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  Vol. 139 No. 8, August 1985 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Iowa's System for Screening and Tracking High-Risk Infants

James A. Blackman, MD; Herman A. Hein, MD

Am J Dis Child. 1985;139(8):826-831.


Abstract



• A statewide system for the screening, tracking and referral of high-risk infants has been in operation in Iowa since 1978. During the first five years of the Iowa High-Risk Infant Follow-up Program, pediatric nurse-practitioners have screened 1,440 infants at ages 4, 9, 18, and 30 months. Nineteen percent of the infants failed screening and were referred to developmental centers for further evaluation. Infants meeting criteria related to preterm birth comprised most of the flagged group; the highest failure rates were found for infants who experienced neonatal seizures or who were hypotonic at discharge from the hospital. Most children who failed screening did so by the nine-month checkpoint. A year-by-year comparison of failure rates for high-risk children in Iowa suggests a statistically significant pattern of decreasing developmental morbidity.

(AJDC 1985;139:826-831)



Author Affiliations



From the Divisions of Developmental Disabilities (Dr Blackman) and Neonatology (Dr Hein), Department of Pediatrics, University of Iowa, Iowa City.


Footnotes



Reprint requests to Division of Developmental Disabilities, 213 Hospital School, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242 (Dr Blackman).



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