WASHINGTON, June 20--Children with recurrent otitis media have a higher number of infectious pathogens in their nasopharynx and lower counts of beneficial flora. A Georgetown team, discovered this while seeking to show how smoking by parents affected children with otitis media. Surprisingly, the number of infectious pathogens found in the children of smoking parents and the children of non-smoking was essentially the same, Itzhak Brook, M.D., and Alan E. Gober, M.D., reported in the June issue of Archives of Otolaryngology. They collected swabs from 40 children with recurrent otitis media and also from their parents, half of whom smoked at...