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Dive into the research topics where Ellen F. Crain is active.

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Featured researches published by Ellen F. Crain.


Pediatric Pulmonology | 1997

Characteristics of inner-city children with asthma: the National Cooperative Inner-City Asthma Study.

Meyer Kattan; Herman Mitchell; Peyton A. Eggleston; Peter J. Gergen; Ellen F. Crain; Susan Redline; Kevin B. Weiss; Richard Evans; Richard A. Kaslow; Carolyn M. Kercsmar; Fred Leickly; Floyd J. Malveaux; H. James Wedner

Asthma morbidity has increased dramatically in the past decade, especially among poor and minority children in the inner cities. The National Cooperative Inner‐City Asthma Study (NCICAS) is a multicenter study designed to determine factors that contribute to asthma morbidity in children in the inner cities. A total of 1,528 children with asthma, ages 4 to 9 years old, were enrolled in a broad‐based epidemiologic investigation of factors which were thought to be related to asthma morbidity. Baseline assessment included morbidity, allergy evaluation, adherence and access to care, home visits, and pulmonary function. Interval assessments were conducted at 3, 6, and 9 months after the baseline evaluations.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1992

A prospective study of recurrent febrile seizures

Anne T. Berg; Shilomo Shinnar; W. Allen Hauser; Marta Alemany; Eugene D. Shapiro; Morton E. Salomon; Ellen F. Crain

BACKGROUND Febrile seizures occur in about 2 to 4 percent of all children, approximately one third of whom will have recurrent febrile seizures. Little is known about predictors of recurrence. METHODS In this prospective study, we identified 347 children (1 month to 10 years of age) who presented with a first febrile seizure at one of four pediatric emergency departments. Information about these children was collected from medical records and interviews with the parents, and the children were followed for a median of 20 months to ascertain whether febrile seizures recurred. RESULTS Recurrent febrile seizures occurred in 94 of the 347 children (27 percent) with a cumulative risk of 25 percent at one year and 30 percent at two years. The duration of fever before the initial seizure was associated with the risk of recurrence at one year: for fever lasting less than 1 hour, the risk of recurrence was 44 percent; for fever lasting 1 to 24 hours, 23 percent; and for fever lasting more than 24 hours, 13 percent (P less than 0.001). With each degree of increase in temperature (in degrees Fahrenheit), from 101 degrees F (38.3 degrees C) to greater than or equal to 105 degrees F (40.6 degrees C), the risk of recurrence at one year declined, from 35 percent to 30, 26, 20, and 13 percent (P for trend = 0.024). An age of less than 18 months and a family history of febrile seizures were also associated with an increased risk of recurrence. A family history of epilepsy, complex febrile seizures, and neurodevelopmental abnormalities did not increase the risk of recurrent febrile seizures. CONCLUSIONS A shorter duration of fever before the initial febrile seizure and a lower temperature are associated with an increased risk of recurrence in children who have febrile seizures.


Pediatric Pulmonology | 1997

Psychosocial characteristics of inner-city children with asthma: A description of the NCICAS psychosocial protocol

Shari L. Wade; Connie Weil; Gary Holden; Herman Mitchell; Richard Evans; Deanna Kruszon-Moran; Laurie J. Bauman; Ellen F. Crain; Peyton A. Eggleston; Meyer Kattan; Carolyn M. Kercsmar; Fred Leickly; Floyd J. Malveaux; H. James Wedner

Previous research has demonstrated a significant reciprocal relationship between psychosocial factors and asthma morbidity in children. The National Cooperative Inner‐City Asthma Study investigated both asthma‐specific and non‐specific psychosocial variables, including asthma knowledge beliefs and management behavior, caregiver and child adjustment, life stress, and social support. This article presents these psychosocial characteristics in 1,528 4–9‐year‐old asthmatic urban children and their caretakers.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2008

Acute respiratory health effects of air pollution on children with asthma in US inner cities

George T. O'Connor; Lucas M. Neas; Benjamin Vaughn; Meyer Kattan; Herman Mitchell; Ellen F. Crain; Richard Evans; Rebecca S. Gruchalla; Wayne J. Morgan; James W. Stout; G. Kenneth Adams; Morton Lippmann

