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Tag: children’s national hospital

  • This NICU nurse takes care of infants all while flying hundreds of feet in the air – WTOP News

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    Many nurses in the D.C. area are responsible for taking care of people struggling with severe illnesses, but only a few are doing it for the youngest patients, all while traveling over 100 miles per hour, hundreds of feet above the ground.

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    NICU nurse saves tiny lives midair

    In the D.C. region, conversations often start with, “What do you do?” WTOP’s “Working Capital” series profiles the people whose jobs make the D.C. region run.

    Many nurses in the D.C. area are responsible for taking care of people struggling with severe illnesses, but only a few are doing it for the youngest patients all while traveling over a 100 miles per hour, hundreds of feet above the ground.

    For the past 27 years, Janice Berry has been a neonatal intensive care unit transport nurse at Children’s National Hospital in D.C. She originally worked on the floor for about 12 years before turning in her scrubs for a navy blue flight suit.

    Berry joined the NICU at Children’s National in 1986 after attending nursing school at Clemson University.

    She has taken thousands of flights by helicopter all over the Capital region to pick up infants fighting for their lives.

    “Thankfully, with a helicopter, it really cuts a two-and-a-half-hour driving time down to about 40 minutes,” Berry said.

    On a typical day for the veteran nurse, she and her team will get a briefing from the pilots about the conditions of the aircraft as well as any weather issues that they may run into.

    They pack up the portable isolation box that NICU babies usually need, though theirs comes with a seat belt for the ride.

    “We generally have a basic idea of what’s going on with the baby, what kind of equipment, what size team that we’re going to need for that transport,” Berry told WTOP. “Sometimes, it’s just myself and a paramedic and either the driver or the pilot. Sometimes we’ll need respiratory therapy, and occasionally we’ll bring a doctor with us as well.”

    Additional nurses, breathing specialists and physicians take the ride, depending on the case.

    While most NICU nurses deal with their patients’ health complications, Berry and other transport nurses have the added complication of performing their care for the infants while flying through the air and dealing with turbulence.

    As well as a nurse, Berry is part safety officer, having learned extensively about flying during her time.

    “When we’re on the aircraft, we’re looking out for any potential problems. All of us are part of that team that helps keep this patient safe and are able to mitigate those safety concerns,” she said.

    If the weather is detrimental to flying and could cause any safety concerns, they will take an ambulance instead of the usual helicopter that you may see zipping around the D.C. skies.

    “Once I got here and I saw what the transport team did, and how they functioned, and everything that they got to do — which is a really unique job — that was what my goal was and what I strived for,” Berry said.

    After a number of years of bedside nursing, she took the position on the transport team.

    “I really appreciate that it’s different every day,” Berry said.

    “Since we are based in the NICU, I go out as a children’s nurse, meet the families, talk to them about Children’s (National) and the wonderful care that we’re going to give this baby, and help to reassure them. Because generally, this is not a normal birth plan for anyone to have their child transported right after delivery,” she added.

    Following up with the families is one of her favorite parts of the job.

    “I was invited to a first birthday party recently for someone I transported, which was pretty amazing to get to see that full circle moment of my little guy doing great,” Berry said.

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    Luke Lukert

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  • DC region shines in US News children’s hospital rankings – WTOP News

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    According to an annual list from U.S. News and World Report, Maryland, Virginia and D.C. are home to top hospitals that specialize in pediatric care.

    You hope your child never needs specialized medical care, but if they do, the D.C. region seems to be a good place to be.

    According to an annual list from U.S. News and World Report, Maryland, Virginia and D.C. are home to top hospitals that specialize in pediatric care. Leading the pack is Children’s National Hospital in D.C.

    “Children’s National Hospital — it ranked among the best in the country for all 11 specialties that we looked at,” said Ben Harder, chief of health care analytics at U.S. News and World Report.

    In the 2025 Best Children’s Hospitals rankings, Children’s National shared the honor roll with nine other top hospitals across the country. Among them were Boston Children’s Hospital, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles and Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

    Hospitals were ranked based on their ability to address a wide range of pediatric specialties. These include pediatric cancer, neonatology, cardiology, orthopedics, behavioral health and more.

    Researchers considered how well hospitals treat medically complex children, how many patients recover without complications and how closely hospitals follow best practices.

    “Some hospitals are really good at adhering to best practices … from every nurse washing their hands before they touch a patient to making sure every patient gets the right medication at the right time,” Harder said.

    Harder said Children’s National stood out for its outstanding patient outcomes, strict adherence to best practices and robust clinical resources.

    While Children’s National earned the highest marks, the D.C. region is also home to several other highly ranked children’s hospitals.

