Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta offers a one-year, pediatric neuroradiology fellowship to qualified, promising physicians.
If your child’s complaining of being too sick for school, our pediatrician-approved guide can help you decide whether to keep him home.
Urinary tract infections are common in kids. Here's how parents can recognize the signs of this infection and help ensure it’s treated effectively.
The Children’s Pediatric Orthopaedic Fellowship Program provides training in the identification, management and treatment of pediatric orthopedic disorders.
When your child has an unusually high temp, it’s hard to know what to do—but not every fever is the same. Learn when your child needs to see a doctor and how to treat high temps at home.
Hearing devices are not a one-size-fits-all solution for kids with hearing issues, so our team uses the latest advancements in technology to address concerns.
It’s not always easy to know which flu symptoms can be treated at home and which require medical attention. Learn when it’s best to go to the doctor and when it’s best to stay home.
Children’s offers pediatric residencies in both PGY-1 pharmacy practice and PGY-2 solid organ transplant.
Teachers and school nurses can help students with sickle cell disease maintain their health with these tips from the Aflac Cancer and Blood Disorders Center.
As the first pediatric hospital in Georgia to offer vertebral body tethering, Children’s is raising the bar in surgical spine care to treat severe cases of scoliosis.