BACKGROUND Children with asthma in inner-city communities may be particularly vulnerable to adverse effects of air pollution because of their airways disease and exposure to relatively high levels of motor vehicle emissions. OBJECTIVE To investigate the association between fluctuations in outdoor air pollution and asthma morbidity among inner-city children with asthma. METHODS We analyzed data from 861 children with persistent asthma in 7 US urban communities who performed 2-week periods of twice-daily pulmonary function testing every 6 months for 2 years. Asthma symptom data were collected every 2 months. Daily pollution measurements were obtained from the Aerometric Information Retrieval System. The relationship of lung function and symptoms to fluctuations in pollutant concentrations was examined by using mixed models. RESULTS Almost all pollutant concentrations measured were below the National Ambient Air Quality Standards. In single-pollutant models, higher 5-day average concentrations of NO2, sulfur dioxide, and particles smaller than 2.5 microm were associated with significantly lower pulmonary function. Higher pollutant levels were independently associated with reduced lung function in a 3-pollutant model. Higher concentrations of NO2 and particles smaller than 2.5 microm were associated with asthma-related missed school days, and higher NO2 concentrations were associated with asthma symptoms. CONCLUSION Among inner-city children with asthma, short-term increases in air pollutant concentrations below the National Ambient Air Quality Standards were associated with adverse respiratory health effects. The associations with NO2 suggest that motor vehicle emissions may be causing excess morbidity in this population.


Pediatric Pulmonology | 1997

Design and Methods of the National Cooperative Inner-City Asthma Study

Herman Mitchell; Yvonne D. Senturia; Peter J. Gergen; Dean B. Baker; Christine L.M. Joseph; Kathleen Mcniff-Mortimer; H. James Wedner; Ellen F. Crain; Peyton A. Eggleston; Richard Evans; Meyer Kattan; Carolyn M. Kercsmar; Fred Leickly; Floyd J. Malveaux; Ernestine Smartt; Kevin B. Weiss

The National Cooperative Inner‐City Asthma Study (NCICAS) was established to identify and then intervene on those factors which are related to asthma morbidity among children in the inner‐city. This paper describes the design and methods of the broad‐based initial Phase I epidemiologic investigation. Eight research centers enrolled 1,528 children, 4 to 9 years of age, from English‐ or Spanish‐speaking families, all of whom resided in major metropolitan inner‐city areas. The protocol included an eligibility assessment and an extensive baseline visit, during which symptom data, such as wheezing, lost sleep, changes in activities of daily living, inpatient admissions, and emergency department and clinic visits were collected. A comprehensive medical history for each child was taken and adherence to the medical regimen was assessed. Access, as well as barriers, to the medical system were addressed by a series of questions including the location, availability, and consistency of treatment for asthma attacks, follow‐up care, and primary care. The psychological health of the caretaker and of the child was also measured. Asthma knowledge of the child and caretaker was determined. Sensitization to allergens was assessed by skin‐prick allergen testing and exposure to cigarette smoke and the home environment were assessed by questionnaire. For more than a third of the families, in‐home visits were conducted with dust sample allergen collection and documentation of the home environment, such as the presence of pets and evidence of smoking, mildew, and roaches. Urine specimens were collected to measure passive smoke exposure by cotinine assays, blood samples were drawn for banking, and children age 6 to 9 years were given spirometric lung function assessment. At 3, 6 and 9 months following the baseline assessment, telephone interviews were conducted to ask about the childs symptoms, unscheduled emergency department or clinic visits, and hospitalizations. At this time, peak flow measurements with 2‐week diary symptom records were collected. Pediatr. Pulmonol. 1997;24:237–252.


Pediatric Emergency Care | 2000

Acetaminophen and ibuprofen dosing by parents.

