We investigated the etiology of attentional control (AC) and four different anxiety symptom types (generalized, obsessive-compulsive, separation, and social) in an adolescent sample of over 400 twin pairs. Genetic factors contributed to 55% of the variance in AC and between 43 and 58% of the variance in anxiety. Negative phenotypic associations between AC and anxiety indicated that lower attentional ability is related to increased risk for all 4 anxiety categories. Genetic correlations between AC and anxiety phenotypes ranged from −.36 to −.47, with evidence of nonshared environmental covariance between AC and generalized and separation anxiety. Results suggest that AC is a phenotypic and genetic risk factor for anxiety in early adolescence, with somewhat differing levels of risk depending on symptomatology.
In 2010, the American Academy of Pediatrics recommended universal screening for anemia at approximately 1 year of age. This quality improvement study sought to improve anemia screening in an ambulatory setting. In a large university-based setting, a best practice alert (BPA) was placed within the electronic health record. The primary outcome was overall screening rate in ambulatory family medicine (DFM) and pediatrics (PEDS) clinics. From 2545 pre-BPA clinic visits over a 12-month period, the screening rate was 48.2%. Among 2186 post-BPA clinic visits over an 8-month period, the screening rate improved to 72.7%, P < .0001. Follow-up over a second 7-month period demonstrated sustained improvements (70.8%) but was not higher after educational sessions between the periods. Screening rates were higher in PEDS than DFM at each time point; P < .0001. This technology-based intervention increased and maintained higher screening rates for anemia at 1 year, with higher rates in PEDS.
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