    In Maryland, Harder highlighted Johns Hopkins Children’s Center in Baltimore. In Virginia, he pointed to the University of Virginia Children’s Hospital in Charlottesville, the Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU, and Inova L.J. Murphy Children’s Hospital in Falls Church.

    Harder said the fact that the Greater Washington and Baltimore region has five nationally ranked hospitals is something to be proud of.

    “For families, it’s reassuring that there are a lot of good options if they do have a child who has a complex medical need,” he said.

    The rankings also break down hospitals by region and specialty. Harder said the goal is to help parents choose the best hospital for their child’s specific condition.

    “We want to make sure that the data we have worked so hard to obtain and analyze is available and useful to families who depend on it,” he said.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Mike Murillo

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  • More US hospitals are ending gender-affirming care for minors. How this could impact patients – WTOP News

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    Two U.S. hospitals are the latest to announce they will be ending some, or all, of their pediatric gender-affirming care services at the end of the month.

    (NEW YORK) — Two U.S. hospitals are the latest to announce they will be ending some, or all, of their pediatric gender-affirming care services at the end of the month.

    Kaiser Permanente, a health care company that manages 40 hospitals across several states — including California, Oregon and Virginia — said it is pausing gender-related surgeries for patients under age 18 on Aug. 29. It noted that other gender-related care will continue.

    Children’s National Hospital in Washington, D.C. said it will also stop prescribing gender-affirming medications on Aug. 30. It follows a move the hospital made in late January to pause all puberty-blockers and hormone prescriptions for minors.

    Since President Donald Trump’s second term began in January, at least 17 major hospital systems in at least nine states and the District of Columbia have paused, discontinued, canceled or ended pediatric gender services, according to an ABC News tally, amid mounting legal and regulatory concerns.

    In January, Trump signed an executive order stating the U.S. would not “fund, sponsor, promote, assist, or support” gender transition of those under age 19 and would “rigorously enforce all laws that prohibit or limit these destructive and life-altering procedures.”

    Transgender adults and youth may experience extreme psychological distress due to a mismatch in their gender presentation and identity. They experience significantly higher rates of suicide than the general population, but some studies suggest gender-affirming care eases those feelings of distress.

    While some individuals and groups have called for a slower approach to gender-affirming care for minors, other pediatric gender care experts and advocates have said ending such care can have a harmful effect on patients’ mental health and well-being.

    They say the government is interfering in conversations meant to be held only between patients, their families and doctors, and that doctors are not being allowed to follow the established medical guidelines that medical associations like the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Endocrine Society and the World Professional Association for Transgender Health have endorsed.

    “This is health care provided by licensed clinicians according to standards of care that have been around for many years,” Kellan Baker, a senior adviser for health policy with the Movement Advancement Project, a nonprofit think tank that focuses on LGBTQ+ issues, told ABC News.

    “To have the government interfering … overreaching into the private conversations between patients and families and their doctors and telling doctors that they cannot provide the care that they know that their patients need — that is a very serious government overreach,” he added.

    Evidence for gender-affirming care
    Gender-affirming care may include medical, surgical, mental health and non-medical services. It can range from allowing a child to pick their pronouns to more invasive treatments typically prescribed for older teens.

    Early gender affirming care can be “crucial” to overall health and well-being, allowing a child to focus on social transitions and can help build up confidence while dealing with the health care system, the federal Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health wrote during the Biden administration.

    Gender-affirming care is supported by multiple major medical organizations. Studies have shown many of the treatment options are generally safe and that care can have a positive impact on mental health, which psychotherapy alone cannot provide, some experts said.

    Some experts have questioned the significance of the interventions on long-term mental health as well as the possibility of regret and point out potential risks on future fertility.

    “It’s deeply disappointing that hospital systems have relented to the political pressure, not scientific pressure, to end these sorts of programs,” Dr. Marci Bowers, a gynecologic and reconstructive surgeon at Mills-Peninsula Medical Cener in Burlingame, California, told ABC News. “We have decades of evidence-based information that suggests that gender-related health care is beneficial to patients and their families with very, very, very scant incidences of regret or disappointment in that care.”

    A spokesperson for Children’s National Hospital told ABC News it was discontinuing the prescription of gender-affirming medications in light of “escalating legal and regulatory risks” to the hospital, its providers and families.

    “We know this change will have a significant impact on affected patients, families and staff, and our care teams are working directly with families of current patients to support them,” the statement read, in part. “Mental health and other support services for patients remain available. LGBT patients are always welcome at Children’s National for other medical needs and treatment.”

    Similarly, a spokesperson for Kaiser Permanente pointed ABC News to actions from the administration, including the Department of Justice issuing subpoenas to doctors and clinics providing gender-affirming care to transgender youth.

