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HEALTH & SCIENCE

AMA, PTA kick off school year with health event

Vaccines and body image were among the topics discussed.

By Bob Cook, AMNews staff. Sept. 5, 2005.


Before children head back to class, the American Medical Association and the National PTA want them, and their parents, to be aware of some health issues that could affect them during the school year.

The AMA-PTA event -- "Back to School: Child and Adolescent Health" -- covered a wide range of issues, including germs, vaccines, bullying, body image problems, general psychiatric care, and obesity. The event was held Aug. 11 at the headquarters of Scholastic Inc. in New York.


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Among the physician-oriented presentations at the event:

  • New meningococcal conjugate and acellular pertussis vaccines are being recommended for children ages 11 and older, said Walter A. Orenstein, MD, associate director of the Emory Vaccine Center at Emory University in Atlanta. Protecting older children from pertussis should help prevent those most vulnerable -- infants in the first few months of life -- from contracting the disease before they can be immunized, Dr. Orenstein said.
  • Physicians and parents must increase their awareness of a disorder that gives young people extreme obsessions with imagined flaws in their appearance, said Katharine A. Phillips, MD, professor of psychiatry at Brown Medical School in Providence, R.I. Body dysmorphic disorder, which affects about 1% of the population, can intensify dislike of any body area. Children and adolescents are most likely to focus on their skin, hair or weight. The condition usually appears at around age 13, Dr. Phillips said, but symptoms have been seen in children as young as 5.
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