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A Right to Diapers

Journal of Pediatric Health Care, 2010
Recently, I was invited to attend a day-long conference at the Yale Law School on Diaper Rights: Health, Hygiene, and Public Policy. The goals of the conference were to help generate a national discussion on the needs of low-income families who are unable to afford basic hygiene items such as diapers and to shape a legislative initiative to move public
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Diapers and Poisons

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1982
Those of us with experience in childhood poisoning have published numerous articles dealing with series of cases related to a single intoxicant. While these series and others that show various epidemiologic data abound in the literature and in textbooks, few articles deal with practical poison prevention.
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Worms in Diaper

Pediatrics, 1983
To the Editor.— In a recent letter,1 Ruttner called attention to the presence of housefly maggots in soiled diapers as a cause for parental misidentification of stool parasites. Recently, a mother brought a clean diaper with "worms" to our acute care clinic. The diaper contained more than 20 slender brown "worms," each 1.5 mm long, which
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Diaper dermatitis — An overview

The Indian Journal of Pediatrics, 2003
Diaper dermatitis, also know as nappy rash, is an inflammation of the skin covered by nappy. It probably results due to an interaction of multiple factors like increased wetness, elevated pH due to urine, fecal enzymes and microorganisms under the nappy.
H R Y, Prasad   +2 more
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Dermatophytosis of the Diaper Area

Clinical Pediatrics, 1987
Six cases of dermatophytosis of the diaper area due to either Epadermophyton floccosum or Trichophyton rubrum are described herein. The clinical and laboratory features of these patients and those reported in the literature are highlighted. Dermatophytosis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of rashes in the diaper area.
M, Kahana   +4 more
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Diaper Dermatitis

Pediatrics In Review, 2021
Lauren E, Helms, Heather L, Burrows
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Diapers and diaper rashes.

Dermatology nursing, 1997
The diaper-wearing population has expanded from infants and children to include adults, especially the elderly. Nurses caring for patients over a wide age range are commonly asked for advice about diapering choices, and for guidance in evaluation, prophylaxis, and treatment of diaper rashes.
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Diapers at the Doctor: Addressing Diaper Need in a Pediatric Clinic

Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved
Summary: A needs-assessment at a federally qualified health center in the Bay Area found that over 40% of patients faced diaper need, with cost as the major barrier and few local diaper banks available to address this need. This report describes a clinic-based diaper distribution program that helps fill this gap.
Max, Lee   +9 more
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Amoxicillin and diaper dermatitis

Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1988
Multiple skin sites and the gastrointestinal tract of 57 infants with otitis media were cultured quantitatively for Candida albicans before and after antibiotic therapy. Ten days of systemic therapy with amoxicillin was associated with a twofold increase in the recovery of C. albicans from the rectum and skin.
P J, Honig   +4 more
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Diaper Dermatitis

American Journal of Clinical Dermatology, 2005
Eruptions in the diaper area are the most common dermatologic problem in infancy. Such eruptions can be subdivided into primary diaper dermatitis, an acute inflammation of the skin in the diaper area with an ill-defined and multifactorial etiology, and secondary diaper dermatitis, a term which encompasses eruptions in the diaper area with defined ...
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