant death syndrome cases. DESIGN/METHODS. We conducted a population-based retrospective review of sudden infant death syndrome cases in New Jersey (1996–2000) dichotomized by bed-sharing status and compared demographic, lifestyle, bedding-environment, and sleep-position status. RESULTS. Bed-sharing status was reported in 239 of 251 cases, with sharing in 39%. Bed-sharing cases had a higher percentage of bedding risks (44.1% vs 24.7%), exposure to bedding risks in infants discovered prone (57.1% vs 28.2%), and lateral sleep placement (28.9% vs 17.8%). The prone position was more common for bed-sharing and non–bed-sharing cases at placement (45.8% and 51.1%, respectively) and discovery (59.0% and 64.4%, respectively). In multivariable logistic-regression analyses, black race, mother <19 years, gravida >2, and maternal smoking were associated with bed sharing. There was a trend toward less breastfeeding in bed-sharing cases (22% vs 35%). In bed-sharing cases, those breastfed were younger than those who were not and somewhat more exposed to bedding risks (64.7% vs 45.1%) but less likely to be placed prone (11.8% vs 52.9%) or have maternal smoking (33% vs 66%). CONCLUSIONS. Bed-sharing cases were more likely to have had bedding-environment and sleep-position risks and higher ratios of demographic and lifestyle risk factors. Bed-sharing subjects who breastfed had a risk profile distinct from those who were not breastfed cases. Risk and situational profiles can be used to identify families in greater need of early guidance and to prepare educational content to promote safe sleep.


Twin Research | 2000

Maternal behavior toward premature twins: implications for development.

Barbara Ostfeld; Richard H Smith; Mark Hiatt; Thomas Hegyi

Assisted reproductive techniques and fertility enhancing therapies have increased multiple births and, therefore, the risk of prematurity and its developmental consequences. Parent intervention is an effective source of compensation for the cognitive effects of prematurity. We hypothesized that relative to parents of preterm singletons, parents of preterm twins are less able to provide such enhancing care, resulting in a developmental disadvantage for preterm twins. Maternal-infant interactions of premature singletons (n = 22; birth weight = 1668 +/- 350 g, gestational age = 32.3 +/- 2.1 weeks) and premature twins (n = 8; birth weight = 1618 +/- 249 g; gestational age = 32.0 +/- 2.6 weeks) with comparable demographic and medical status were observed at home at 1 and 8 months corrected age using a 30 min checklist of developmentally facilitative behavior. Mental (MDI) and psychomotor (PDI) indices of the Bayley Scales of Infant Development and Caldwell Home Observations for Measurement of the Environment (HOME) inventories were administered (18 months corrected age). Compared with mothers of premature singletons, mothers of premature twins exhibited fewer initiatives (P < 0.001) and responses (P < 0.01) and were less responsive to positive signals (P < 0.01) and crying (P < 0.01). Unprompted by the infant, twin mothers lifted or held (P < 0.05), touched (P < 0.01), patted (P < 0.05) or talked (P < 0.01) less. Singleton MDIs surpassed twins (119.4 +/- 7.7 vs 103.6 +/- 7.7; P < 0.01). Maternal verbal behavior and the acceptance of child factor (HOME), both favoring singletons, correlated with MDI (R-square = 0.46, P < 0.0002). Mothers of premature twins exhibited fewer initiatives and responses toward offspring than did mothers of premature singletons. Maternal behavior was predictive of cognitive development.


Pediatrics International | 2006

Lipid peroxidation in cord blood and neonatal outcome

Barry Weinberger; Salman Nisar; Mujahid Anwar; Barbara Ostfeld; Thomas Hegyi

Background: Periventricular–intraventricular hemorrhage, necrotizing enterocolitis, chronic lung disease and retinopathy of prematurity have been referred to as oxygen radical diseases (ORD) because they are thought to be related to excess oxidant stress relative to anti‐oxidant defenses in premature infants. 8‐Isoprostane is a product of lipid peroxidation that can be used as a measure of free radical exposure or injury. The aim of the present study was to determine whether fetal oxidant stress is associated with adverse effects in preterm infants.


Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics | 1993

Maternal grief after sudden infant death syndrome

Barbara Ostfeld; Tara Ryan; Mark Hiatt; Thomas Hegyi

ABSTRACT. Six months after the death of their infants of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), the subjective impression of mothers anonymously rating their initial and present grief was that there had been a reduction in all symptoms (p < .001). However, an increase in the relative ranking of some cognitive symptoms over somatic ones, the association of certain lifestyles and situational variables with higher levels of grief, and the implication for future symptoms of family decisions made during bereavement underscore the importance of continuing active support for these families. In relative ranking, guilt rose from 10th to 5th most prominent symptom, particularly among the 34% of mothers whose infants manifested clinical symptoms (p < .05). Single mothers had higher grief scores both initially (p < .05) and at 6 months (p < .002), were almost three times more likely to become pregnant within 6 months of the death but only one-third as likely to attend a support group, and were also more likely to move after the death (44% vs 25%). Mothers whose infants had been discovered by another caregiver reached out more to a crisis intervention service of a support program available to SIDS families (p < .05). Mothers without surviving children had grief levels comparable with those with children but were less likely to rate their pediatricians support as satisfactory, increasing the probability that they would change physicians with subsequent children, thereby losing continuity of care and support. J Dev Behav Pediatr 14:156–162, 1993. Index terms: SIDS, parental bereavement.


