Parents are in a unique position to help their children manage their asthma. This five-part plan from Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta can help parents take charge of asthma so their children can feel better.
If your child has been diagnosed with cancer, this article will provide you with professional insight on how to explain your child’s cancer diagnosis, and how to explain his or her diagnosis to your child’s friends and siblings.
The drug abatacept was shown to significantly reduce the risk of acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) among children and adults undergoing unrelated donor blood and marrow transplant for hematologic cancer during a seven-year, multisite trial.
Understanding the difference between flu and COVID-19 symptoms—as well as other common respiratory illnesses in kids such as RSV, allergies and the common cold—is important for you to know so you can provide the best care for you family.
The signs and symptoms of type 1 diabetes—also known as juvenile diabetes—can easily be overlooked. Here's how parents can recognize the signs of this autoimmune disease.
Boys tend to make more pre-speech vocalizations than girls
If your child has been diagnosed with diabetes, this guide will help you get up to speed on how much insulin your child needs, when they need it and the right way to give an insulin injection.
The Pediatric Hematology/Oncology Fellowship Program at Children’s offers a one-year fellowship in pediatric BMT and cell therapy.
The Aflac Cancer and Blood Disorders Center BMT Program treats a range of pediatric cancers with blood and marrow transplants, also called bone marrow transplants.
Our T32 Hematology Training Program gives physician scientists and clinical investigators experience in pediatric nonmalignant hematology.