April 15, 2020

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) strongly supports the continued provision of health care for children during the COVID-19 pandemic unless community circumstances related to the pandemic require necessary adjustments.

Newborn and infant care should be provided consistent with  the Bright Futures Guidelines for Health Supervision of Infants, Children, and Adolescents (4th Edition) and the corresponding  Bright Futures/AAP Recommendations for Preventive Pediatric Health Care (Periodicity Schedule) whenever possible.

The AAP recommends that pediatricians continue to follow federal and state guidelines on newborn screening and the Recommended Uniform Screening Panel set by the Advisory Committee on Heritable Disorders in Newborn and Children. Pediatricians should follow their specific state guidance for procurement and follow up of results.

Newborn Bloodspot Screening  

States and territories have newborn screening programs and systems in place to ensure that newborns are screened at birth and receive timely follow-up and treatment for preventable complications from certain congenital conditions. Individual state guidance should be consulted for newborn bloodspot screening. A missed out-of-range dried blood spot screen can have devastating consequences for an affected child and family. The individual conditions detected by newborn screening are rare and screening is designed to detect asymptomatic individuals, primary care pediatricians are unlikely to recognize these conditions before symptoms arise if screening does not occur. 

Early Hearing Detection and Intervention (Newborn Hearing Screening) 

States and territories have early hearing detection and intervention programs and systems in place to ensure that newborns are screened at birth for hearing loss. Clinical best practices advise that infants be screened by 1 month of age, are diagnosed for hearing loss by 3 months of age and enter into early intervention services by 6 months of age. Continued adherence to these standards amid COVID-19 is essential to ensure healthy and appropriate development.  

Critical Congenital Heart Disease Screening  

Newborn screening for critical congenital heart disease (CCHD) uses pulse oximetry to check the level of oxygen in the blood of newborns. Children who fail this screening should have further testing to evaluate for congenital heart disease or for other potential causes of low blood oxygen levels. 

Additional Information

Last Updated

04/15/2020

Source

American Academy of Pediatrics