Browse the Collection

RC Produced by Research Connections

* Peer Reviewed Journal

Current Filters: Classification:Childhood Illnesses [remove];

15 results found.
[1]  
Select Citation
Result Resource Type

*

Acute care and antibiotic seeking for upper respiratory tract infections for children in day care: Parental knowledge and day care center policies
Friedman, Jennifer F., April 2003
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 157(4), 369-374

A study of predictors of the parental seeking of acute care and antibiotics for children with upper respiratory tract infections (URIs) who attend child care, based on surveys of 211 parents and staff from 36 child care centers

Reports & Papers


get fulltext

Care of mildly ill children: Issues and national policy directions in child care: Executive summary
Polyzoi, Eleoussa, 2001
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada: University of Winnipeg.

An executive summary of a study of parent and child care provider concerns about the care of mildly ill children.

Executive Summary


*

Child care providers' experiences caring for sick children: Implications for public policy
Heymann, Jody, 2002
Early Child Development and Care, 172(1), 1-8

An examination of the experiences of preschool and school age child care providers with the care of sick children, based on interviews with public, private, and home-based providers in Cambridge, an urban area in the northeastern United States

Reports & Papers


get fulltext

*

Effects of a probiotic infant formula on infants in child care centers: Comparison of two probiotic agents
Weizman, Zvi, 2005
Pediatrics, 115(1), 5-9

A comparison of the effects of 2 different species of probiotic bacteria in preventing infectious illnesses in infants attending child care centers

Reports & Papers


*

Exclusion of ill children from child-care centers in Israel
Kahan, Ernesto, 2005
Patient Education and Counseling, 56(1), 93-97

An examination of Israeli child care centers' policies regarding the exclusion of sick children

Reports & Papers


get fulltext

*

Exclusion of mildly ill children from childcare
Shope, Timothy, May, 2012
Pediatric Annals, 41(5), 204-208

A description of the extent of child illness in child care settings, of exclusion practices related to illness, and of current guidelines and strategies pediatric health providers can use to limit children from being excluded from child care due to illness

Other


get fulltext

*

How working parents cope with the care of sick young children
Bear, Harold, 2003
Australian Journal of Early Childhood, 28(4), 53-57

A survey-based study of employed Australian parents of young children investigating how their employment was affected by the impact of child care centers failing to provide sick care for children

Reports & Papers


*

Meeting the challenges of vaccine-preventable diseases in child day care
Cochi, Stephen L., December 1994
Pediatrics, 94(6), 1021-1023

A discussion of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices of the U.S. Public Health Service's revised recommended immunization schedule, including challenges that exist to implementing the program

Reports & Papers


get fulltext

*

Molecular epidemiology of childhood astrovirus infection in child care centers
Mitchell, Douglas K., 1999
Journal of Infectious Diseases, 180(2), 514-517

A study of the role of human astrovirus (HAstV) in outbreaks and sporadic cases of diarrhea among children attending child care centers

Reports & Papers


get fulltext

*

A public health perspective on infectious disease aspects of the Revised Standards for Health and Safety in Out-of-Home Child Care
Cordell, Ralph L., May 2002
Pediatric Annals, 31(5), 307-312

An overview of the disease-specific recommendations of the Revised Standards for Health and Safety in Out-of-Home Child Care

Other


*

Self-report of child care directors regarding return-to-care
Hashikawa, Andrew N., December, 2012
Pediatrics, 130(6), 1046-1052

A survey of child care directors' return-to-child-care criteria for mild illness prior to the introduction of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) return-to-care recommendations for mildly ill children, based on data from 305 directors in metropolitan Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Reports & Papers


get fulltext

*

Self-report of child care directors regarding return-to-care
Hashikawa, Andrew N., December, 2012
Pediatrics, 130(6), 1046-1052

A survey of child care directors' return-to-child-care criteria for mild illness prior to the introduction of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) revised return-to-care recommendations for mildly ill children, based on data from 305 directors in metropolitan Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Reports & Papers


get fulltext

State policies impacting the participation of young children with medical needs in child care: A policy analysis conducted in connection with a developmental disabilities project of national significance
Fink, Dale Borman, February, 2005
Farmington: University of Connecticut, A. J. Pappanikou Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities.

An analysis of state policies that affect the participation of children with special health care needs child care, based on interviews with child care program providers and state agency representatives

Reports & Papers


get fulltext

*

A tuberculosis outbreak in a private-home family child care center in San Francisco, 2002-2004
Dewan, Puneet K., 2006
Pediatrics, 117(3), 863-869

An examination of an outbreak of tuberculosis in San Francisco stemming from an adult living in a private home family child care center

Reports & Papers


get fulltext

Vaccination coverage among children enrolled in Head Start programs or day care facilities or entering school
Jiles, Ruth B., 2000
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report: CDC Surveillance Summaries, 49(9), 27-38

A synthesis of reported data on vaccination rates of children in public schools and licensed child care centers, using information gathered through the Center for Disease Control’s National Immunization Program

Reports & Papers


get fulltext

Select Citation
[1]  

Search Feedback


 



Research Connections is supported by grant #90YE0104 from the Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, Administration for Children and Families, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The contents are solely the responsibility of the National Center for Children in Poverty and the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research and do not necessarily represent the official views of the Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, the Administration for Children and Families, or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Google Translate