ARCHIVES OF PEDIATRICS & ADOLESCENT MEDICINE
Temperature, stress score, amount of antipyretic received, total days that the infant or caregiver was absent from day care or work, respectively, at the 3-day time point, recurrence of fever, and number of emergency department visits. To determine physicians' knowledge of urine drug testing an...
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Veröffentlicht in: | JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association 2006-04, Vol.295 (15), p.1754 |
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description | Temperature, stress score, amount of antipyretic received, total days that the infant or caregiver was absent from day care or work, respectively, at the 3-day time point, recurrence of fever, and number of emergency department visits. To determine physicians' knowledge of urine drug testing and usual practices when performing drug testing on adolescent patients at a time when interest in drug testing of adolescents is on the rise and physicians may he consulted for advice and requests to perform tests. Participants were practicing physicians randomly selected from the national membership rolls of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Society of Adolescent Medicine, and American Academy of Family Physicians who provided care for 10 or more adolescents per week. Primary care physicians do not always use proper urine sample collection and validation procedures, and they are not aware of important limitations of drug testing. |
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To determine physicians' knowledge of urine drug testing and usual practices when performing drug testing on adolescent patients at a time when interest in drug testing of adolescents is on the rise and physicians may he consulted for advice and requests to perform tests. Participants were practicing physicians randomly selected from the national membership rolls of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Society of Adolescent Medicine, and American Academy of Family Physicians who provided care for 10 or more adolescents per week. 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To determine physicians' knowledge of urine drug testing and usual practices when performing drug testing on adolescent patients at a time when interest in drug testing of adolescents is on the rise and physicians may he consulted for advice and requests to perform tests. Participants were practicing physicians randomly selected from the national membership rolls of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Society of Adolescent Medicine, and American Academy of Family Physicians who provided care for 10 or more adolescents per week. 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To determine physicians' knowledge of urine drug testing and usual practices when performing drug testing on adolescent patients at a time when interest in drug testing of adolescents is on the rise and physicians may he consulted for advice and requests to perform tests. Participants were practicing physicians randomly selected from the national membership rolls of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Society of Adolescent Medicine, and American Academy of Family Physicians who provided care for 10 or more adolescents per week. Primary care physicians do not always use proper urine sample collection and validation procedures, and they are not aware of important limitations of drug testing.</abstract><cop>Chicago</cop><pub>American Medical Association</pub></addata></record> |
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language | eng |
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source | American Medical Association Journals |
subjects | Clinical trials Confidence intervals Drug testing Physicians Primary care Teenagers Tests Urban areas |
title | ARCHIVES OF PEDIATRICS & ADOLESCENT MEDICINE |
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