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Growth in renal failure: a longitudinal study of emotional and behavioural changes during trials of growth hormone treatment.

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Growth in renal failure: a longitudinal study of emotional and behavioural changes during trials of growth hormone treatment. / Postlethwaite, R. J.; Eminson, D. M.; Reynolds, J. M. et al.
In: Archives of Disease in Childhood, Vol. 78, 03.1998, p. 222-229.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Postlethwaite RJ, Eminson DM, Reynolds JM, Wood AJ, Hollis S. Growth in renal failure: a longitudinal study of emotional and behavioural changes during trials of growth hormone treatment. Archives of Disease in Childhood. 1998 Mar;78:222-229.

Author

Postlethwaite, R. J. ; Eminson, D. M. ; Reynolds, J. M. et al. / Growth in renal failure: a longitudinal study of emotional and behavioural changes during trials of growth hormone treatment. In: Archives of Disease in Childhood. 1998 ; Vol. 78. pp. 222-229.

Bibtex

@article{046099fdbcec4b99a553c3766d403c74,
title = "Growth in renal failure: a longitudinal study of emotional and behavioural changes during trials of growth hormone treatment.",
abstract = "Growth and psychological functioning were studied in 30 patients with renal failure over a two year period following the offer of growth hormone treatment for significant short stature. Parents' concerns about growth decreased significantly during the study. Twenty eight parents (93%) accepted growth hormone treatment; most (74%) were satisfied with it and would opt for it again (89%). The views of these parents were unrelated to growth outcome in their child. This suggests that the positive responses were related more to the effort to improve growth than to any objective treatment success. In contrast children's reduction in concern about growth, satisfaction with treatment (36%), and decision to opt for growth hormone again (50%) were all significantly related to improvement in growth. Parents' reports of non-compliance increased significantly from 41% at 1 year to 91% at 2 years in the group as a whole. No significant changes were identified in maternal mental distress and no additional costs to the psychological health of the children seem to have resulted from the introduction of growth hormone treatment. A group of children was identified who accepted treatment but had continued poor growth. These appeared to be at particular risk of both physical problems and associated or consequent psychological difficulties.",
keywords = "short stature, chronic renal failure, growth hormone, psychological problems",
author = "Postlethwaite, {R. J.} and Eminson, {D. M.} and Reynolds, {J. M.} and Wood, {A. J.} and S. Hollis",
year = "1998",
month = mar,
language = "English",
volume = "78",
pages = "222--229",
journal = "Archives of Disease in Childhood",
issn = "1468-2044",
publisher = "BMJ Publishing Group",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Growth in renal failure: a longitudinal study of emotional and behavioural changes during trials of growth hormone treatment.

AU - Postlethwaite, R. J.

AU - Eminson, D. M.

AU - Reynolds, J. M.

AU - Wood, A. J.

AU - Hollis, S.

PY - 1998/3

Y1 - 1998/3

N2 - Growth and psychological functioning were studied in 30 patients with renal failure over a two year period following the offer of growth hormone treatment for significant short stature. Parents' concerns about growth decreased significantly during the study. Twenty eight parents (93%) accepted growth hormone treatment; most (74%) were satisfied with it and would opt for it again (89%). The views of these parents were unrelated to growth outcome in their child. This suggests that the positive responses were related more to the effort to improve growth than to any objective treatment success. In contrast children's reduction in concern about growth, satisfaction with treatment (36%), and decision to opt for growth hormone again (50%) were all significantly related to improvement in growth. Parents' reports of non-compliance increased significantly from 41% at 1 year to 91% at 2 years in the group as a whole. No significant changes were identified in maternal mental distress and no additional costs to the psychological health of the children seem to have resulted from the introduction of growth hormone treatment. A group of children was identified who accepted treatment but had continued poor growth. These appeared to be at particular risk of both physical problems and associated or consequent psychological difficulties.

AB - Growth and psychological functioning were studied in 30 patients with renal failure over a two year period following the offer of growth hormone treatment for significant short stature. Parents' concerns about growth decreased significantly during the study. Twenty eight parents (93%) accepted growth hormone treatment; most (74%) were satisfied with it and would opt for it again (89%). The views of these parents were unrelated to growth outcome in their child. This suggests that the positive responses were related more to the effort to improve growth than to any objective treatment success. In contrast children's reduction in concern about growth, satisfaction with treatment (36%), and decision to opt for growth hormone again (50%) were all significantly related to improvement in growth. Parents' reports of non-compliance increased significantly from 41% at 1 year to 91% at 2 years in the group as a whole. No significant changes were identified in maternal mental distress and no additional costs to the psychological health of the children seem to have resulted from the introduction of growth hormone treatment. A group of children was identified who accepted treatment but had continued poor growth. These appeared to be at particular risk of both physical problems and associated or consequent psychological difficulties.

KW - short stature

KW - chronic renal failure

KW - growth hormone

KW - psychological problems

M3 - Journal article

VL - 78

SP - 222

EP - 229

JO - Archives of Disease in Childhood

JF - Archives of Disease in Childhood

SN - 1468-2044

ER -