Anna Taddio

カナダの小児科医
Anna Taddio
Born1967 (age 58–59)
Academic background
EducationBS., MS, 1994, PhD, 1997, University of Toronto
ThesisClinical pharmacology of lidocaine-prilocaine cream in infants. (1997)
Academic work
InstitutionsUniversity of Toronto

Anna Taddio (born 1967) is a Canadian pharmacist. She is a professor in the Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy at the University of Toronto, and adjunct senior scientist and clinical pharmacist at SickKids Hospital.

Early life and education

Taddio was born in 1967.[1] She earned her undergraduate degree, Master's degree, and PhD from the University of Toronto (U of T).[2] While earning her Master's degree, Taddio co-published a study titled Effect of neonatal circumcision on pain responses during vaccination in boys.[3] The result of the study found that pain experienced at birth could have a lasting effect on a child's memory. They concluded this by studying newborns who had circumcisions with and without any numbing medicine and comparing their experiences at future immunizations.[4]

Career

Upon earning her PhD, Taddio co-published Effect of neonatal circumcision on pain response during subsequent routine vaccination with Joel D. Katz.[5] Their study found that boys who were given anesthetic cream during their circumcision experienced less pain during the process than those with a placebo cream.[6] As an assistant professor of pharmacy at U of T and SickKids Hospital pharmacist, she led the first study to look at anticipatory pain responses in newborns. To reach this conclusion, the research team studied how infants who received heel lances over the first 24–36 hours of life (compared to a control group) reacted to a Venipuncture procedure. It was found that the babies who received heel lances had increased pain responses.[7] Her work reached beyond newborns and in 2005, Taddio helped establish a new topical anesthetic in order to reduce pain for children having IVs inserted.[8] She was subsequently awarded the Early Career Award from the Canadian Paediatric Society.[9]

Continuing her work with needles and pain, Taddio led a sucrose study on babies born at Mount Sinai Hospital in 2008 which found that those who received sugar water, or sucrose, had lower pain scores. However, the study did find that there was no significant difference in pain between the newborn and control group when it came to vitamin K injections. In spite of these findings, Taddio said "sugar water works, but it doesn’t work as well as we thought it did...We need to investigate other analgesics or other ways to make it work better."[10][11] In the same year, Taddio co-founded HELPinKids&Adults (Help ELiminate Pain in Kids & Adults) at SickKids in an effort to reduce pain caused by vaccines. By 2010, they published the first clinical practice guideline on reducing pain during childhood vaccination.[12]

In 2011, Taddio and her research team developed and published an evidence-based practice guideline in order to reduce pain from childhood vaccinations.[13] Upon reviewing 18 studies of 831 patients, they discovered that warming vaccines using water baths, incubators, fluid warmers, baby food warmers, a warming tray, or a syringe warmer could greatly reduce the pain patients feel.[14] As a result of her research, the World Health Organization invited Taddi to their 2015 Strategic Advisory Group of Experts meeting in Geneva and announced they would adopt many of her proposed pain mitigation techniques.[15] She also co-published an updated guideline for healthcare providers in the Canadian Medical Association Journal which included recommendations for all ages.[16] In recognition of her efforts, she was honoured with the Pfizer Research Career Award by the Association of Faculties of Pharmacy of Canada.[17]

By 2018, Taddio was the recipient of a $1 million Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) grant to continue her work on reducing fear of needles in youth.[18] Using this grant and the assistance of HELPinKids&Adults, she developed the CARD method to relieve the fear of needles.[19] The CARD System (Comfort, Ask, Relax, Distract) is an evidence-based approach which allows patients to select coping strategies during their vaccines.[20] Her subsequently published paper Overview of a Knowledge Translation (KT) Project to improve the vaccination experience at school: The CARD System earned her the 2020 Noni MacDonald Award from the Canadian Paediatric Society.[21]