Siu Fai Li; Britt Lacher; Ellen F. Crain

Background Acetaminophen and ibuprofen are two of the most commonly used medications in children. It is our experience that parents often misdose these medications. Misdosing may lead to unintended toxicity or inadequate symptomatic improvement. There are limited data on the extent of misdosing of these antipyretics. We sought to determine the prevalence of and risk factors for inaccurate dosing by parents seeking care for their children in the emergency department (ED). Methods A cross-sectional observational study was performed in an urban academic pediatric ED. Two hundred patients 10 years of age and younger who were given a known dose of acetaminophen or ibuprofen in the 24 hours prior to the ED visit were enrolled. The treating physician completed a questionnaire for each patient. Caregivers were asked about quantity and frequency of antipyretic use prior to the ED visit, the source of information used to determine dosage, and which factor (eg, age, sex, height, weight, height of fever, severity of illness) they considered most important in determining the correct dosage of medication. Doses of 10 to 15 mg/kg for acetaminophen and 5 to 10 mg/kg for ibuprofen were considered accurate. Results Overall, 51% of patients received an inaccurate dose of medication, including 62% of patients given acetaminophen and 26% of patients given ibuprofen. Infants < 1 year old were more likely to receive an inaccurate dose (RR 1.40, P < 0.04, 95% CI = 1.06–1.86). Caregivers who stated that medication dosage was based on weight were less likely to give an inaccurate dose of medication (RR 0.71, P < 0.03, 95% CI = 0.52–0.97). Conclusions Over half of the caregivers surveyed gave an inaccurate dose of acetaminophen or ibuprofen, particularly to infants. Caregivers who reported that antipyretic dosage was based on weight were less likely to misdose medication, suggesting a valuable role for patient education.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1982

Febrile infants: predictors of bacteremia.

Ellen F. Crain; Steven Shelov

One hundred and seventy-five infants less than 8 weeks of age, presenting to the pediatric emergency room of the Bronx Municipal Hospital Center with rectal temperature greater than or equal to 38 degrees C (100.4 degrees F), were studied. House officers recorded their impressions of the infants on a number of variables prior to performing a lumbar puncture and obtaining laboratory data. All infants were admitted for parenteral antibiotic therapy pending culture results. Culture-positive bacterial infections occurred in 6.3% (n = 11); the incidence of bacteremia was 3.4% (n = 6). Of special concern were the 134 infants who had no visible source for their fever during the first examination. A major goal was to determine whether there were any early predictors of bacteremia in this group. The individual variables of white blood cell count greater than or equal to 15,000/mm3, band count greater than or equal to 500/mm3, temperature, impression of irritability, tone, cry, and activity level were not related to the presence of bacteremia. An erythrocyte sedimentation rate greater than or equal to 30 and the examiners impression of sepsis were significantly associated with bacteremia but did not correctly identify all cases. However, the combination of impression of sepsis, white blood count greater than or equal to 15,000/mm3, and erythrocyte sedimentation rate greater than or equal to 30 identified all infants with bacteremia and excluded 82% of the infants who were eventually shown not to have bacteremia.


Pediatrics | 2006

A randomized clinical trial of clinician feedback to improve quality of care for inner-city children with asthma

Meyer Kattan; Ellen F. Crain; Suzanne Steinbach; Cynthia M. Visness; Michelle Walter; James W. Stout; Richard Evans; Ernestine Smartt; Rebecca S. Gruchalla; Wayne J. Morgan; George T. O'Connor; Herman Mitchell

CONTEXT. Barriers impede translating recommendations for asthma treatment into practice, particularly in inner cities where asthma morbidity is highest. METHODS. The purpose of this study was to test the effectiveness of timely patient feedback in the form of a letter providing recent patient-specific symptoms, medication, and health service use combined with guideline-based recommendations for changes in therapy on improving the quality of asthma care by inner-city primary care providers and on resultant asthma morbidity. This was a randomized, controlled clinical trial in 5- to 11-year-old children (n = 937) with moderate to severe asthma receiving health care in hospital- and community-based clinics and private practices in 7 inner-city urban areas. The caretaker of each child received a bimonthly telephone call to collect clinical information about the childs asthma. For a full year, the providers of intervention group children received bimonthly computer-generated letters based on these calls summarizing the childs asthma symptoms, health service use, and medication use with a corresponding recommendation to step up or step down medications. We measured the number and proportion of scheduled visits resulting in stepping up of medications, asthma symptoms (2-week recall), and health care use (2-month recall). RESULTS. In this population, only a modest proportion of children whose symptoms warranted a medication increase actually had a scheduled visit to reevaluate their asthma treatment. However, in the 2-month interval after receipt of a step-up letter, 17.1% of the letters were followed by scheduled visits in the intervention group compared with scheduled visits 12.3% of the time by the control children with comparable clinical symptoms. Asthma medications were stepped up when indicated after 46.0% of these visits in the intervention group compared with 35.6% in the control group, and when asthma symptoms warranted a step up in therapy, medication changes occurred earlier among the intervention children. Among children whose medications were stepped up at any time during the 12-month study period, those in the intervention group experienced 22.1% fewer symptom days and 37.9% fewer school days missed. The intention-to-treat analysis showed no difference over the intervention year in the number of symptom days, yet there was a trend toward fewer days of limited activity and a significant decrease in emergency department visits by the intervention group compared with controls. This 24% drop in emergency department visits resulted in an intervention that was cost saving in its first year. CONCLUSIONS. Patient-specific feedback to inner-city providers increased scheduled asthma visits, increased asthma visits in which medications were stepped up when clinically indicated, and reduced emergency department visits.


