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Dive into the research topics where Nancy A. Murphy is active.

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Featured researches published by Nancy A. Murphy.


Pediatrics | 2005

Care coordination in the medical home: Integrating health and related systems of care for children with special health care needs

Paul H. Lipkin; Joshua Alexander; James Daniel Cartwright; Larry W. Desch; John C. Duby; Diane R. Edwards; Ellen Roy Elias; Christopher P. Johnson; Eric B. Levey; Nancy A. Murphy; Scott M. Myers; Ann Tilton; Beverly Crider; Donald J. Lollar; Michelle M. Macias; Merle McPherson; Stephanie Mucha Skipper

Care coordination is a process that facilitates the linkage of children and their families with appropriate services and resources in a coordinated effort to achieve good health. Care coordination for children with special health care needs often is complicated because there is no single point of entry into the multiple systems of care, and complex criteria frequently determine the availability of funding and services among public and private payers. Economic and sociocultural barriers to coordination of care exist and affect families and health care professionals. In their important role of providing a medical home for all children, primary care physicians have a vital role in the process of care coordination, in concert with the family.


Pediatrics | 2006

Sexuality of Children and Adolescents With Developmental Disabilities

Nancy A. Murphy; Ellen Roy Elias

Children and adolescents with developmental disabilities, like all children, are sexual persons. However, attention to their complex medical and functional issues often consumes time that might otherwise be invested in addressing the anatomic, physiologic, emotional, and social aspects of their developing sexuality. This report discusses issues of puberty, contraception, psychosexual development, sexual abuse, and sexuality education specific to children and adolescents with disabilities and their families. Pediatricians, in the context of the medical home, are encouraged to discuss issues of sexuality on a regular basis, ensure the privacy of each child and adolescent, promote self-care and social independence among persons with disabilities, advocate for appropriate sexuality education, and provide ongoing education for children and adolescents with developmental disabilities and their families.


Pediatrics | 2014

Patient- and Family-Centered Care Coordination: A Framework for Integrating Care for Children and Youth Across Multiple Systems

Renee M. Turchi; Richard C. Antonelli; Kenneth W. Norwood; Richard Adams; Timothy J. Brei; Robert Burke; Beth Ellen Davis; Sandra L. Friedman; Amy J. Houtrow; Dennis Z. Kuo; Susan E. Levy; Susan E. Wiley; Miriam A. Kalichman; Nancy A. Murphy; Carolyn Bridgemohan; Marie Y. Mann; Georgina Peacock; Bonnie Strickland; Nora Wells; Max Wiznitzer; Stephanie Mucha; W. Carl Cooley; Joan Jeung; Beverly Johnson; Thomas S. Klitzner; Jennifer Lail; Linda L. Lindeke; Amy Mullins; Lee Partridge; William Schwab

Understanding a care coordination framework, its functions, and its effects on children and families is critical for patients and families themselves, as well as for pediatricians, pediatric medical subspecialists/surgical specialists, and anyone providing services to children and families. Care coordination is an essential element of a transformed American health care delivery system that emphasizes optimal quality and cost outcomes, addresses family-centered care, and calls for partnership across various settings and communities. High-quality, cost-effective health care requires that the delivery system include elements for the provision of services supporting the coordination of care across settings and professionals. This requirement of supporting coordination of care is generally true for health systems providing care for all children and youth but especially for those with special health care needs. At the foundation of an efficient and effective system of care delivery is the patient-/family-centered medical home. From its inception, the medical home has had care coordination as a core element. In general, optimal outcomes for children and youth, especially those with special health care needs, require interfacing among multiple care systems and individuals, including the following: medical, social, and behavioral professionals; the educational system; payers; medical equipment providers; home care agencies; advocacy groups; needed supportive therapies/services; and families. Coordination of care across settings permits an integration of services that is centered on the comprehensive needs of the patient and family, leading to decreased health care costs, reduction in fragmented care, and improvement in the patient/family experience of care.


Pediatrics | 2012

Home Care of Children and Youth With Complex Health Care Needs and Technology Dependencies

Ellen Roy Elias; Nancy A. Murphy

Children and youth with complex medical issues, especially those with technology dependencies, experience frequent and often lengthy hospitalizations. Hospital discharges for these children can be a complicated process that requires a deliberate, multistep approach. In addition to successful discharges to home, it is essential that pediatric providers develop and implement an interdisciplinary and coordinated plan of care that addresses the child’s ongoing health care needs. The goal is to ensure that each child remains healthy, thrives, and obtains optimal medical home and developmental supports that promote ongoing care at home and minimize recurrent hospitalizations. This clinical report presents an approach to discharging the child with complex medical needs with technology dependencies from hospital to home and then continually addressing the needs of the child and family in the home environment.


