Publications by authors named "Soyang Kwon"

Purpose: Recovery after minimally invasive repair of pectus excavatum (MIRPE) is prolonged. The purpose of this prospective study was to enhance our understanding of post-MIRPE recovery by following patients' recovery through postoperative day (POD) 60 using wearable devices and determine if recovery rate is impacted by PE severity and preoperative physical activity (PA) level.

Methods: Children ≤ 18 years who underwent MIRPE with cryoablation between 8/2023 and 1/2024 wore a Fitbit™ for ≥ 3 days preoperatively to determine preoperative PA and through POD 60.

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Introduction: Postoperative recovery of children is difficult to gauge by parents after hospital discharge. Consumer wearable devices (CWD) generate valid and near real-time pulse rate data, integer pulse rate variability (PRVi), that can serve as digital biomarkers for the onset of complications during post-discharge recovery. This study sought to explore whether pediatric patients with surgical complications after appendectomy exhibited a CWD-derived PRVi trajectory that differs from the normative PRVi recovery trajectory.

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Article Synopsis
  • Resting heart rate (RHR) can vary greatly among individuals, making it challenging to use as a reliable health indicator, especially in post-surgical contexts; thus, this study introduces a new metric called ACΔ-RHR to address this issue.
  • The research involved monitoring the RHR of children aged 3-17 who had laparoscopic appendectomies, using Fitbits for 21 days after surgery to track day-by-day changes in RHR autocorrelation.
  • Findings indicated that the ACΔ-RHR stabilized, indicating recovery, on different postoperative days based on age and sex, suggesting that this metric could effectively enhance monitoring and recovery assessments in pediatric surgery patients.
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Background: The PROMIS Early Childhood Physical Activity (PROMIS EC PA) scale is a recently developed PROMIS Early Childhood measure to assess PA among children aged 1-5 years. The purpose of this study was to examine test-retest reliability and convergent validity of the PROMIS EC PA scale among toddlers.

Method: An ancillary study was conducted in the toddler-mother dyad sample of the Child and Mother Physical Activity Study.

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Background: Lower physical activity (PA) has been observed in females compared to males among preschool-aged and older children. However, the timing of when the sex gap emerges is unclear. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether females have lower PA levels than males in the early toddler age and to explore whether gross motor competency and PA parenting practices might explain a sex difference in PA.

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Background: Lower physical activity (PA) has been observed in females compared to males among preschool-aged and older children. However, the timing of when the sex gap emerges is unclear. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether females have lower PA levels than males in the early toddler age and to explore whether gross motor competency and PA parenting practices might explain a sex difference in PA.

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Background: Acute musculoskeletal infection affects >1 in 6,000 children in the United States annually. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the gold standard for the diagnosis of musculoskeletal infection, but it traditionally requires contrast and anesthesia for children, delaying management. A rapid MRI protocol involves MRI without anesthesia and with limited non-contrast sequences optimized for fluid detection and diffusion-weighted images to identify abscesses.

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Importance: Young children's screen time increased during the COVID-19 lockdown in 2020, but it is unknown whether their screen time returned to prepandemic levels in 2021. Knowledge of the relationship between screen time and child development and health will inform prevention and intervention targets and strategies.

Objective: To evaluate screen time by family income and race and ethnicity in the prepandemic (ie, 2018, 2019) and pandemic (ie, 2020, 2021) periods and to examine the relationship between screen time and psychological well-being among young children in the US.

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Background: Daily step counts from consumer wearable devices have been used to objectively assess postsurgical recovery in children. However, step cadence, defined as steps taken per minute, may be a more specific measure of physiologic status. The purpose of this study is to define objective normative physical activity recovery trajectories after laparoscopic appendectomy using this novel metric.

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Introduction: Markers of postoperative recovery in pediatric patients are difficult for parents to evaluate after hospital discharge, who use subjective proxies to assess recovery and the onset of complications. Consumer-grade wearable devices (e.g.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study analyzed the impact of intravenous fluid (IVF) therapy on hospital length of stay (HLOS) and adverse events in patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) experiencing vaso-occlusive episodes (VOE) between 2015 and 2020.
  • - Results from 617 hospitalizations showed that while higher IVF rates increased HLOS significantly, there was no link between IVF therapy and adverse outcomes like acute chest syndrome or intensive care transfers.
  • - The research concluded that although IVF is expected to mitigate sickling, its increased use led to longer hospital stays, which may negatively impact patients and healthcare resources.
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Introduction: Counseling patients and parents about the postoperative recovery expectations for physical activity after pediatric appendectomy varies significantly and is not specific to patients' demographic characteristics. Consumer wearable devices (CWD) can be used to objectively assess patients' normative postoperative recovery of physical activity. This study aimed to develop demographic-specific normative physical activity recovery trajectories using CWD in pediatric patients undergoing appendectomy.

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Context: Sport specialization, commonly defined as intensive year-round training in a single sport to the exclusion of other sports, has been associated with an increased risk for overuse injury. Two pathways to becoming highly specialized are recognized: (1) having only ever played 1 sport (exclusive highly specialized) and (2) quitting other sports to focus on a single sport (evolved highly specialized). Understanding the differences in injury patterns between these groups of highly specialized athletes will inform the development of injury-prevention strategies.

