News

Eye on Washington

With the election of Senator Bill Frist, MD (R-Tenn.), as leader of the Senate, physicians can expect health-related issues to receive intense and sympathetic attention in Congress.

Q I have a patient, a 9-year-old boy, whose family recently moved to a new neighborhood. Every morning since the boy started attending his new school, he has complained of nausea and had at least one episode of emesis, either before leaving for school or on the way there.

Q It seems that my patients are becoming larger, stronger, and more belligerent. Recently, a number of patients 9 to 16 years of age became uncooperative and actually combative when we performed procedures such as fingersticks for hemoglobin tests or administered vaccines.

With a combination vaccine that protects against five diseases now approved for use in the US--and other such vaccines on the horizon--pediatricians need answers to new questions: How should these vaccines be used for infants at various stages of immunization? Is it safe to give extra doses?

Adoptions of foreign-born children by families in the United States, which more than tripled over the past 25 years, may raise medical, developmental, psychosocial, and legal concerns. Pediatricians who understand those concerns can better serve international adoptees and their new-found families.

You are asked to evaluate an 8-year-old boy who recently developed white rings around moles on his neck and back. Although he complains of slight itching, you don't see signs of scratching.