News

The Great American Smokeout is Thursday, November 16th.  This annual event encourages individuals across the United States to quit smoking and start a healthier, smoke-free life. In recognition of this day, the Pediatric Asthma Program and Adolescent Medicine have teamed up to share tips on how to keep children and teens with asthma protected from smoke exposure and highlight the importance of smoking cessation.

What effect does smoking/vaping have on children and adolescents with asthma?

Smoking/Vaping is a known trigger for asthma, and it can make the condition worse. The smoke irritates the airways and causes inflammation, leading to symptoms like coughing, wheezing, shortness of breath, and chest tightness.

This article was originally posted in the WCM newsroom.

Mental health crises among children and adolescents requiring emergency department care skyrocketed during the pandemic and have stayed elevated despite a return to normalcy, according to a study by Weill Cornell Medicine and NewYork-Presbyterian investigators.

The study, published in the journal Pediatrics on Oct. 20, compared rates of pediatric mental health visits in the emergency departments of five New York City medical centers from a pre-pandemic period through five pandemic waves. Each wave saw elevated rates of youth mental health-related visits compared to before the pandemic. They found, however, no relationship between pediatric mental health visits and COVID-19 prevalence or how strict mitigation measures were.

This article was originally posted in the NewYork-Presbyterian newsroom

NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital has been recognized as the 2023-2024 #1 children’s hospital in New York by U.S. News & World Report. This is the 17th year in a row that the Hospital has ranked among the best children’s hospitals in the nation.

NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital was the only hospital in New York to rank among the top 50 hospitals across all 10 pediatrics specialties evaluated. The Hospital ranked in the top 10 in pediatric diabetes & endocrinology, and in the top 20 in pediatric cardiology & heart surgery, pediatric neurology & neurosurgery, and neonatology.

NewYork-Presbyterian provides pediatric care in every area of medicine at two major sites: NewYork-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital and NewYork-Presbyterian Komansky Children’s Hospital. NewYork-Presbyterian is the nation’s only hospital affiliated with two world-class medical schools, Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons and Weill Cornell Medicine.

Jake Larose is a now healthy 13-year-old boy who experienced a severe medical journey after developing hemolytic uremic syndrome from eating a hamburger in March 2014. His condition rapidly progressed, leading to acute renal failure, peritonitis, bowel perforation, severe septic shock, and acute respiratory failure. Throughout his stay in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) at NewYork-Presbyterian Komansky Children’s Hospital, Jake received extensive multidisciplinary care and rehabilitation. Despite experiencing delirium and hallucinations during his ICU stay, Jake made a remarkable recovery and was eventually discharged home. Though he still requires ongoing medical care, nearly a decade later, Jake is doing well. 

Congratulations to Dr. Julia Buirkle on being awarded the 2023 CATCH grant by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) in recognition of her outstanding work in child health.

The Community Access to Child Health (CATCH) program, offered by the AAP, supports pediatricians in their efforts to collaborate with communities and advance the health of all children. With the CATCH Grant, Dr. Buirkle will work closely with Team KiPOW!, a national nonprofit organization, to implement school wellness policy in underserved elementary/middle schools and help children reach their full physical, emotional, and academic potential through improved nutrition and physical activity.

As part of the project, Dr. Buirkle and her team at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, known as “Team KiPOW! Cornell” will work with P.S. 083 Luis Munoz Rivera School in East Harlem in the form of an after-school program and study its impact on the health of participating students through collecting questionnaires and biometric data. This project also offers a valuable opportunity for medical students and residents to gain training and experience in nutrition and lifestyle counseling.

Dr. Ahsan Uddin is a second-year fellow in the Pediatric Endocrinology Program. He attended medical school at St. George’s University School of Medicine and completed his Internal Medicine-Pediatrics residency at Beaumont Health in Michigan. Dr. Uddin splits his clinical time with research as part of the Meyer-Teruel Lab with a focus on steroid-induced obesity and metabolic dysregulations.

Why did you pursue a fellowship at Weill Cornell Medicine?

My wife is born and bred in Brooklyn, NY, so after I completed my residency in Michigan we had planned to come back to NYC to settle down full-time. When looking for a program for fellowship, I wanted to be at a hospital with a record of excellence in patient care, a strong clinical training program and broad opportunities for research.

