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Dive into the research topics where Helen J. Binns is active.

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Featured researches published by Helen J. Binns.


Pediatrics | 1999

Language Barriers and Resource Utilization in a Pediatric Emergency Department

Louis C. Hampers; Susie Cha; David J. Gutglass; Helen J. Binns; Steven E. Krug

Background. Although an inability to speak English is recognized as an obstacle to health care in the United States, it is unclear how clinicians alter their diagnostic approach when confronted with a language barrier (LB). Objective. To determine if a LB between families and their emergency department (ED) physician was associated with a difference in diagnostic testing and length of stay in the ED. Design. Prospective cohort study. Methods. This study prospectively assessed clinical status and care provided to patients who presented to a pediatric ED from September 1997 through December 1997. Patients included were 2 months to 10 years of age, not chronically ill, and had a presenting temperature ≥38.5°C or complained of vomiting, diarrhea, or decreased oral intake. Examining physicians determined study eligibility and recorded the Yale Observation Score if the patient was <3 years old, and whether there was a LB between the physician and the family. Standard hospital charges were applied for each visit to any of the 22 commonly ordered tests. Comparisons of total charges were made among groups using Mann-Whitney U tests. Analysis of covariance was used to evaluate predictors of total charges and length of ED stay. Results. Data were obtained about 2467 patients. A total of 286 families (12%) did not speak English, resulting in a LB for the physician in 209 cases (8.5%). LB patients were much more likely to be Hispanic (88% vs 49%), and less likely to be commercially insured (19% vs 30%). These patients were slightly younger (mean 31 months vs 36 months), but had similar acuity, triage vital signs, and Yale Observation Score (when applicable). In cases in which a LB existed, mean test charges were significantly higher:


Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics | 1999

Sleep and behavior problems among preschoolers.

John V. Lavigne; Richard Arend; Diane Rosenbaum; Andy Smith; Marc Weissbluth; Helen J. Binns; Katherine Kaufer Christoffel

145 versus


Pediatrics | 2008

From suspicion of physical child abuse to reporting: Primary care clinician decision-making

Emalee G. Flaherty; Robert D. Sege; John L. Griffith; Lori Lyn Price; Richard C. Wasserman; Eric J. Slora; Niramol Dhepyasuwan; Donna Harris; David P. Norton; Mary Lu Angelilli; Dianna Abney; Helen J. Binns

104, and ED stays were significantly longer: 165 minutes versus 137 minutes. In an analysis of covariance model including race/ethnicity, insurance status, physician training level, attending physician, urgent care setting, triage category, age, and vital signs, the presence of a LB accounted for a


Pediatrics | 2005

Lead exposure in children: Prevention, detection, and management

Michael Shannon; Dana Best; Helen J. Binns; Janice Joy Kim; Lynnette J. Mazur; William B. Weil; Christine L. Johnson; David W. Reynolds; James R. Roberts; Elizabeth Blackburn; Robert H. Johnson; Martha S. Linet; Walter J. Rogan; Paul Spire

38 increase in charges for testing and a 20 minute longer ED stay. Conclusion. Despite controlling for multiple factors, the presence of a physician–family LB was associated with a higher rate of resource utilization for diagnostic studies and increased ED visit times. Additional study is recommended to explore the reasons for these differences and ways to provide care more efficiently to non-English-speaking patients. language barriers, resource utilization, test ordering.


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 2001

Oppositional Defiant Disorder With Onset in Preschool Years: Longitudinal Stability and Pathways to Other Disorders

John V. Lavigne; Colleen Cicchetti; Robert D. Gibbons; Helen J. Binns; Lene Larsen; Crystal Devito

This study described the relationship between amount of sleep and behavior problems among preschoolers. Participants were 510 children aged 2 to 5 years who were enrolled through 68 private pediatric practices. Parents reported on the amount of sleep their child obtained at night and in 24-hour periods. With demographic variables controlled, regression models were used to determine whether sleep was associated with behavior problems. The relationship between less sleep at night and the presence of a DSM-III-R psychiatric diagnosis was significant (odds ratio = 1.23, p = .026). Less night sleep (p < .0001) and less sleep in a 24-hour period (p < .004) were associated with increased total behavior problems on the Child Behavior Checklist; less night sleep (p < .0002) and less 24-hour sleep (p < .004) were also associated with more externalizing problems on that measure. Further research is needed to ascertain whether sleep is playing a causal role in the increase of behavior problems.


