This clinical content conforms to AAFP criteria for CME.
The goals of the well-child visit for school-aged children (ages 6-12 years) are health promotion, disease prevention, disease detection, and anticipatory guidance. Critical components include the physical examination and developmental surveillance. Vaccines remain a cornerstone of disease prevention and should be administered on time. Screening for dental care, dyslipidemia, hearing, hypertension, mental health, overweight and obesity, scoliosis, social determinants of health, and vision should be considered or performed, and is often dictated by risk factors. Healthy lifestyle should be discussed at every well-child visit, including recommending 60 minutes/day of physical activity, adequate nutritional intake, 9 to 12 hours/night of sleep without disturbance, and routine dental care, including fluoride supplementation if not in the primary water supply. Social history should be reviewed, including media use and substance use and exposure. Children and families should be counseled on safety, including the leading cause of death in this age group: unintentional injury.
Case 3. RK is a 10-year-old child who is brought to your office by her mother for a well-child visit. The history and physical examination results are normal. The mother asks for your help in talking to RK about social media because she feels RK is too young for it. RK says that all her friends are using social media, and she feels left out because her mother will not let her create an account.
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