    “As the legal and regulatory environment for gender-affirming care continues to evolve, we must carefully consider the significant risks being created for health systems, clinicians, and patients under the age of 19 seeking this care,” the statement read, in part. “After significant deliberation and consultation with internal and external experts, including our physicians, we’ve made the difficult decision to pause surgical treatment for patients under the age of 19 in our hospitals and surgical centers.”

    The hospital said it would work to identify clinicians performing surgery if a patient’s planned operation was canceled and, if a clinician is available, the hospital said it will work with patients and their families to coordinate care and provide coverage for surgical treatment.

    Bowers — the Mills-Peninsula gynecologic and reconstructive surgeon — said if somebody is in treatment and that treatment is suddenly withdrawn, it can be extremely difficult, and patients can experience psychosocial and personal setbacks. She said treatment gave patients a psychological boost.

    ‘When you look and you talk to these individuals, they are happier about themselves,” she said. “They’re happier about their bodies. They’re happier about their choice of friends, how they see themselves in the world. They’re more optimistic. So those are softer measures, but they’re important, and those things matter.”

    She also said withdrawing medical care can be a major disruption to patients’ lives because families may have to move to receive care that is now no longer being provided locally.

    Baker — the Movement Advancement Project’s health policy adviser — said he sees the actions from the administration as a “campaign of terror” against health care institutions, doctors and families, and that decisions about continuing or discontinuing gender-affirming care should remain between patients and their health care providers.

    “This is about health care providers working together with patients and parents to get kids what they need,” Baker said. “It’s nothing more. It’s nothing less. All that trans people are trying to do is live their lives, and all the parents of trans kids are trying to do is love their kids.”

    Concern after HHS report
    Not all experts are opposed to the closures. Dr. Kristopher Kaliebe, a child and adolescent psychiatrist and professor at the University of South Florida Morsani College of Medicine, believes the retrenchment reflects long-standing scientific concerns.

    “Clinicians have quietly recognized for years that the evidence base for these interventions in minors is weak,” he told ABC News. “There’s no strong proof that they improve mental health, and we simply don’t know the long-term outcomes.”

    In May, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released what it called a “comprehensive review” of transgender care for children and teens, calling for broader use of psychotherapy for young people with gender dysphoria rather than gender-affirming care.

    The authors of the review were not named, so their credentials have not been reviewed and the paper has not yet been peer-reviewed by independent scientists yet — a step this is typically necessary before changing any guidelines that health care providers follow.

    The more than 400-page document details possible harm from medical interventions for youth, including the use of puberty blockers and potentially associated risks, such as infertility.

    It follows systematic reviews from Sweden, Finland and the U.K. that have resulted in the three countries restricting gender-affirming care. England’s National Health Service ended prescribing puberty blockers for minors experiencing gender dysphoria outside of clinical trials. Sweden and Finland have followed psychotherapy-first models.

    Kaliebe called the HHS review a needed step, saying, “For the first time, the federal government acknowledged openly that these interventions are experimental and that we need high-quality data, especially long-term tracking of outcomes.”

    However, Bowers dismissed the HHS review as derivative, saying the team that put the report together didn’t appear to conduct its own review and rather “pirated” reviews conducted overseas.

    “There were a lot of other mischaracterizations throughout that report,” Bowers said. “Most experts, frankly, scoff at what they saw. … It’s disappointing. It sounds more like politics than it does practical and factual matter.”

    Baker concurred, referring to the report as a “really shocking government document,” suggesting it was commissioned right after Trump’s January executive order with a pre-determined outcome.

    “I’m a health services researcher by training … and I’m very familiar with evidence-based medicine and systematic reviews, and one of the ways that you need to make sure that you’re approaching work like that is to not have your thumb on the scale,” he said. “You don’t go in with a research question that has already been decided, where the outcome has already been decided. That’s not good science. It’s not science at all.”

    He said producing the report so quickly after the executive order was issued — a little over three months — was too short of a timeline for a thorough review and he criticized not having the names of the authors on the report to ensure there were no conflicts of interest and that the authors were experts in their field.

    Experts have said they are in favor of more research being conducted — Kaliebe emphasized the need for rigorous tracking of harms and a clearer study of psychotherapeutic approaches.

    Bowers argued that while stronger research is welcome, cutting off services altogether harms real people.

    “We know from decades of clinical experience that when care is affirming, young people are happier and healthier,” she said. “That’s what parents see, even if politics obscures it.”

    If you or someone you know is struggling with thoughts of suicide, free, confidential help is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Call or text the national lifeline at 988.

     

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    WTOP Staff

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  • One of the best children’s hospitals in the country is right here in DC – WTOP News

    One of the best children’s hospitals in the country is right here in DC – WTOP News

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    Children’s National Hospital in D.C. has been named one of the best children’s hospitals in the United States, according to the latest rankings from U.S. News & World Report.