Pediatrics | 2006

Spatial accessibility of primary care pediatric services in an urban environment: association with asthma management and outcome.

Stephen J. Teach; Mark F. Guagliardo; Ellen F. Crain; Robert McCarter; Deborah M. Quint; Cheng Shao; Jill G. Joseph

BACKGROUND. Disadvantaged urban children with asthma depend heavily on emergency departments (EDs) for episodic care. We hypothesized that among an urban population of children with asthma, higher spatial accessibility to primary care pediatric services would be associated with (1) more scheduled primary care visits for asthma, (2) better longitudinal asthma management, and (3) fewer unscheduled visits for asthma care. METHODS. We enrolled children aged 12 months to 17 years, inclusive, who sought acute asthma care in an urban pediatric ED. Eligibility criteria included a history of unscheduled visits for asthma in the previous year. We collected comprehensive data on each participants asthma medical management and prior health care utilization. In addition, we calculated each participants spatial accessibility to primary care pediatric services, reported as a provider-to-population ratio at their place of residence. Patients then were stratified by their spatial accessibility to care and compared with respect to measures of medical management and health care utilization. RESULTS. Among the 411 eligible participants, the spatial accessibility of primary care ranged from 7.4 to 350.2 full-time pediatric providers per 100000 children <18 years of age, with a mean of 57.7 ± 40.0. Patients in the middle and highest tertiles of spatial accessibility made significantly more scheduled visits for asthma care than patients in the lowest tertile. There were no differences among tertiles of accessibility with respect to asthma management or with respect to unscheduled visits for asthma care. CONCLUSIONS. Within this highly urban, largely disadvantaged and minority population of children with chronic asthma, patients with higher spatial accessibility to primary care services made significantly more scheduled visits for asthma care.


Ambulatory Pediatrics | 2001

Insurance and Quality of Care for Children With Acute Asthma

Timothy G. Ferris; Ellen F. Crain; Emily Oken; Linda Wang; Sunday Clark; Carlos A. Camargo

BACKGROUND Increasing attention has been paid to the role of insurance in determining quality and outcomes of care. Pressures to reduce health costs and to improve quality have prompted attempts by managed care organizations to decrease the use of the emergency department (ED) for acute asthma, but performance comparisons between insurance types remain rare. METHODS We used prospective data from the Multicenter Airway Research Collaboration on 965 children with acute asthma presenting to 36 EDs. We compared measures of quality of pre-ED care, acute severity, and short-term outcomes (length of stay, percent relapse, and percent with ongoing symptoms) across 4 different insurance categories: managed care, indemnity, Medicaid, and uninsured. We used multivariate regression to control for differences in education, estimated income, race/ethnicity, and chronic asthma severity and acute asthma characteristics. RESULTS Children with managed care and indemnity had similar demographic and asthma characteristics, but these children differed significantly from Medicaid and uninsured patients. Managed care and indemnity insured children had similar ratings on all 7 quality measures, with Medicaid and uninsured children ranking significantly lower on most measures, including (1) percent with primary care provider (PCP) (P <.001), (2) percent using ED as usual site of asthma care (P <.001), (3) percent using ED for prescriptions (P <.001), (4) percent with a ratio of >1 of ED visits to acute office visits within the past year (P =.003), and (5) percent visiting their PCP within the week prior to ED visit (P <.001). Children with managed care were more acutely ill than were indemnity, Medicaid, or uninsured children on presentation to the ED (pulmonary index of 4.6, 4.0, 4.2, and 3.9, respectively, P =.007). There were no significant differences in length of hospital stay, relapse, and ongoing exacerbation. CONCLUSIONS Our results indicate similar quality of care, greater severity of acute asthma, and no worse outcomes for children with managed care compared to children with indemnity insurance. We found uninsured children to have consistently poorer quality of care than insured patients.

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Sandra J. Cunningham

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Meyer Kattan

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Richard Evans

Children's Memorial Hospital

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Kevin B. Weiss

George Washington University

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Rebecca S. Gruchalla

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Carolyn M. Kercsmar

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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James W. Stout

University of Washington

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