General Hospital Psychiatry | 1996

Factitious disorder by proxy ☆: Awareness among mental health practitioners

Barbara Ostfeld; Marc D. Feldman

Factitious disorder by proxy (FDP) is a form of abuse in which a caregiver surreptitiously simulates or induces illnesses in a person for whom he or she cares. Typically, a mother is the perpetrator and at least one of her children is victimized. FDP has a high morbidity and mortality rate, and a knowledgeable health team increases the primary physicians confidence in making this difficult diagnosis. The purpose of this study was to determine the levels of awareness of FDP among mental health practitioners and their sources of information. Anonymous questionnaires were sent to 687 primary care physicians and mental health practitioners. Psychiatrists (89%) and psychologists (69%) were more aware of the disorder than were social workers (42%). Years in practice were not associated with awareness of FDP. Psychiatrists were more likely than psychologists or social workers to have had exposure through an actual case or through their professional journals. These findings were statistically significant. Awareness of FDP varies significantly among mental health professionals and may reflect the availability of information during training and in journals. Since social workers and psychologists often have earlier and broader opportunities than psychiatrists to interface with families, enhancements in training and the professional literature in these disciplines are needed if FDP is to be consistently considered and identified.


Pediatrics | 2017

Prematurity and sudden unexpected infant deaths in the United States

Barbara Ostfeld; Ofira Schwartz-Soicher; Nancy E. Reichman; Julien O. Teitler; Thomas Hegyi

Despite recommendations for safe sleep education in NICUs, national data indicate SUID rates remain inversely associated with GA. BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Prematurity, a strong risk factor for sudden unexpected infant death (SUID), was addressed in recommendations by the American Academy of Pediatrics in 2011 for safe sleep education in NICUs. We documented associations between gestational age (GA) and SUID subsequent to these guidelines. METHODS: Using the 2012–2013 US linked infant birth and death certificate period files, we documented rates per live births of sudden infant death syndrome, ill-defined and unspecified causes, accidental suffocation and strangulation in bed, and overall SUID by GA in postneonatal, out-of-hospital, and autopsied cases; compared survivors and cases; and estimated logistic regression models of associations between GA and SUID. RESULTS: SUID cases were more likely than survivors to be <37 weeks’ GA (22.61% vs 10.79%; P < .0001). SUID rates were 2.68, 1.94, 1.46, 1.16, 0.73, and 0.51 per 1000 live births for 24 to 27, 28 to 31, 32 to 33, 34 to 36, 37 to 38, and 39 to 42 weeks’ GA, respectively. Logistic regression models additionally indicated declines in the risk for SUID as GA increased. Prenatal smoking, inadequate prenatal care, and demographics associated with poverty were strongly associated with SUID. CONCLUSIONS: Despite the 2011 American Academy of Pediatrics recommendations for increased safe sleep education in the NICUs, SUID rates were inversely associated with GA in 2012 to 2013, suggesting that risk of SUID associated with prematurity has multiple etiologies requiring continued investigation, including biological vulnerabilities and the efficacy of NICU education programs, and that strategies to reduce SUID should be multifaceted.


Journal of Perinatal & Neonatal Nursing | 2007

Educating parents about the risk factors of sudden infant death syndrome: the role of neonatal intensive care unit and well baby nursery nurses.

Linda Esposito; Thomas Hegyi; Barbara Ostfeld

Nurses in newborn nurseries and neonatal intensive care units are instrumental in educating parents about reducing the risk for SIDS. Nurse participation is acknowledged and encouraged in the current policy statement on SIDS Risk Reduction put forth by the American Academy of Pediatrics. Despite the decline in SIDS, it remains the leading cause of postneonatal infant mortality, and despite greater public compliance with the risk reduction guidelines there is room for improvement in how effectively and consistently they are disseminated. To facilitate nursing participation as educators, role models, and collaborators in the development of relevant hospital policies and procedures, we review the current recommendations, addressing issues that may serve as barriers to participation, describing the biological plausibility underlying risk-reducing practices, and presenting resources from which nurses may obtain teaching materials and model policies.


Journal of Aapos | 2009

Actinic conjunctivitis in children: Clinical features, relation to sun exposure, and proposed staging and treatment

J. Mark Engel; Andrea Molinari; Barbara Ostfeld; Malik Deen; Oscar Croxatto

BACKGROUND Actinic conjunctivitis is an ocular photosensitivity reaction found mainly in children in certain populations in the Andean regions of South America, Mexico, and in the southwestern United States. Its clinical features, treatment, and possible relation to duration of sun exposure have not been fully described in the ophthalmologic literature. METHODS A 20-member ophthalmic team traveled to an Andean region of Ecuador to provide ophthalmic care to children. All children with conjunctivitis were examined. A novel 3-stage classification of actinic conjunctivitis, devised by one of the authors, was used to stage the disease. The parents of each child with actinic conjunctivitis were asked how much time the child spent outside. Histopathological evaluations were performed on children who underwent surgery. RESULTS A total of 206 children were examined, of whom 36 had changes consistent with actinic conjunctivitis. Stage 1 disease was diagnosed in 17 children, stage 2 in 9, and stage 3 in 10 in the most severely affected eye. The amount of time the child spent outside correlated with disease severity (r = 0.77, p < 0.001). Histopathologic samples showed an intense inflammatory response with hyperplasia of the vascular endothelium, pigmentary migration, and occasional eosinophilia. CONCLUSIONS Actinic conjunctivitis is prevalent among children of the highlands of Ecuador. Although it has an allergic component, our data suggest that the severity of the disease is significantly associated with sun exposure. The finding that the lesions are found only in the exposed conjunctiva supports the hypothesis that UV exposure is the main cause of the disease.

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Anne Koons

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

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Nigel Paneth

Michigan State University

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