Pediatrics | 2008

Clinicians' description of factors influencing their reporting of suspected child abuse: Report of the child abuse reporting experience study research group

Rise Jones; Emalee G. Flaherty; Helen J. Binns; Lori Lyn Price; Eric J. Slora; Dianna Abney; Donna Harris; Katherine Kaufer Christoffel; Robert D. Sege

OBJECTIVES. The goals were to determine how frequently primary care clinicians reported suspected physical child abuse, the levels of suspicion associated with reporting, and what factors influenced reporting to child protective services. METHODS. In this prospective observational study, 434 clinicians collected data on 15003 child injury visits, including information about the injury, child, family, likelihood that the injury was caused by child abuse (5-point scale), and whether the injury was reported to child protective services. Data on 327 clinicians indicating some suspicion of child abuse for 1683 injuries were analyzed. RESULTS. Clinicians reported 95 (6%) of the 1683 patients to child protective services. Clinicians did not report 27% of injuries considered likely or very likely caused by child abuse and 76% of injuries considered possibly caused by child abuse. Reporting rates were increased if the clinician perceived the injury to be inconsistent with the history and if the patient was referred to the clinician for suspected child abuse. Patients who had an injury that was not a laceration, who had >1 family risk factor, who had a serious injury, who had a child risk factor other than an inconsistent injury, who were black, or who were unfamiliar to the clinician were more likely to be reported. Clinicians who had not reported all suspicious injuries during their career or who had lost families as patients because of previous reports were more likely to report suspicious injuries. CONCLUSIONS. Clinicians had some degree of suspicion that ∼10% of the injuries they evaluated were caused by child abuse. Clinicians did not report all suspicious injuries to child protective services, even if the level of suspicion was high (likely or very likely caused by child abuse). Child, family, and injury characteristics and clinician previous experiences influenced decisions to report.


Journal of Urban Health-bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine | 2004

Risk factors for overweight in five- to six-year-old Hispanic-American children: a pilot study.

Adolfo J. Ariza; Edwin H. Chen; Helen J. Binns; Katherine Kaufer Christoffel

Fatal lead encephalopathy has disappeared and blood lead concentrations have decreased in US children, but approximately 25% still live in housing with deteriorated lead-based paint and are at risk of lead exposure with resulting cognitive impairment and other sequelae. Evidence continues to accrue that commonly encountered blood lead concentrations, even those less than 10 μg/dL, may impair cognition, and there is no threshold yet identified for this effect. Most US children are at sufficient risk that they should have their blood lead concentration measured at least once. There is now evidence-based guidance available for managing children with increased lead exposure. Housing stabilization and repair can interrupt exposure in most cases. The focus in childhood lead-poisoning policy, however, should shift from case identification and management to primary prevention, with a goal of safe housing for all children.


Aids Patient Care and Stds | 2009

Experiences of HIV-related stigma among young men who have sex with men.

Nadia Dowshen; Helen J. Binns; Robert Garofalo

OBJECTIVE To examine the stability and change in oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) with onset among preschool children in a pediatric sample. METHOD A total of 510 children aged 2-5 years were enrolled initially in 1989-1990 (mean age 3.42 years); 280 participated in five waves of data collection over a period of 48 to 72 months (mean wave 5 age, 8.35 years). Test batteries varied by age, but they included the Child Behavior Checklist, developmental evaluation, Rochester Adaptive Behavior Inventory, and a play session (before age 7 years) and a structured interview (Diagnostic Interview for Children and Adolescents, parent and child versions) at ages 7+ years. Consensus diagnoses were assigned by using best-estimate procedures. RESULTS Wave 1 single-diagnosis ODD showed a significant relationship with both single-diagnosis ODD and single-diagnosis attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) at subsequent waves, but not with single-diagnosis anxiety or mood disorders. Single-diagnosis ODD at wave 1 was associated with later comorbidity of ODD/ADHD, ODD/anxiety, and ODD/mood disorders. Stability across waves 2 through 5 was moderate to high for comorbid ODD/anxiety and ODD/ADHD; low to moderate stability for single-diagnosis ODD and single-diagnosis mood disorder; and low for mood disorder, single-diagnosis ADHD, and single-diagnosis anxiety disorder. CONCLUSIONS Preschool children with ODD are likely to continue to exhibit disorder, with increasing comorbidity with ADHD, anxiety, or mood disorders.


