|      Telling the particular    mothers and fathers regarding little ones whom throw in place and meow    regularly which the youngster possesses gastroesophageal reflux ailment, or    even GERD, creates these individuals very likely to want treatments : even    when there're furthermore explained to it is not more likely to aid    considerably, the latest examine implies. Most babies who spit up    don't have an acid reflux problem, researchers said, just a not-quite-developed    upper stomach valve. Still, an increasing    number of those kids are being labeled as having GERD - even though a    definitive diagnosis normally requires an invasive test. "Roughly 50 percent    of babies during the first six months are spitting up enough to bother their    parents," said Dr. William Carey from The Children's Hospital of    Philadelphia, who wrote a commentary published Monday with the new study. "I never offered    medication for a kid who was just spitting up and gaining weight well and    happy," he told Reuters Health. "I could confidently tell the    mother, 'Look, it's going to be a nuisance until about six months, and then    it's gradually going to get better.' It's an irritating variation of    normal." For their study, Laura Scherer from the University of Missouri in    Columbia and her colleagues handed out surveys to 175 parents with a    hypothetical scenario: their one-month-old infant was spitting up and crying    a lot. The researchers asked    parents what they would do if the doctor diagnosed their child with GERD    versus if the condition wasn't labeled, as well as what they would do if the    doctor told them the medication to treat the    condition was ineffective - as research suggests it is - or didn't say    anything about its efficacy. Survey participants were    more likely to want medication if their hypothetical infant was given a GERD    diagnosis. Even when parents were told the medicine    probably wouldn't work, they rated their interest in treatment at about 2.5    out of 5. However, with no disease    label and with information about the medicine's lack of efficacy, parents    rated their desire to treat below 1.5 out of 5, the researchers reported in    Pediatrics. "It shows how these    kinds of labels can influence how people respond to symptoms," Scherer    told Reuters Health. "Words can make an otherwise normal process seem    like something that requires medical intervention." She said current    guidelines say the case of an irritable infant who cries and spits up    frequently should probably not be treated as GERD - but that if doctors rule    everything else out, they can try a two-week course of acid-reducing    medication. That caveat could further    confuse doctors and parents into thinking medicine is likely to help, Scherer    said. "It's really    becoming pretty clear that GERD in infants is overdiagnosed and overtreated.    One reason for this could be that doctors' use of this GERD label could    unintentionally increase people's (desire) for medications," she said. Carey compared what's    happening with GERD symptoms to the rising    number of very active kids being diagnosed with and treated for attention    deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). "Parents need to    know that there are some annoying or insignificant variations of normal which    one really needs to just put up with and not treat as a disease," he    said. "Be darn sure that    there is an abnormality before treating it as such."  |    
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