Background: Family-oriented therapies are the gold standard of childhood obesity treatment, yet little is known about if or how information gathered by one parent from a health care provider is translated to the home. We assessed how families of children and adolescents with overweight and obesity communicate weight-related information received from their provider to family members not present at the visit.Methods: Parents and children (9-18 years old, N = 112) completed the McMaster's Family Assessment Device Communication Subscale (FADc) and investigator-derived questions describing weight-related communication practices with family members. We used descriptive statistics to describe communication practices and separate logistic regression models to assess associations of communication practices with parent-reported FADc, child BMI z-score, child sex, parent BMI, household income, and site.Results: Most parents discuss with other family members: their child's weight (60.4%) or weight management discussions with the child's provider (57.9%). Median parent FADc score was 2.0 (IQR 0.5). The most common facilitator to weight-related conversations was understanding what the provider said (95.1%). Higher FADc score (worse communication) was associated with whether parents ask other family members' opinions about weight information received from their child's provider [odds ratio 0.22 (95% confidence interval 0.05-0.99)]. Higher income was associated with many healthy communication practices.Conclusions: Slightly more than half of parents discuss with family members what their provider said regarding their child's weight. More effort must be placed on aiding parents in relaying information from the provider to other family members in the home to encourage family lifestyle changes and alleviate childhood obesity.
A previously healthy 15-year-old boy from a rural county in the southeastern United States was evaluated in the emergency department with fever and worsening toe pain in the absence of trauma. He initially presented to his primary care physician 4 weeks before with upper respiratory symptoms and was treated with corticosteroids for presumed reactive airway disease. His respiratory symptoms resolved. One week after this presentation, he developed fever and right great toe pain and presented to an outside hospital. Inflammatory markers were elevated. MRI confirmed a diagnosis of osteomyelitis with associated periosteal abscess. He was treated with intravenous antibiotics and drainage of the abscess. Ten days after his discharge from the outside hospital, he developed fever and had increasing drainage of the toe and pain refractory to oral pain medications. He presented to our facility for further evaluation. Repeat MRI and inflammatory markers corroborated his worsening disease, and he was admitted to the hospital for intravenous antibiotics and underwent serial surgical debridement. He developed painful subcutaneous nodules on his lower extremities and was found to have lung abnormalities on chest radiograph. A multispecialty team collaborated in the management of this patient and unveiled a surprising diagnosis.
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