References

  1. ^ "Taddio, Anna, 1967-". viaf.org. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  2. ^ “Anna Taddio”. canvax.ca . 2020年7月2日閲覧
  3. ^ Taddio, A (1995年2月). 「新生児割礼が男児のワクチン接種中の疼痛反応に与える影響」. Lancet . 345 (8945): 291– 292. doi :10.1016/S0140-6736(95)90278-3. PMID  7837863. S2CID  34963604.
  4. ^ Kundu, Anjana (2017年4月28日). 「ワクチン接種、採血、その他の処置によるお子様の痛みや苦痛を最小限に抑えるための積極的なツール」. proactivepainsolutions.com . 2020年7月2日閲覧
  5. ^ Taddio, Anna; Katz, Joel D.; Ilersich, AL; Koren, G. (1997). 「新生児割礼がその後の定期予防接種における疼痛反応に及ぼす影響」. The Lancet . 1 (349): 599– 603. doi :10.1016/S0140-6736(96)10316-0. hdl : 10315/7941 . PMID  9057731. S2CID  26793265.
  6. ^ 「麻酔クリームで割礼の痛みが軽減」フォートワース・スターテレグラム、1997年4月24日。 2020年7月2日閲覧– Newspapers.comより。
  7. ^ 「研究者らが新生児の痛み反応を特定」eurekalert.org 2002年8月20日. 2020年7月2日閲覧
  8. ^ 「新しい局所鎮痛クリームが痛みを軽減」eurekalert.org 2005年6月20日. 2020年7月2日閲覧
  9. ^ 「CPSがスポンサーとなった過去の受賞者」(PDF) cdn.com 20207月2日閲覧
  10. ^ 「砂糖は子供の痛みを和らげる:研究」toronto.citynews.ca 2008年7月1日. 2020年7月2日閲覧
  11. ^ ウィークス、カーリー(2008年7月1日)「赤ちゃんの痛みを和らげるには砂糖以上のものが必要、研究で判明」グローブ・アンド・メール紙。 2020年7月2日閲覧
  12. ^ Sorensen, Chris (2017年12月15日). 「もう涙は止まらない:トロント大学のアンナ・タディオによる公的資金による研究は、カナダおよび世界におけるワクチン接種の苦痛を軽減している」utoronto.ca . 2020年7月2日閲覧
  13. ^ Busko, Marlene (2011年10月3日). 「子どもの痛みを和らげる」. thechildren.com . モントリオール小児病院. 2020年7月2日閲覧
  14. ^ Maugh, Thomas H (2011年2月8日). 「温めた鎮痛注射で痛みを軽減できる」ロサンゼルス・タイムズ. 2020年7月2日閲覧
  15. ^ ケネディ、マイケル(2015年6月2日)「WHO、トロント大学教授のワクチン接種による痛みの軽減に関する勧告を支持」utoronto.ca 2020年7月2日閲覧
  16. ^ Leung, Wendy (2011年8月24日). 「新たなガイドラインはワクチンによるトラウマを最小限に抑えるのに役立つ」. The Globe and Mail . 2020年7月2日閲覧
  17. ^ Hill-Strathy, Mackenzie (2014年6月6日). 「SickKidsの科学者、アンナ・タディオ博士がファイザー研究キャリア賞を受賞」. sickkids.ca . SickKids . 2020年7月2日閲覧
  18. ^ リチャーズ、ケイト(2018年7月25日)「トロント大学の子どもの痛み専門家が、若者の注射針恐怖症軽減活動でCIHRから100万ドルの助成金を獲得」utoronto.ca 。 2020年7月2日閲覧
  19. ^ 「患者における針への恐怖の予防」cihr-irsc.gc.ca . 2019年11月22日. 2020年7月2日閲覧.
  20. ^ 「痛みは消える:学校でのワクチン接種における生徒の体験を改善する新しいツール」pharmacy.utoronto.ca . 2019年3月29日. 2020年7月2日閲覧
  21. ^ 「2020 CPS賞、子どもと若者の健康への優れた貢献を表彰」cps.ca 2020年6月19日. 2020年7月2日閲覧
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