2011-2020 of 4110 Results Found
CME Session
PCH - Mitochondrial Diseases: An Overview of Clinical Phenotypes and Treatment Landscape - Jennifer Yang, MD (Rady Children’s Hospital - San Diego, CA)
At the end of this presentation, participants should be able to: Recognize the most common clinical presentation of mitochondrial disease in children and adults Describe the diagnostic considerations for mitochondrial disease Understand the current treatment approaches and
Meet Your Team
Your child may see a nurse practitioner, a psychometrist (testing and measurement specialist), a child psychologist, or others on our team who have extensive experience and training in caring for ADHD and other concerns. Providers on our team at Phoenix Children’s include:
Service
We offer the only pediatric comprehensive care in the state for brain and spinal cord tumors. Our team at the Jaydie Lynn King Neuro-Oncology Program understands brain tumors that occur in infants and children are very different from adult brain tumors and combines expertise from
CME Session
SURG - Contemporary Management of Primary Spontaneous Pneumothorax in Children - James Prieto, MD
At the end of this presentation, participants should be able to: Define primary spontaneous pneumothorax in pediatric patients and distinguish it from secondary causes Review epidemiology and risk factors associated with spontaneous pneumothorax Summarize current evidence based
Service
Leukemia and lymphoma are the most common childhood cancers. But your child is one of a kind. You need more than a team that knows how to treat — and beat — cancer. You need professionals who understand your child and what your family is going through — a team dedicated to
Conditions We Treat
At Phoenix Children’s Prosthetics Clinic, we care for patients from birth to 21 years who need prosthetics (artificial limbs and devices) or limb reconstruction surgery. We improve our patients’ range of motion and their ability to play, function independently and pursue
Service
Today, most kids with cancer — close to 85% — will beat it and go on to live full lives. That’s why planning for their future begins the moment a child is diagnosed with cancer at Phoenix Children’s Hospital. Being able to have a child is important to pediatric cancer survivors
Meet Your Team
If your child needs a kidney transplant, it's good to know you have an entire team of pediatric nephrologists, transplant surgeons, advanced practice providers, and additional team members such as coordinators, assistants, dietitians, social workers and pharmacists.
Location
Phoenix Children's Sports Physical Therapy
3530 S. Val Vista Dr.
Suite B205
Gilbert, AZ 85297