Social Determinants of Health and the Role of Routine Pediatric Care in a Medically Complex Toddler.

2020 
CASE Late on a Friday afternoon, a new family presents to your practice for urgent care. They come with their youngest child Mai, a 2-year-old girl, who, although born in the United States at 36 weeks gestation, has resided in Laos with her grandparents for the past 16 months. Your triage nurse tells you that she has a fever and was found to have profound anemia while at the WIC (Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children) office earlier today.On walking into the room, you describe Mai as "listless" and "sickly." Her vitals were notable for fever (102°F), tachycardia (140 beats per minute), and tachypnea (35 breaths per minute). On physical examination, she was grunting with a systolic ejection murmur and without hepatosplenomegaly. Laboratory test results revealed hemoglobin of 2.2 g/dL, hematocrit of 12%, mean corpuscular volume of 50 fL, red cell distribution width of 27%, reticulocyte count of 3%, ferritin of <2 ng/mL, iron of 15 μg/dL, total iron binding count of 420 μg/dL, white blood cell count of 13.5 K/μL, and platelets of 605 K/μL. Her evaluation was consistent with severe iron deficiency anemia (IDA), which was further supported by reported restrictive diet and excessive cow milk intake of 35 ounces daily. She was admitted to the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit in high-output cardiac failure and was slowly transfused with 15 mL/kg of packed red blood cells over 2 days with careful monitoring. Once stabilized, she was transferred to the inpatient floor for further nutritional evaluation and supplementation. Additional workup, including hemoglobin electrophoresis, fecal occult blood test, celiac studies, and stool parasite testing were normal. The clinical picture was consistent with a viral infection in the setting of profound IDA and malnutrition.Although her clinical status had improved, she remained inpatient for nutritional optimization. Her height was at the 54th percentile (z-score: 0.11), weight was at the first percentile (z-score: -2.25), and body mass index was below the first percentile (z-score: -3.18), diagnostic of severe protein-calorie malnutrition. She was evaluated by an interdisciplinary growth and nutrition team, received multivitamin and mineral supplements, and was monitored for refeeding syndrome. She was noted to be "difficult to engage," "resistant to new faces," and made little progress on expanding her dietary choices. Concerns about a possible diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder were raised by her treating team. What would you do next? REFERENCE 1. Bouma S. Diagnosing pediatric malnutrition: paradigm shifts of etiology-related definitions and appraisal of the indicators. Nutr Clin Pract. 2017;32:52-67.
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