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Factors associated with excessive school absence

Weitzman, M; Klerman, L V; Alpert, J J; Lamb, G A; Kayne, H; Rose, L
Excessive school absence is a major educational and social problem in the United States which is most pronounced in urban school systems. A case control study of excessively absent inner-city middle-school students and regular attenders failed to demonstrate any differences between groups in terms of health status, health-related behaviors, or utilization of health services. These results contrast dramatically with the findings of a previous study which identified a number of educational and demographic characteristics which clearly distinguish excessively absent students from regular attenders. It is concluded that educational and demographic factors are far more important in influencing excessive absence behavior than are health-related factors. The implications of these findings for the pediatrician are discussed
PMID: 3822950
ISSN: 0300-1245
CID: 71438

School absence rates as outcome measures in studies of children with chronic illness

Weitzman, M
Health care providers are caring for growing numbers of children with chronic illnesses and research on the effects of various interventions with these children are being increasingly published. Data from a variety of sources indicate that children with chronic illness miss more school than their healthy peers. The relative ease with which school attendance data can be obtained and analyzed and the implications of excessive school absence for children's academic performance, social adjustment, and ultimate capacity to function in society suggest that school absence rates deserve to be more broadly emphasized in research on chronic illness in childhood. Although school absence rates have not been widely used as outcome measures in such studies they do reflect a wide variety of aspects of children's health status and have been shown to be responsive to interventions with children with various physical and mental health problems. Since these rates reflect both health and non-health related factors it is important that investigators recognize the nonspecific nature of this measure and account for non-health related influences either by sampling or analytic techniques
PMID: 3760108
ISSN: 0021-9681
CID: 71454

Demographic and educational characteristics of inner city middle school problem absence students

Weitzman, M; Klerman, L V; Lamb, G A; Kane, K; Geromini, K R; Kayne, R; Rose, L; Alpert, J J
Results of a study of characteristics of middle school students revealed highly significant differences between problem absence students and non-problem absence students on all study variables except sex. Characteristics such as increasing grade, being behind appropriate grade, busing and special education status, and the particular school attended were highly correlated with this behavior, as were race and increasing age
PMID: 4025518
ISSN: 0002-9432
CID: 71439

Medical services for children with chronic illnesses

Chapter by: Weitzman M
in: Issues in the care of children with chronic illness by Hobbs N; Perrin JM [Eds]
San Francisco : Jossey-Bass, 1985
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 0875896502
CID: 4275

Use of health services by chronically ill and disabled children

Smyth-Staruch K; Breslau N; Weitzman M; Gortmaker S
Hospitalization and use of outpatient health care services during a 1-year period by 369 pediatric patients with cystic fibrosis, cerebral palsy, myelodysplasia, or multiple physical handicaps and 456 randomly selected children without congenital conditions from the Cleveland area were examined. Use of hospitalization and outpatient services by the average chronically ill or disabled child was 10 times that of the average comparison child. Physician specialists, occupational and physical therapists, and school nurses were the major outpatient categories used disproportionately by children with chronic illnesses or disabilities. The major share of health care used by children with chronic conditions was attributable to a small subset of children: All hospital care was accounted for by one third of the children, and three quarters of all outpatient care was accounted for by one quarter of that sample. Hospital care was used at similar rates by the four diagnostic groups. However, amount and type of outpatient care varied by diagnosis, level of functional impairment, race, and income. Estimated average expenditure for health services used by the chronically ill or disabled sample was 10 times that of the comparison sample. Relative distribution of estimated expenditures across types of services differed for the two samples as well as among diagnostic categories
PMID: 6232434
ISSN: 0025-7079
CID: 62514

School and peer relations

Weitzman, M
PMID: 6701027
ISSN: 0031-3955
CID: 71903

Non-academic benefits of schools to children with learning disabilities

Weitzman M
ORIGINAL:0006035
ISSN: 0196-206x
CID: 71787

Developmental implications of chronic childhood illness

Weitzman M
ORIGINAL:0006036
ISSN: 0196-206x
CID: 71788

School absence

Chapter by: Weitzman M; Alpert JJ
in: Ambulatory pediatrics III by Green M; Hagerty RJ [Eds]
Philadelphia : Saunders, 1984
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 0721642373
CID: 4255

School absence -- can it be used to monitor child health?

Chapter by: Klerman LV; Weitzman M; Lamb GA; Alpert JJ
in: Monitoring child health in the United States : selected issues and policies by Walker DK; Richmond JB [Eds]
Cambridge MA : Harvard University Press, 1984
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 0674585518
CID: 4274