Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
This essential resource developed by multidisciplinary panels of experts in infancy, early childhood, middle childhood, and adolescent health (i.e., pediatricians, family physicians, nurse practitioners, nutritionists, mental health specialists, pediatric dentists and families), covers 12 health promotion themes including: Promoting Family Support, Promoting Healthy Weight, and more The guidelines reflect updated AAP Recommendations for Preventive Pediatric Health Care, updates to content reflected in the 32 health supervision visits (prenatal and 31 well-child care visits). New themes include: Promoting Lifelong Health for Families and Communities; Promoting Health for Children and Youth with Special Health Care Needs; Promoting the Healthy and Safe Use of Social Media.
Synopsis
This essential resource provides key background information and recommendations for themes critical to healthy child development along with well-child supervision standards for 31 age-based visits--from Newborn through 21 Years. The result: better health care, more efficient visits, stronger partnerships with children and families, and better ability to keep up with changes in family, communities, and society that affect a child's health.
What's in the Bright Futures Guidelines, Fourth Edition?
Twelve health promotion themes
-Promoting Lifelong Health for Families and Communities NEW
-Promoting Family Support
-Promoting Health for Children and Youth with Special Health Care Needs NEW
-Promoting Healthy Development
-Promoting Mental Health
-Promoting Healthy Weight
-Promoting Healthy Nutrition
-Promoting Physical Activity
-Promoting Oral Health
-Promoting Healthy Sexual Development and Sexuality
-Promoting the Healthy and Safe Use of Social Media NEW
-Promoting Safety and Injury Prevention
31 age-based health supervision visits--Newborn to 21 Years
All the information and guidance that's needed to give children optimal health outcomes
-Context
-Health Supervision
-History
-Surveillance of Development
-Review of Systems
-Observation of Parent-Child Interaction
-Physical Examination
-Medical Screening
-Immunizations
-Anticipatory Guidance
What's NEW in the 4th Edition?
-Builds upon previous editions with new and updated content that reflects the latest research.
-Presents more recommendations supported by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, CDC Community Guide, Cochrane, and high-quality peer reviewed publications.
-Includes three new health promotion themes:
-Promoting Lifelong Health for Families and Communities
-Promoting Health for Children and Youth With Special Health Care Needs
-Promoting the Healthy and Safe Use of Social Media
-New screen time recommendations
-Provides greater focus on lifelong physical and mental health
-Weaves social determinants of health throughout the Visits, allowing health care professionals to consider social factors like food insecurity, violence, and drug use that may affect a child's and family's health
-Features updated Milestones of Development and Developmental Surveillance questions
-Provides new clinical content that informs health care professionals about the latest recommendations and provides guidance on how to implement them in practice
-Maternal depression screening, Safe sleep, Iron supplementation in breast fed infants, Fluoride varnish, Dyslipidemia blood screening
-Includes updates to several Adolescent screenings
-Cervical dysplasia, Depression, Dyslipidemia, Hearing, Vision, Tobacco/alcohol/drugs, STIs
With Bright Futures, health care professionals can accomplish 4 tasks in 18 minutes
-Disease detection
-Disease prevention
-Health promotion
-Anticipatory guidance
What is Bright Futures?
-A set of theory-based, evidence-driven, and systems-oriented principles, strategies, and tools that health care professionals can use to improve the health and well-being of children through culturally appropriate interventions. Bright Futures addresses the current and emerging health promotion needs of families, clinical practices, communities, health systems, and policymakers.
-The Bright Futures Guidelines is recognized by the Affordable Care Act as the blueprint for health supervision visits for all children.
-Bright Futures is the health promotion and disease prevention part of the patient-centered medical home.
Who can use Bright Futures?
-Child health professionals and practice staff who directly provide primary care
-Parents and youth who participate in well-child visits
-Public Health Professionals
-Policymakers
-Pediatric Educators
-MD Residents