Brief ReportConference Summary
Neonatal and Pediatric Respiratory Care: What Does the Future Hold?
Robert M DiBlasi and Ira M Cheifetz
Respiratory Care September 2011, 56 (9) 1466-1480; DOI: https://doi.org/10.4187/respcare.01505
Robert M DiBlasi
Center for Developmental Therapeutics, Seattle Children's Research Institute, and with the Department of Respiratory Care, Seattle Children's Hospital and Research Institute, Seattle, Washington.
Ira M Cheifetz
Division of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, Pediatric Respiratory Care, and the Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation Program, Duke Children's Hospital, Durham, North Carolina.
In this issue
Respiratory Care
Vol. 56, Issue 9
1 Sep 2011
Neonatal and Pediatric Respiratory Care: What Does the Future Hold?
Robert M DiBlasi, Ira M Cheifetz
Respiratory Care Sep 2011, 56 (9) 1466-1480; DOI: 10.4187/respcare.01505
Jump to section
- Article
- Abstract
- Respiratory Research: Why Is It So Difficult?
- Sharing Data Between Children and Adults
- Noninvasive Ventilation of Premature Infants: Do We Really Need to Intubate?
- Neonatal Invasive Mechanical Ventilation
- Advances in the Management of Pulmonary Hypertension
- Inhaled Medical Gases: More to Breathe Than Oxygen
- Resuscitation in the Delivery Room: Lung Protection From the First Breath
- Surfactant: Neonates and Beyond
- Asthma 2015 and Beyond
- Aerosol Delivery: An Old Topic With New Data
- Airway Maintenance and Clearance: How to Stay Out of Trouble
- ECMO: Moving at the Speed of Light
- Disaster Planning for Pediatrics
- Conclusions
- Footnotes
- References
- Info & Metrics
- References