Pediatrics | 2007

Interpreting and Managing Blood Lead Levels of Less Than 10 μg/dL in Children and Reducing Childhood Exposure to Lead: Recommendations of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Advisory Committee on Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention

Helen J. Binns; Carla Campbell; Mary Jean Brown

OBJECTIVES. Primary care clinicians participating in the Child Abuse Reporting Experience Study did not report all suspected physical child abuse to child protective services. This evaluation of study data seeks (1) to identify factors clinicians weighed when deciding whether to report injuries they suspected might have been caused by child abuse; (2) to describe clinicians’ management strategies for children with injuries from suspected child abuse that were not reported; and (3) to describe how clinicians explained not reporting high-suspicion injuries. METHODS. From the 434 pediatric primary care clinicians who participated in the Child Abuse Reporting Experience Study and who indicated they had provided care for a child with an injury they perceived as suspicious, a subsample of 75 of 81 clinicians completed a telephone interview. Interviewees included 36 clinicians who suspected child abuse but did not report the injury to child protective services (12 with high suspicion and 24 with some suspicion) and 39 who reported the suspicious injury. Interviews were analyzed for major themes and subthemes, including decision-making regarding reporting of suspected physical child abuse to child protective services and alternative management strategies. RESULTS. Four major themes emerged regarding the clinicians’ reporting decisions, that is, familiarity with the family, reference to elements of the case history, use of available resources, and perception of expected outcomes of reporting to child protective services. When they did not report, clinicians planned alternative management strategies, including active or informal case follow-up management. When interviewed, some clinicians modified their original opinion that an injury was likely or very likely caused by abuse, to explain why they did not report to child protective services. CONCLUSIONS. Decisions about reporting to child protective services are guided by injury circumstances and history, knowledge of and experiences with the family, consultation with others, and previous experiences with child protective services.


Pediatrics | 2009

Policy statement - Tobacco use: A pediatric disease

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

The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of and possible risk factors for overweight in a sample of 5- to 6-year-old Hispanic (predominantly Mexican American) children in Chicago, Illinois, to see if overweight is more common in more highly acculturated immigrant families. There were 250 kindergarten students (92% of those eligible) attending two public elementary schools serving primarily Mexican American neighborhoods measured for height and weight. Consenting mothers were interviewed (n=80) and measured (n=38). The interview tool covered demography, acculturation, infant and toddler feeding practices, current cating patterns and food preparation habits, physical activity, and psychosocial family characteristics. Overweight was conservatively defined as weight-for-height at or above the National Center for Health Statistics 95th percentile. The data were used to describe the prevalence of overweight. Overweight and nonoverweight children were compared on all survey variables using appropriate statistical tests, with significance set at .05. There were 23% of the total sample of children (n=250) and 26% of the subsample of children (those whose mothers were interviewed) who were overweight. Analysis limited to children in the subsample explored risk factors. The median score on the Acculturation Scale was 4.0 (range 2.4–10.4) on a scale of 2.4 (entirely not acculturated) to 12 (fully acculturated). There was no significant association between overweight and Acculturation Scale score. Overweight children were more likely than those not overweight to watch television for more than 3 hours during weekend days (48% vs. 22%, P=.03). Overweight children were also more likely to consume sweetened beverages (powdered drinks, soda pop, atole) daily (67% vs. 39%, P=.03). There was a trend indicating that free access to food at home increased the risk of overweight (P=0.06). No other family- or child-level variables were related to overweight. Only 40% of mothers with an overweight child correctly assessed these children as overweight. Approximately one quarter of the children in the study were overweight. Our hypothesis that their obesity was linked to acculturation was not confirmed. Longer hours of child television viewing on weekends and higher levels of sweetened beverage consumption were important behaviors associated with the occurrence of overweight. These data should be considered when designing future studies in this population.

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Adolfo J. Ariza

Children's Memorial Hospital

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Susan A. LeBailly

Children's Memorial Hospital

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Joel A. Forman

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Richard Arend

Children's Memorial Hospital

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Jerome A. Paulson

George Washington University

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Kevin C. Osterhoudt

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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