Publications by authors named "Holly Agostino"

Eating disorders (EDs) are a group of serious, potentially life-threatening illnesses that typically have their onset during adolescence and can be associated with severe medical and psychosocial complications. The impact of EDs on caregivers and other family members can also be significant. Health care providers (HCPs) play an important role in the screening and management of adolescents and young adults with EDs.

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Les troubles des conduites alimentaires (TCA) désignent un groupe de maladies graves au potentiel mortel qui se déclarent généralement pendant l'adolescence et peuvent être associés à de graves complications médicales et psychosociales. Ils peuvent avoir d'importantes répercussions sur les proches et les autres membres de la famille. Les professionnels de la santé jouent un rôle important pour les dépister et les prendre en charge chez les adolescents et les jeunes adultes.

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Purpose: Adolescents are more likely to disclose sensitive health information if confidentiality is assured. We sought to evaluate the frequency, quality, and factors associated with provision of confidential care to adolescent patients at a pediatric teaching hospital.

Methods: We undertook a cross-sectional survey of adolescents presenting to a tertiary pediatric hospital from January 2019 to January 2020.

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Youth with anorexia nervosa (AN) have been reported to have high levels of comorbid autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and ASD-like traits suggesting a potential shared underlying neurodevelopmental or genetic link between the disorders. Youth with comorbid AN and ASD symptomatology generally require more intensive treatment and have worse psychological outcomes following treatment. To date, no Canadian national guidelines exist for the treatment of this comorbidity.

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Importance: Hospitalizations for eating disorders rose dramatically during the COVID-19 pandemic. Public health restrictions, or stringency, are believed to have played a role in exacerbating eating disorders. Few studies of eating disorders during the pandemic have extended to the period when public health stringency restrictions were lifted.

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This study aimed to document recovery trajectories among adolescents with anorexia nervosa (AN) based on three markers of remission, namely changes in body weight, food restriction, and excessive exercise, and to identify predictors of these trajectories. One hundred twenty-six adolescent girls (14.7 ± 1.

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A hallmark of delivering quality adolescent health care services is the provision of confidential care. Key tenets when providing confidential care for adolescents include time alone with a health care provider, maintaining the privacy of health information, and securing informed consent for services without permission from a parent, guardian, or caregiver. While confidentiality is a basic principle for all health care encounters regardless of age, the unique considerations for capable adolescent patients are not always realized or appreciated.

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Objective: Adolescents are more likely to seek care and disclose sensitive health information if confidentiality is assured. Little is known regarding the provision of confidential care to adolescents in the hospital setting. We sought to understand confidentiality practices and barriers for adolescents cared for in a tertiary hospital setting.

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Background And Objectives: Evidence suggests that children and adolescents with avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) have heterogeneous clinical presentations. To use latent class analysis (LCA) and determine the frequency of various classes in pediatric patients with ARFID drawn from a 2-year surveillance study.

Methods: Cases were ascertained using the Canadian Pediatric Surveillance Program methodology from January 1, 2016, to December 31, 2017.

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Importance: The COVID-19 pandemic has had considerable mental health consequences for children and adolescents, including the exacerbation of previously diagnosed eating disorders. Whether the pandemic is a factor associated with the concomitant increase in new-onset anorexia nervosa or atypical anorexia nervosa remains unknown.

Objective: To assess the incidence and severity of newly diagnosed anorexia nervosa or atypical anorexia nervosa in a national sample of youth before and during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Importance: To our knowledge, this is the first pediatric surveillance study of children and adolescents with avoidant restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID).

Objectives: To examine the incidence and age- and sex-specific differences in the clinical presentation of ARFID in children and adolescents in Canada.

Design, Setting, And Participants: In this cross-sectional study, patients with ARFID were identified through the Canadian Paediatric Surveillance Program by surveying 2700 Canadian pediatricians monthly from January 1, 2016, to December 31, 2017.

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Purpose: The medical stabilization of adolescent patients with restrictive eating disorders can be associated with refeeding syndrome, a potentially fatal complication preceded by refeeding hypophosphatemia (RH). Whether RH can be prevented by routine prophylactic phosphate supplementation has not been previously examined. This study sought to determine the safety and efficacy of a refeeding strategy that incorporates prophylactic phosphate supplementation to prevent RH.

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Purpose: The initial goal of admission for a patient with anorexia nervosa is physiologic stabilization through nutritional rehabilitation balanced against the risk of refeeding syndrome. Recent alternative approaches emphasize meal composition, limiting carbohydrates, to reduce risk. The Montreal Children's Hospital has instituted a standardized high-calorie continuous nasogastric (NG) refeeding protocol for the initial management of inpatient adolescents with restrictive eating disorders.

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