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Background: Children of South Asian (SA) origin in the UK have lower levels of physical activity (PA), compared to their White counterparts. Parents play an important role in establishing PA habits among young children. The aim of this study was to compare PA and television (TV) viewing parenting practices for young children between SA British (SAB) and White British (WB) parents living in the UK.

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Background: American women tend to reduce physical activity (PA) during the transition to motherhood. Their main barrier to participation in PA is lack of time due to new/increased parenting and housework responsibilities. Because there are known racial/ethnic variations in time spent on housework among American women, their PA changes during the transition to motherhood might also differ by racial/ ethnic background.

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When children are discharged from the hospital after surgery, their caregivers often rely on subjective assessments (e.g., appetite, fatigue) to monitor postoperative recovery as objective assessment tools are scarce at home.

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Introduction: The modified Nuss procedure is an elective procedure associated with a lengthy recovery, uncontrolled pain, and risk of infrequent, yet life-threatening complications. The absence of objective measures of normative postoperative recovery creates uncertainty about the postdischarge period, which remains highly dependent on the patients' and their caregivers' expectations and management of recovery. We aimed to describe an objective-normative, physical activity recovery trajectory after the modified Nuss procedure, using step counts from the Fitbit.

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Objectives: The purpose of this study is to evaluate the utility of the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) anxiety and depressive symptom domains in conjunction with the Post-Concussion Symptom Scale (PCSS)for identifying pediatric patients with emotional symptoms following a concussion, and to identify predictors of higher emotional symptom loads.

Methods: We recruited English-speaking patients aged 8-17 years presenting to a tertiary-care concussion clinic from 2014 to 2018 ( = 458). Demographics and clinical data including PCSS, injury date, previous history of anxiety/depression, and Vestibular/Ocular-Motor Screen (VOMS) were collected from patients' electronic medical records.

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Background: Children with bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) who require invasive home mechanical ventilation (IHMV) are medically vulnerable and experience high caregiving and healthcare costs. Predictors for duration of IHMV in children with BPD remain unclear, which can make prognostication and decision-making challenging.

Methods: A retrospective cohort study of children with BPD requiring IHMV was conducted from independent children's hospital records (2005-2021).

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Background: Physical activity (PA) development in toddlers (age 1 and 2 years) is not well understood, partly because of a lack of analytic tools for accelerometer-based data processing that can accurately evaluate PA among toddlers. This has led to a knowledge gap regarding how parenting practices around PA, mothers' PA level, mothers' parenting stress, and child developmental and behavioral problems influence PA development in early childhood.

Methods: The Child and Mother Physical Activity Study is a longitudinal study to observe PA development in toddlerhood and examine the influence of personal and parental characteristics on PA development.

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Article Synopsis
  • Digital phenotyping is about collecting data from phones and other devices to understand how people behave and feel in real-time.
  • Smartphones are usually seen as the best way to gather this data, but they mainly work for teens and adults who own them.
  • New gadgets like wearables can also collect important health information, so we should think about using these other technologies to help more people.
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A prior study conducted in high-income countries demonstrated that specific sedentary behavior, such as TV viewing, is prospectively associated with adiposity in both active and inactive adolescents. The aim of this study was to examine the joint associations of sedentary behaviors and moderate- and vigorous-intensity physical activity (MVPA) with adiposity among Brazilian adolescents. This prospective cohort study included 377 participants of the 1993 Pelotas (Brazil) Study who completed an accelerometry assessment at age 13 years and a dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) assessment at age 18 years.

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Objective: To compare the characteristics and healthcare use of children with medical complexity who receive paid certified nursing assistant (CNA) care by a family member (family CNA) and by a traditional nonfamily member (nonfamily CNA).

Study Design: This was retrospective cohort study of children who received CNA care through Colorado's Medicaid paid family caregiving program between 2017 and 2019 by a home healthcare agency. We compared patient characteristics between the family CNA and nonfamily CNA groups.

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Background: Physical activity recovery after pediatric surgery can be assessed using objective measures such as step counts, but practice currently relies on subjective assessment by proxy. It is unclear how subjective and objective assessments of activity relate. We compared caregiver assessment of return to normal physical activity after pediatric appendectomy to step count recovery measured by a Fitbit.

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Early childhood is an important development period for establishing healthy physical activity (PA) habits. The objective of this study was to evaluate PA levels in a representative sample of U.S.

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Synopsis of recent research by authors named "Soyang Kwon"

  • - Soyang Kwon's recent research focuses on pediatric health, particularly postoperative recovery metrics and physical activity patterns in young children, utilizing innovative methodologies such as consumer wearable devices and MRI protocols.
  • - Findings from Kwon's studies indicate that wearable technology can provide valuable real-time health data, significantly improving the assessment of recovery trajectories in pediatric patients post-surgery, and highlighting the need for novel metrics like autocorrelation in resting heart rate to better understand recovery.
  • - Additional work explores disparities in physical activity among toddlers, emphasizing the importance of addressing sex differences and the effects of sociodemographic factors on children's development and well-being, alongside evaluating the impact of screen time during the COVID-19 pandemic.