Children and adolescents are vulnerable in times of disaster and they will suffer more severely if neglected. The concept of resilience differs between cultures, and identifying the components of resilience is essential for decision making and interventions in disasters such as risk management. This study aimed to identify the components of children’s resilience in disasters in Iran. This qualitative study took a content-analysis approach. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews with 23 people and three group meetings. Conventional content analysis was used for data analysis. MAXQDA 10 software was used for classification. The resilience components derived from the data were categorized into two main categories, internal and external, and eight subcategories covering psychological, emotional, cognitive, mental, spiritual, physical, social, and behavioral factors. The results also showed that the nature of resilience is both intrinsic and extrinsic. Recognizing the dimensions of children’s resilience in disasters can lead to a new perspective for authorities and planners in disaster and emergency situations. The results of this study could be used by planners and policymakers to develop interventions to enhance children’s and adolescents’ resilience at the time of disasters, which is also underlined and highlighted by international documents.
Long-term survival after successful renal transplantation is shortened by cardiovascular disease. Cardiovascular disease is a main cause of morbidity and death among children and young adults after renal transplantation. The aim of our study was to measure the carotid intima media thickness (cIMT) and determine its relationship to the risk factors for early arteriopathy in renal transplant recipients. Sixty-six stable renal transplant patients (36 female and 30 male), 7-25 years of age (mean 18.3 +/- 4.5 years) were enrolled in this study. The cIMT was measured by high-resolution B mode ultrasonography in multiple projections. The results were correlated with clinical and paraclinical parameters, including age, gender, body mass index (BMI), blood pressure, glomerular filtration rate (GFR), duration of dialysis, duration of chronic kidney disease (CKD), post-transplantation interval, calcium-phosphate (CaxP) product, cumulative dose of Ca-based P binder and calcitriol, lipid profile, uric acid, and cyclosporine level. The mean post-transplantation follow-up period was 64 +/- 40 months. The mean cIMT standard deviation score (SDS) of the patients and the control group was 0.60 +/- 0.81 mm (range -1.10 mm to 2.75 mm) and -1.25 +/- 0.95 mm (range -3.23 mm to 0.26 mm), respectively. Renal transplant recipients had a significantly greater cIMT than that of the controls (P < 0.001). Among several risk factors, there were positive correlations between cIMT SDS and gender, and cumulative dose of calcitriol (P = 0.02 and P = 0.02, respectively). In conclusion, subclinical atherosclerosis is present in young transplant recipients. Non-invasive monitoring of cIMT in renal transplant patients for the detection of early vascular lesions might be of value in preventing cardiovascular disease. Further studies are needed to see if proper monitoring of vitamin D therapy before and after transplantation could be helpful in the prevention of arteriopathy in renal transplant recipients.
The outcome of pediatric renal transplantation was previously reported by a single-center study at the year 2006. Therefore, we aimed to evaluate and report the characteristics and outcome of renal pediatric renal transplantation in a multi-center nationwide study. In this nationwide report, medical records of 907 children (≤18yr) with renal transplantation in eight major pediatric transplant centers of Iran were recorded. These 907 patients received a total of 922 transplants. All children who failed to follow-up were excluded. Rather than baseline characteristics, graft and patient outcomes were considered for survival analysis. For further analysis, they were divided into two groups: patients who had graft survival time more than 10yr (n=91) and the ones with graft survival time of equal or less than 10yr (n=831). Of 922 recipients, 515 (55.8%) were boys and 407 (44.2%) were girls with the mean age of 13.10 (s.d.=3.54) yr. DGF and AR were occurred in 10% and 39.5% of the transplanted children, respectively. Transplantation year, dialyzing status before transplantation, DGF, and AR were significant enough to predict graft survival in cox regression model (overall model: p<0.001). Nowadays, there is a successful live donor pediatric renal transplantation in Iran. Graft survival has improved in our recipients and now the graft survival rates are near to international standards.
