Deborah Simkin
American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
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Pediatrics | 2011
Sharon Levy; Patricia K. Kokotailo; Janet F. Williams; Seth Ammerman; Tammy H. Sims; Vincent C. Smith; Martha J. Wunsch; Deborah Simkin; Karen E. Smith; Mark Del Monte
As a component of comprehensive pediatric care, adolescents should receive appropriate guidance regarding substance use during routine clinical care. This statement addresses practitioner challenges posed by the spectrum of pediatric substance use and presents an algorithm-based approach to augment the pediatricians confidence and abilities related to substance use screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment in the primary care setting. Adolescents with addictions should be managed collaboratively (or comanaged) with child and adolescent mental health or addiction specialists. This statement reviews recommended referral guidelines that are based on established patient-treatment–matching criteria and the risk level for substance abuse.
Pediatrics | 2009
Helen J. Binns; Joel A. Forman; Catherine J. Karr; Jerome A. Paulson; Kevin C. Osterhoudt; James R. Roberts; Megan Sandel; James M. Seltzer; Robert O. Wright; Dana Best; Elizabeth Blackburn; Mark Anderson; Sharon A. Savage; Walter J. Rogan; Paul Spire; Janet F. Williams; Marylou Behnke; Patricia K. Kokotailo; Sharon Levy; Tammy H. Sims; Martha J. Wunsch; Deborah Simkin; Karen Smith; Margaret J. Blythe; Michelle S. Barratt; Paula K. Braverman; Pamela J. Murray; David S. Rosen; Warren M. Seigel; Charles J. Wibbelsman
Tobacco use and secondhand tobacco-smoke (SHS) exposure are major national and international health concerns. Pediatricians and other clinicians who care for children are uniquely positioned to assist patients and families with tobacco-use prevention and treatment. Understanding the nature and extent of tobacco use and SHS exposure is an essential first step toward the goal of eliminating tobacco use and its consequences in the pediatric population. The next steps include counseling patients and family members to avoid SHS exposures or cease tobacco use; advocacy for policies that protect children from SHS exposure; and elimination of tobacco use in the media, public places, and homes. Three overarching principles of this policy can be identified: (1) there is no safe way to use tobacco; (2) there is no safe level or duration of exposure to SHS; and (3) the financial and political power of individuals, organizations, and government should be used to support tobacco control. Pediatricians are advised not to smoke or use tobacco; to make their homes, cars, and workplaces tobacco free; to consider tobacco control when making personal and professional decisions; to support and advocate for comprehensive tobacco control; and to advise parents and patients not to start using tobacco or to quit if they are already using tobacco. Prohibiting both tobacco advertising and the use of tobacco products in the media is recommended. Recommendations for eliminating SHS exposure and reducing tobacco use include attaining universal (1) smoke-free home, car, school, work, and play environments, both inside and outside, (2) treatment of tobacco use and dependence through employer, insurance, state, and federal supports, (3) implementation and enforcement of evidence-based tobacco-control measures in local, state, national, and international jurisdictions, and (4) financial and systems support for training in and research of effective ways to prevent and treat tobacco use and SHS exposure. Pediatricians, their staff and colleagues, and the American Academy of Pediatrics have key responsibilities in tobacco control to promote the health of children, adolescents, and young adults.
Pediatrics | 2010
Janet F. Williams; Marylou Behnke; Patricia K. Kokotailo; Sharon Levy; Tammy H. Sims; Martha J. Wunsch; Deborah Simkin; Karen E. Smith
Alcohol use continues to be a major problem from preadolescence through young adulthood in the United States. Results of recent neuroscience research have substantiated the deleterious effects of alcohol on adolescent brain development and added even more evidence to support the call to prevent and reduce underaged drinking. Pediatricians should be knowledgeable about substance abuse to be able to recognize risk factors for alcohol and other substance abuse among youth, screen for use, provide appropriate brief interventions, and refer to treatment. The integration of alcohol use prevention programs in the community and our educational system from elementary school through college should be promoted by pediatricians and the health care community. Promotion of media responsibility to connect alcohol consumption with realistic consequences should be supported by pediatricians. Additional research into the prevention, screening and identification, brief intervention, and management and treatment of alcohol and other substance use by adolescents continues to be needed to improve evidence-based practices.
Pediatrics | 2010
Janet F. Williams; Marylou Behnke; Patricia K. Kokotailo; Sharon Levy; Tammy H. Sims; Martha J. Wunsch; Deborah Simkin; Karen E. Smith
Alcohol use continues to be a major problem from preadolescence through young adulthood in the United States. Results of recent neuroscience research have substantiated the deleterious effects of alcohol on adolescent brain development and added even more evidence to support the call to prevent and reduce underaged drinking. Pediatricians should be knowledgeable about substance abuse to be able to recognize risk factors for alcohol and other substance abuse among youth, screen for use, provide appropriate brief interventions, and refer to treatment. The integration of alcohol use prevention programs in the community and our educational system from elementary school through college should be promoted by pediatricians and the health care community. Promotion of media responsibility to connect alcohol consumption with realistic consequences should be supported by pediatricians. Additional research into the prevention, screening and identification, brief intervention, and management and treatment of alcohol and other substance use by adolescents continues to be needed to improve evidence-based practices.
