Content related to One Straight Year of Therapy Dogs
How a Single, Genetic Change Causes Retinal Tumors in Young Children
September 24, 2014
Researchers are working to uncover a cause for retinoblastoma, the most common eye cancer in children. They have published promising results in the journal Nature.
Standard Test for Diagnosing Autism is Unnecessary when Developmental Behavioral Pediatricians’ Certainty is High, Study Suggests
October 28, 2022
Developmental behavioral pediatricians’ professional judgment does not require the “gold standard” test for autism in the vast majority of cases.
Mental Health Disparities in Transgender Youth Populations
April 4, 2016
In a new editorial published in JAMA Pediatrics, Johanna Olson-Kennedy, MD, medical director of The Center for Transyouth Health and Development at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles discusses
Guidelines for Keeping Your Child Safe at Home
June 7, 2018
It is in every parent’s interest to keep his or her children safe at all times. We tend to associate safety with areas in which we are most familiar, like our home, but did you know that about 4.5
Water Safety and Preventing Drowning
November 28, 2016
In earlier blogs I wrote about water safety and preventing drowning. I have found that drowning is more prevalent worldwide than deaths by war; in fact it is the second leading cause of unintentional
Chemotherapy and Hearing Loss: Until Now, an Unquantified Risk
October 25, 2020
Researchers at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles led a multi-institutional study that pins down, for the first time, the actual risk of hearing loss from cisplatin, a common chemotherapy agent
Jim Harrison Lives Life to the Fullest Thanks to World-Renowned Pediatric Diaphragm Pacing Program at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles
February 23, 2018
CHLA’s Home Mechanical Ventilation Program Marks 40th Anniversary There was a time when it was devastating news for a parent to learn that in order to survive, their child would need to be
At the Heart of Regeneration: Scientists Reveal a New Frontier in Cardiac Research
November 12, 2019
One of the reasons coronary heart disease is so deadly is that fluid build-up and scarring can develop in the heart tissue. This prevents the heart from contracting properly, impacting its ability to
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