Annually, children as a major group are affected in disasters worldwide. Resilience terminology is appeared in disaster risk reduction to improve more attention paid on human ability instead of concentration on his vulnerability. It seems that child resiliency may be the best approach to decrease the vulnerability. Although there are lots of studies on resiliency, children resiliency in disasters seems to be a unique field to consider. The current systematic review protocol aimed at synthesizing the evidence of the children resiliency indicators in natural disasters to identify their capacity and improve their ability against it. The current systematic review will be conducted on the children resiliency in articles regarding natural disaster situation that extracted indicators/factors to improve children resiliency in natural disasters. Four main electronic databases which cover such articles will be searched including PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, and Pycinfo. Furthermore, experts will be asked to identify verifiable grey literatures. EndNote software version X7 will be used to manage searching the databases, screening duplications, and extracting irrelevant articles. Search strategy was defined by the current review authors. Specific syntax was used for each main database. A period will be considered to search the databases. The evaluation of the articles will be conducted based on PICO defined according to the research question to include and exclude the articles. Moreover, the qualitative assessment and review instrument (QARI) checklist from JBI (Joanna Briggs Institute Reviewers' Manual: 2014 edition) will be used to assess the quality criteria. It is a quality context focused on human psychosocial behavior with specific group called children, adolescents, teenagers, and youths, but the current systematic review called them under eighteen-year-old children according to the definition of the United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF). On the other hand, the QARI data extraction instrument will be also used according to the research question.The current systematic literature review will determine the tangible criteria of child resiliency that would be valuable for decision makers, community, researchers, families, and the people concerned about children and also disaster situations. In this way, in disaster situations they can evaluate the difference between resilient children vs. non-resilient ones; the impacts are limited to the disaster, but also long-time after the disaster.
Resilience has received increased attention among both practitioners and scholars in recent years. Child resilience has received notable attention in disaster risk reduction (DRR) during the creation of the Sendai Framework 2015–2030 to improve child protection in the event of disasters. As resilience is a subjective concept with a variety of definitions, this study evaluates its different factors and determinates in the existing research to clarify the path for the near future and objective research. A systematic literature review was conducted by searching and selecting the peer-reviewed papers published in four main international electronic databases including PubMed, SCOPUS, WEB OF SCIENCE, and PsycINFO to answer the research question: “What are the criteria, factors or indicators for child resilience in the context of a natural disaster?” The process was based on PRISMA guidelines. In total, 28 papers out of 1838 were selected and evaluated using thematic analysis. The results are shown in two separate tables: one descriptive and the other analytical. Two main themes and five subthemes for criteria for child resilience in a disaster have been found. The factors found cover the following areas: mental health, spiritual health, physical, social behavior, and ecological, and as well as environmental. The majority of the included studies mentioned the scattered criteria about children resilience without any organized category. Although this concept is multifactorial, additional research is needed to develop this study and also observe other kinds of disasters such as human-made disasters.
Tricho-dento-osseous syndrome (TDO) is a rare autosomal dominant disorder with complete penetrance. Common clinical features include abnormalities of hair, teeth, and skull. Dental management of TDO patients is quite challenging in terms of existing dental and skeletal problems. The current article presents a 12-year-old girl suffering TDO, followed by a review on the published literature pertaining to the dental management of TDO patients. Patient history included, rejected corneal transplantation, stone-forming kidneys, and several previous dental treatments. She was noted to have signs of mandibular prognatia, frontal bossing of the skull, mild bilateral tibial bowing, microstomia, and labial fissures. Dental findings included severe generalized enamel defects, discolored teeth, microdontia, anterior open-bite, posterior cross-bite, deep periodontal pockets, hyperplastic inflamed gingiva, taurodontism of permanent molars, dental periapical radiolucencies, and missing teeth. She was the only child of healthy, nonconsanguineous parents with no familial history of similar congenital syndrome or dental abnormalities. A treatment plan was established based on medical/dental history and findings, using a team-based approach. This article emphasizes the importance of a multidisciplinary approach for the dental management of patients suffering TDO.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.