Harms, safety and certainties

How you know about stuff you don’t know about is a fascinating philosophical, statistical and downright practical topic. There’s the issue of ‘unknown unknowns’ – stuff you didn’t know you didn’t know – that can be frighteningly and sometimes dangerous. (How may of you know that failure to thrive is a common manifestation of a […]

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Are you feeling sleepy?

You may have noticed a resurgence of interesting posts on this blog; it’s all part of an orchestrated campaign to get more paediatric clinical evidence discussion going. As part of that, Archi’s been touting for folk to write a couple of hundred words on something they’ve learned recently – a highlight – arising from evidence. […]

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How do you improve services for Children

A paediatric tweeter, @kunbab (named with permission) working at intern/SHO level remarked on their frustration with the process of improving things in a workplace. They’d done something very simple; their patient had needed a referral, and so they’d emailed this referral to the relevant consultant.  However, when their boss heard about this, the boss insisted on a paper […]

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Best Practice – what would you like to see?

So, I’ve been commissioning a lot of new Best Practice articles – many of them in “15 minute consultation” format. Here’s my standard commissioning brief: Commissioning letter for Best Practice including 15 minute consultation papers My question is:  What would you like to see as a 15 minute consultation paper?  Bear in mind that I’ve […]

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Chorioamnionitis and NEC – the challenge of significant small associations

In a recent flurry of twittering, Archimedes noticed a meta-analysis linking chorioamnionitis with necrotising enterocolitis. Although a long time since doing neonates has passed, the consequences of NEC were profound enough to stick, and a potential association, perhaps a route in to stopping it happen, would be welcome. The meta-analysis showed that, on univariate examination, […]

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New way to wee

There’s a paper in the Archives from January which presents a ‘new’ way of collecting urine from little babies. (I say ‘new’ as it is startlingly similar to the method employed by the Matron at my first SHO appointment, back in the last millennium, but this version is scientifically tested.) How should we, as clinical […]

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Proof of equipoise

In order to test a new treatment, in a standard randomised controlled trial, we are ethically assumed to have ‘equipoise’: an honest uncertainty at the same chance of a patient being allocated to the new or old treatment. But, I hear you scoff, how can any investigator put themselves through the hell of ethical administration […]

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