AIM: This study aimed to identify paediatric terminology used in the Australian health and health-education context, propose a standardized framework for Australian use, and compare it with a US-based framework. METHOD: Australian health and health-education websites were systematically searched using a novel hierarchical domain-specific search strategy to identify grey literature containing paediatric terminology. Webpages published from 2009 to February 2014, with a '.gov.au' or '.edu.au' domain and no advertising, were included. Paediatric terms were analysed with power-law distributions. Age definitions were grouped using a chi-squared test automatic interaction detection analysis (p<0.05). RESULTS: In total, 34 paediatric terms and 197 unique age definitions were identified in 613 webpages. Terms displayed a language distribution, although definitions had semantic and lexical ambiguity. Age definitions were divided into four statistically different groups (F=245.3, p<0.001). Four paediatric terms with distinct age definitions were proposed based on Australian data: 'infant: 0 to <1 year', 'early childhood: 1 year to <5 years', 'child: 5 years to <13 years', and 'young person: 13 years to <22 years'. These recommendations were broader than the US-based comparison. INTERPRETATION: This is a starting point for standardizing Australian paediatric terminology, and a method for exploring paediatric terminology in other countries.
AIM: This study aimed to identify paediatric terminology used in the Australian health and health-education context, propose a standardized framework for Australian use, and compare it with a US-based framework. METHOD: Australian health and health-education websites were systematically searched using a novel hierarchical domain-specific search strategy to identify grey literature containing paediatric terminology. Webpages published from 2009 to February 2014, with a '.gov.au' or '.edu.au' domain and no advertising, were included. Paediatric terms were analysed with power-law distributions. Age definitions were grouped using a chi-squared test automatic interaction detection analysis (p<0.05). RESULTS: In total, 34 paediatric terms and 197 unique age definitions were identified in 613 webpages. Terms displayed a language distribution, although definitions had semantic and lexical ambiguity. Age definitions were divided into four statistically different groups (F=245.3, p<0.001). Four paediatric terms with distinct age definitions were proposed based on Australian data: 'infant: 0 to <1 year', 'early childhood: 1 year to <5 years', 'child: 5 years to <13 years', and 'young person: 13 years to <22 years'. These recommendations were broader than the US-based comparison. INTERPRETATION: This is a starting point for standardizing Australian paediatric terminology, and a method for exploring paediatric terminology in other countries.
Authors: Waleed M Sweileh; Kolitha Wickramage; Kevin Pottie; Charles Hui; Bayard Roberts; Ansam F Sawalha; Saed H Zyoud Journal: BMC Public Health Date: 2018-06-20 Impact factor: 3.295
Authors: Andrea L Schaffer; Claudia Bruno; Nicholas A Buckley; Rose Cairns; Melisa Litchfield; Simon Paget; Helga Zoega; Natasha Nassar; Sallie-Anne Pearson Journal: Paediatr Perinat Epidemiol Date: 2022-02-16 Impact factor: 3.103