Pediatrics | 2009

Joint statement - Learning disabilities, dyslexia, and vision

Gregg T. Lueder; James B. Ruben; Richard J. Blocker; David B. Granet; Daniel J. Karr; Sharon S. Lehman; Sebastian J. Troia; George S. Ellis; Christie L. Morse; Michael X. Repka; Kyle Arnoldi; Sheryl M. Handler; Walter M. Fierson; Linda Lipinsky; Nancy A. Murphy; Robert Burke; Larry W. Desch; John C. Duby; Ellen Roy Elias; Susan E. Levy; Gregory S. Liptak; Douglas McNeal; Scott M. Myers; Kenneth W. Norwood; Paul J. Sagerman; Paul H. Lipkin; Stephanie Mucha Skipper

Learning disabilities, including reading disabilities, are commonly diagnosed in children. Their etiologies are multifactorial, reflecting genetic influences and dysfunction of brain systems. Learning disabilities are complex problems that require complex solutions. Early recognition and referral to qualified educational professionals for evidence-based evaluations and treatments seem necessary to achieve the best possible outcome. Most experts believe that dyslexia is a language-based disorder. Vision problems can interfere with the process of learning; however, vision problems are not the cause of primary dyslexia or learning disabilities. Scientific evidence does not support the efficacy of eye exercises, behavioral vision therapy, or special tinted filters or lenses for improving the long-term educational performance in these complex pediatric neurocognitive conditions. Diagnostic and treatment approaches that lack scientific evidence of efficacy, including eye exercises, behavioral vision therapy, or special tinted filters or lenses, are not endorsed and should not be recommended.


Pediatrics | 2009

Who Will Care for Me Next? Transitioning to Adulthood With Hydrocephalus

Tamara D. Simon; Sara Lamb; Nancy A. Murphy; Bonnie Hom; Marion L. Walker; Edward B. Clark

OBJECTIVES: Hydrocephalus is a prototypical chronic condition that follows children into adulthood. The objectives of this study were to (1) review how the health care needs of young adults with hydrocephalus are not being met, (2) estimate the numbers of adults with childhood-onset hydrocephalus, (3) describe a novel program to provide care for young adults with hydrocephalus and other chronic pediatric conditions, and (4) propose national strategies to promote successful hydrocephalus transition care. RESULTS: Adults with hydrocephalus need continuous access to expert surgical and medical providers. Existing care models fail to meet this need. The number of young adults who have hydrocephalus, are aged 18 to 35 and need treatment in the United States is predicted to exceed 40000 annually within the next 2 decades. We are developing integrated teams of pediatric and adult medical and surgical specialists to provide continuous, coordinated, comprehensive care for individuals with hydrocephalus in a pediatric setting. This setting will train our future physician workforce on optimal transition care. Coordinated national efforts are also needed. CONCLUSIONS: Providers need to implement appropriate management and transition care for individuals with hydrocephalus. We must work at local and national levels to transform the care model, improve the quality of health care delivery, and improve outcomes for young adults with hydrocephalus.


Pediatrics | 1987

Keep the 18-month health supervision visit.

Connie Lybarger; Nancy A. Murphy


The FASEB Journal | 2015

Muscle Protein Synthetic Responses to Essential Amino Acid Supplementation during Load Carriage Exercise

Stefan M. Pasiakos; Holly L. McClung; Nancy A. Murphy; Lee M. Margolis; Gregory Lin; Jay R. Hydren; Betty Davis; Andrew J. Young


The FASEB Journal | 2015

Net Protein Balance after Load Carriage Exercise is Enhanced by Amino Acid Supplementation

Holly L. McClung; Lee M. Margolis; Nancy A. Murphy; Gregory Lin; Jay R. Hydren; Betty Davis; Andrew J. Young; Stefan M. Pasiakos


Pediatrics | 2006

Sexualidad de los niños y adolescentes con discapacidades del desarrollo

Nancy A. Murphy; Ellen Roy Elias

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Ellen Roy Elias

Boston Children's Hospital

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Jay R. Hydren

United States Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine

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John C. Duby

Boston Children's Hospital

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Larry W. Desch

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Lee M. Margolis

United States Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine

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Paul H. Lipkin

Kennedy Krieger Institute

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Robert Burke

Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island

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Stefan M. Pasiakos

United States Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine

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Stephanie Mucha Skipper

American Academy of Pediatrics

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