Therapy  use for children with developmental conditions: Analysis of Colorado Medicaid  data
Interview  with Beth M. McManus
(Co-authors:  Mary Jane Rapport, Zachary Richardson, and Richard Lindrooth)
DESCRIPTION:
Infants  and toddlers with cerebral palsy received lower doses of early intervention  physical therapy than children who had developmental delay with comorbidities  in a study of 20 000 Medicaid cases in Colorado.  Beth McManus reports on the unmet need of  less-easily noticed children who have disability and yet whose needs of  physical therapy and potential benefit from it may be great
. Goal  Attainment Scales to evaluate intervention of individual gains for children  born extremely preterm
Interview with Laura Brown 
(Co-authors: Yvonne Burns, Pauline  Watter and Peter Gray) 
DESCRIPTION:
Goal attainment scoring, or GAS, was  shown to be a highly accurate method of assessing the effectiveness of physical  therapy intervention in a cohort of infants born extremely preterm studied by a  group in Sydney Australia.  Lead author  Laura Brown said that GAS has clinical relevance and is a useful tool among  this group of children.
 
Reliability and Validity of the 50-Foot Walk Test for  Idiopathic Toe Walking
Interview  with Catie Christensen 
(Co-authors:  Amanda Haddad and Elizabeth Maus)
DESCRIPTION:
The  “50 foot Walk Test” is a simple and accurate method of assessing children for  the severity of idiopathic toe-walking that can be highly recommended to  clinicians as reproducible, with ratings varying little from one clinician to  another, says Catie Christensen from Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus  Ohio.
 
Kinematic Gait Changes Following  Serial Casting and Bracing to Treat Toe Walking in a Child with Autism: A  Retrospective Case-Report
Interview with Marybeth Barkocy 
(Co-authors: James Dexter, and  Colleen Petranovich)
DESCRIPTION:
The patience and compassion that  physical therapists harness are clear from the case of a remarkable cure for  toe-walking in a child with severe autistic spectrum disorder who had a  difficult home environment.  Marybeth  Barkocy from New Mexico talks about her case report in Pediatric Physical  Therapy Journal.  
 
How  Accurately Do Both Parents and Health Professionals Assess Overweight in  Children?  
(Special Communication)
Interview with Cynthia Brown Dodds
(Co-authors: Ickpyo Hong, Patty  Coker-Bolt, Annie N. Simpson and Craig A. Velozo)
DESCRIPTION:
Parents often do not recognize when  their child is overweight according to research published in Pediatric Physical  Therapy journal.  According to co-author  Cynthia Brown Dodds physical therapists are excellently placed to step up to  the plate and provide necessary guidance on physical activity and nutrition  once the barrier of recognizing childhood obesity has been overcome.
Physical  Therapy for a Child with Infantile Idiopathic Scoliosis and Motor Delay: Case Report 
Interview with Rhea Hall 
(co-author Mary Jane Rapport)
DESCIPTION:
Severe idiopathic scoliosis was  corrected in a 10-month old infant sufficiently to remove the need for serial  casting.  Rhea Hall from the University  of Colorado in Aurora discusses the scope physical therapist have for achieving  benefit even in infants from creatively assessing potential tools available to  the family in the home environment to be used for improving spinal  curvature.  
A  Progressive Running Program for an Adolescent with Cerebral Palsy: Case Report
Interview  with Jessica Lewis
(Case  report)
DESCRIPTION:
If you have cerebral palsy can you  go out jogging?  Well:  Yes. So says physical therapist Jessica Lewis  talking about her the case history she wrote in Pediatric Physical Therapy  journal. A simple running program she undertook with an adolescent had a big  pay-off.