Generator

Browse Public Summaries

Filter by Model

All Models 32 available
Qwen Turbo 0 FREE
GPT 5 Nano 1 FREE
GPT 5.4 Nano 1 FREE
GPT-4o-mini 1 FREE
Gemini 2.5 Flash 1 FREE
Gemini 2.5 Flash Lite 1 FREE
Gemini 2.5 Pro 1 FREE
Gemini 3.1 Flash Lite Preview 1 FREE
Qwen Plus 1 FREE
Qwen3 Coder Plus 1 FREE
Claude 4.5 Haiku 2 FREE
DeepSeek V4 Flash 2 FREE
DeepSeek-V3.2-Exp 2 FREE
GPT 4o 2 FREE
GPT 5 Mini 2 FREE
GPT 5.4 Mini 2 FREE
Grok 4 Fast Non-Reasoning 2 FREE
Grok 4.3 2 FREE
Grok Code Fast 1 2 FREE
Qwen Max 2 FREE
Qwen VL Max 2 FREE
DeepSeek V4 Pro 3 FREE
GPT 5 3 FREE
GPT 5.4 3 FREE
GPT o3 mini 3 FREE
GPT o4 mini 3 FREE
Claude 4.5 Sonnet 4 FREE
DeepSeek-V3.2-Exp (Thinking) 4 FREE
Gemini 3 Flash Preview 4 FREE
Gemini 3.1 Pro Preview 4 FREE
GPT 5 Pro 15 FREE
Claude Opus 4.6 25 FREE

Filter by Language

All Languages
English (United States)
Spanish (Spain)
French (France)
German (Germany)
Italian (Italy)
Portuguese (Brazil)
Arabic (Generic)
Bengali (India)
Bulgarian (Bulgaria)
Croatian (Croatia)
Czech (Czech Republic)
Danish (Denmark)
Dutch (Belgium)
Dutch (Netherlands)
Estonian (Estonia)
Finnish (Finland)
Greek (Greece)
Gujarati (India)
Hebrew (Israel)
Hindi (India)
Hungarian (Hungary)
Indonesian (Indonesia)
Japanese (Japan)
Kannada (India)
Korean (South Korea)
Latvian (Latvia)
Lithuanian (Lithuania)
Malayalam (India)
Mandarin Chinese (China)
Marathi (India)
Norwegian Bokmål (Norway)
Polish (Poland)
Romanian (Romania)
Russian (Russia)
Serbian (Cyrillic)
Slovak (Slovakia)
Slovenian (Slovenia)
Swahili (Kenya)
Swedish (Sweden)
Tamil (India)
Telugu (India)
Thai (Thailand)
Turkish (Turkey)
Ukrainian (Ukraine)
Urdu (India)
Vietnamese (Vietnam)
Failure to thrive (FTT) refers to inadequate weight gain in children, defined by weight below the 5th percentile, a drop of more than 2 percentile lines, or less than 80% median weight for height. ...
Prompt: Failure to thrive (FTT) or weight faltering is commonly used to describe a lack of adequate weight gain in pediatric patients. Accepted definitions include a weight for age less than the fifth percentile on standardized growth charts, a decrease in weight percentile of more than 2 major percentile lines on the growth chart, or less than the 80th percent of median weight for height/length ratio. Given the many causes of FTT, clinicians must obtain a thorough history and physical exam. Healthcare professionals should recognize that inpatient management has a role if the patient is more severely malnourished, has other underlying conditions, or has failed outpatient management. FTT is essential to recognize and treat because it can result in developmental delays and other long-term effects for the developing child. As the underlying reason for FTT is often related to inorganic etiologies of inadequate caloric intake, leveraging an interprofessional team, including nutrition, behavioral health, and social workers, can be especially helpful when caring for pediatric patients with FTT. This activity reviews the evaluation and management of FTT and highlights the role of the interprofessional team in the care of patients with this disorder.