Pediatrics | 2007
Mary Lou Behnke; John R Knight; Patricia K. Kokotailo; Tammy H. Sims; Janet F. Williams; John W. Kulig; Deborah Simkin; Linn Goldberg; Sharon Levy; Karen E. Smith; Robert Murray; Barbara L. Frankowski; Rani S. Gereige; Cynthia J. Mears; Michele M. Roland; Thomas L. Young; Linda Grant; Daniel Hyman; Harold Magalnick; George J. Monteverdi; Evan G. Pattishall; Nancy LaCursia; Donna Mazyck; Mary Vernon-Smiley; Robin Wallace; Madra Guinn-Jones
The American Academy of Pediatrics continues to believe that adolescents should not be drug tested without their knowledge and consent. Recent US Supreme Court decisions and market forces have resulted in recommendations for drug testing of adolescents at school and products for parents to use to test adolescents at home. The American Academy of Pediatrics has strong reservations about testing adolescents at school or at home and believes that more research is needed on both safety and efficacy before school-based testing programs are implemented. The American Academy of Pediatrics also believes that more adolescent-specific substance abuse treatment resources are needed to ensure that testing leads to early rehabilitation rather than to punitive measures only.
Pediatrics | 2009
Tammy H. Sims; Janet F. Williams; Marylou Behnke; Patricia K. Kokotailo; Sharon Levy; Martha J. Wunsch; Deborah Simkin; Karen Smith
Tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of morbidity and death in the United States. Because 80% to 90% of adult smokers began during adolescence, and two thirds became regular, daily smokers before they reached 19 years of age, tobacco use may be viewed as a pediatric disease. Every year in the United States, approximately 1.4 million children younger than 18 years start smoking, and many of them will die prematurely from a smoking-related disease. Moreover, there is recent evidence that adolescents report symptoms of tobacco dependence early in the smoking process, even before becoming daily smokers. The prevalence of tobacco use is higher among teenagers and young adults than among older adult populations. The critical role of pediatricians in helping to reduce tobacco use and addiction and secondhand tobacco-smoke exposure in the pediatric population includes education and prevention, screening and detection, and treatment and referral.
Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America | 2013
Deborah Simkin; Charles W. Popper
Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) defies simple definition, because the distinction between CAM and conventional medicine is largely arbitrary and fluid. Despite inconclusive data on the efficacy and safety of many CAM treatments in child and adolescent psychiatry, there are enough data on certain treatments to provide guidance to clinicians and researchers. CAM treatments, as adjunctive therapy or monotherapy, can be clinically beneficial and sensible. The low stigma and cost-competitiveness of many CAM psychiatric treatments are highly attractive to children and parents. Physicians need to be knowledgeable about CAM treatments to provide clinically valid informed consent for some conventional treatments.
Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America | 2013
Deborah Simkin; Charles W. Popper
In deciding what topics to cover in this introduction to complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) treatments in child and adolescent psychiatry, we were primarily interested in focusing on treatments backed by useful research—data that allow us to evaluate the clinical value of these treatments for youth with psychiatric disorders. The CAM treatments covered here have been chosen because the available data in youth allow some inferences about their effects (positive or otherwise), because the limited data justify more research, or because of widespread public interest or common use of these treatments. A huge variety of interventions were considered, but the scientific literature is too scant to support the meaningful discussion of most CAM treatments, especially in youth. We have found increasing activity and improving quality in CAM research in child and adolescent psychiatry, so the Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America have expanded their original plans and have allowed child and adolescent CAM psychiatry to be covered in 2 volumes. In these volumes, it will be clear that the data on many CAM treatments are often too limited to draw firm conclusions about their efficacy in youth, but are promising enough to offer helpful guidance to clinicians and researchers in child and adolescent psychiatry. These 2 volumes are, by necessity, highly selective. CAM encompasses a vast range of types of treatments, systems of health care, and lifestyle philosophies. The selection of treatments discussed in these volumes tends toward the more conventional “near” side of CAM. We have not included alternative or non-Western systems of medicine. Acupuncture has gained a strong foothold in American medicine, even though its mechanism remains difficult to explain based on the Western traditions of anatomy and physiology. We have not included acupuncture in these volumes because we could not find any data regarding its use for psychiatric indications in youth (at least in the literature published in English). Chiropractic manipulation for physical conditions, although covered by health insurance companies, is supported by data, but the magnitude of its effects remains uncertain, and there are little data
Pediatrics | 2001
Edward A. Jacobs; John R Knight; John W. Kulig; Peter D. Rogers; Gayle M. Boyd; Dorynne Czechowicz; Deborah Simkin; Karen E. Smith
Pediatrics | 2001
Richard P. Nelson; Jeffrey M. Brown; Wallace D. Brown; Beverly L. Koops; Thomas K. McInerny; John R. Meurer; Maria E. Minon; Mark J. Werner; Jean Wright; Margaret A. McManus; Jean Davis; Edward A. Jacobs; John R Knight; John W. Kulig; Peter D. Rogers; Gayle M. Boyd; Dorynne Czechowicz; Deborah Simkin; Karen E. Smith
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University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
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