    Children’s National Hospital in D.C. has been named one of the best children’s hospitals in the country, according to the latest rankings from U.S. News & World Report.

    Children’s National was one of 10 children’s hospitals to be named to the 2024-2025 Best Children’s Hospitals Honor Roll. Those hospitals “really have the maximum breadth and depth of excellence,” said Ben Harder, chief of health analysis at U.S. News.

    The annual rankings are compiled by evaluating children’s hospitals across the country in various categories, Harder said, including specialties such as cardiology, cancer, orthopedics and neonatology.

    In response to a rise in need for youth mental health services, the outlet added an 11th category — behavioral health — to the hospitals it evaluated this year.

    “The goal of having these different specialty rankings is to help parents and families who need a particular type of care identify the right hospital for their child’s needs,” Harder said.

    Children’s National is the lone children’s hospital to make the outlet’s rankings in D.C. It’s ranked in the top five in two specialties — pediatric cancer and pediatric neurology and neurosurgery.

    In Maryland, meanwhile, Johns Hopkins Children’s Center in Baltimore is ranked first overall. It’s ranked among the best in the U.S. in all of the 11 specialty areas evaluated, Harder said.

    Three hospitals in Virginia made the rankings — University of Virginia Children’s Hospital in Charlottesville is the highest ranked in the state, followed by Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU and Inova L.J. Murphy Children’s Hospital in Falls Church, which is ranked one of the best in the country in neonatology.

    U.S. News reviews dozens of quality indicators in the specialty areas “to help give parents a starting point when they’re confronted with a medical challenge for their family,” Harder said.

    The 2024-2025 honor roll list, in alphabetic order, includes:

    • Boston Children’s Hospital
    • Children’s Hospital Colorado, Aurora
    • Children’s Hospital Los Angeles
    • Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
    • Children’s National Hospital, Washington, D.C.
    • Cincinnati Children’s
    • Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Columbus, Ohio
    • Rady Children’s Hospital, San Diego
    • Seattle Children’s Hospital
    • Texas Children’s Hospital, Houston

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Scott Gelman

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  • A redesigned app helps prevent and respond to concussions in youth sports – WTOP News

    A redesigned app helps prevent and respond to concussions in youth sports – WTOP News

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    Being part of a youth sports league has a lot of benefits — but it also brings with it an increased risk for injuries, including concussions.

    Being part of a youth sports league has a lot of benefits — it boosts kids’ confidence and physical activity, and research shows it can help improve educational outcomes as well.

    But it also brings with it an increased risk for injuries, including concussions.

    “Everybody thinks of football,” Dr. Gerard Gioia — the director of the Safe Concussion Outcome, Recovery & Education (SCORE) Program at Children’s National Hospital — said. Other sports, he added, such as soccer, lacrosse, rugby and skateboarding, can be hazardous, too.

    But if we are talking football, “We need to teach kids that you do not use your head in any way to try to tackle or block or contact another person,” Gioia said, and that a helmet is meant as a protective device, not a weapon.

    The SCORE Program has a newly redesigned app that aims to do just that. Called SCORE 4 Brain Health, it helps parents, coaches and others identify, monitor and respond to concussions. The free app has educational resources, including a list of questions parents should be asking youth sports organizations.

    “There’s a set of three questions that relate to the league’s policy,” Gioia said. “Is there a concussion protocol and guideline? How are parents informed about a suspected concussion? And tell us about your return to play protocol, and what documentation do you require after a youngster is supposedly ready to return?”

    Other prompts focus on concussion training for coaches and whether children are being trained against using their heads to tackle.

    Gioia said if a child does suffer a blow to the head, a parent should get on the phone with the child’s doctor that day.

    The SCORE app has a list of 12 warning signs to know when to take a child to the emergency room, including loss of consciousness or difficulty moving an arm or a leg.

    He said concussion treatment has advanced in the 20 years he’s been in the field.

    “Right now, what we do is we activate kids. We used to say, ‘Rest, rest, rest.’ And no longer do we recommend rest, except maybe the first day or two,” Gioia said. “But we get kids up walking. We want them to return to school — with support, of course. We want them to start doing both physical activity and social activity.”

    There are also more targeted treatments for symptoms, whether the child is suffering from emotional adjustment issues or is having difficulties with balance.

    Currently, all 50 states and the District have passed legislation on children’s sports and safety. Gioia said all require high school coaches to go through CDC concussion safety training. He estimates about half include guidelines for youth coaches, as well, including in Virginia, Maryland and D.C.

    The SCORE 4 Brain Health App is available to download on the App Store and Google Play.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Shayna Estulin

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