Food, glorious food! Not only is it fundamental to our survival; it’s at the very heart of our lives and our diverse cultural backgrounds. And it plays a starring role in our social gatherings, whether at home or at a favorite restaurant. Our memories and our emotions, too, are inextricably bound up with food.

However, “there is no one ‘perfect’ way to eat, or one ideal relationship with food,” says Isabel Reckson, a registered dietitian and certified diabetes care and education specialist in the Divisions of Pediatric Endocrinology and Pediatric Nephrology at Weill Cornell Medicine. Every family and every child is unique, she says.

“Generally, a healthy relationship with food allows us to make choices that honor our body and our hunger without guilt. Balance and flexibility in our eating choices are paramount to that relationship, one we often need to work on and reassess throughout our lives as we grow and change.”

What healthy eating habits can parents foster in their children?

Parents are the greatest role models for their young children and teens alike, starting with positive language around food and food choices. Reckson recommends an all-inclusive approach to food, in which no foods are “good” or “bad.”

This article was originally posted in the WCM newsroom  

Norovirus is a common cause of the “stomach flu”—not to be confused with the flu itself, says Dr. Melanie Dubois, a specialist in pediatric infectious diseases and an Assistant Professor in Pediatric Infectious Diseases at Weill Cornell Medicine.

Norovirus infections in the New York Metropolitan Area appear to be high this year, Dr. Dubois says. The virus tends to peak between November and April, so we’re still in norovirus season, with an increase in emergency room visits for vomiting and diarrhea in the area.

The virus mainly causes vomiting and watery diarrhea, but in some patients, it may also cause nausea, fever, body aches and stomach pain. Norovirus infection comes on quickly—just 1 to 2 days after exposure—and its symptoms typically ease within 2 to 3 days.

How contagious is norovirus?

Norovirus is very contagious. You can catch it by:

  • coming into direct contact with an infected person (via vomit or stool)
  • consuming contaminated food or water
  • touching contaminated surfaces at home, on public transportation or in restaurants

And you can continue to spread it to others for 2 weeks or more after your symptoms clear.

The Top Doctors list is created each year by Castle Connolly to help people find the best-in-class healthcare providers in their city. Castle Connolly's Top Doctor directory allows patients to search not only by doctors and hospitals in their area, but by other factors such as specialty, conditions, insurance and location.

Our doctors are listed among the top 1 percent of the nation’s physicians and among the top 10 percent of the region’s specialists by Castle Connolly Medical Ltd., a New York City research and information company that publishes the annual guidebooks America’s Top Doctors and Top Doctors: New York Metro Area, which informs New York Magazine’s annual “Top Doctors” issue.

The most important criterion for physician selection was excellence in patient care. Other criteria included education, residency, board-certification, fellowships, professional reputation, hospital affiliation, medical school faculty appointment, experience and disciplinary history.

We are thrilled to see so many physicians from the Department of Pediatrics on this pretigious list. Congratulations to you all!  

This article was originally posted in the WCM Newsroom. 

Unlike COVID-19 or the flu, polio is entirely and permanently preventable. In fact, until this year, there had not been one case of polio that originated in this country since 1979. A case in 1993 was brought to these shores by someone who had traveled to a country where the disease was endemic.

As long as you and your children are vaccinated, you have nothing to worry about. But if you are unvaccinated or under-vaccinated, doctors and public health officials urge you to waste no time in getting the polio vaccine, which confers lifelong protection against a potentially disabling disease.

The public health picture

A handful of polio-caused paralysis cases in New York, London and Jerusalem may seem minor compared to the massive global impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. But in public health terms, the recent polio outbreak is anything but minor. That’s because the poliovirus causes paralysis in fewer than 1 in 200 of the people it infects, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Think of the one case of paralysis in New York’s Rockland County as the tip of a very large iceberg.

Pediatrics Weill Cornell Medicine Appointments & Referrals: (646) 962-KIDS (646) 962-5437 Chair's Office: Weill Cornell Medicine 525 E 68th St.
Box 225
New York, NY 10065 (646) 962-5437