☰
  • Request an Appointment
  • Get a Second Opinion
  • Share Your Story
  • Donate
Close
  • Home
  • Research
  • Patient Stories
  • Parenting
  • Clinical Care
  • Our Community
  • Request an Appointment
  • Get a Second Opinion
  • Share Your Story
  • Donate

Answers
Your destination for kids' health

MIS-C steroids IVIG

Children with severe MIS-C do better with IVIG and steroids as initial therapy

Clinical Care, Specialty Care
When children started getting sick with multisystem inflammatory syndrome (MIS-C) in the wake of COVID-19, clinicians largely turned to two treatments. Many used immunoglobulin (IVIG) because of MIS-C’s similarities with Kawasaki disease. And many used steroids such as methylprednisolone because of MIS-C’s inflammatory features. Key takeawayIn this large, rigorous national study, initial treatment of MIS-C ... Read More about Children with severe MIS-C do better with IVIG and steroids as initial therapy
Tagged: coronavirus, immunotherapy, infectious diseases, mis-c, research
illustration of Black woman holding an infant with a cooling thermometer

A successful, low-cost reusable treatment for infant hypothermia

Clinical Care, Specialty Care
Key Takeaways Infant hypothermia leads to about one million deaths each year, primarily in low- and middle-income countries.A study in rural Rwanda of a non-electric infant warmer developed by Boston Children’s showed it successfully raised infants’ core temperatures and improved survival in preterm infants with hypothermia Infant hypothermia contributes to approximately one million deaths each ... Read More about A successful, low-cost reusable treatment for infant hypothermia
Tagged: global health, newborn medicine, research
patient privacy concept

Beyond HIPAA: Maintaining patient privacy in a big data era

Clinical Care, Ethics/Policy
After a prolonged, painful era in which medical data were exchanged mainly by fax, most patients today have electronic health records. But the data within them aren’t as private as they might think, says Kenneth Mandl, MD, MPH. As director of the Computational Health Informatics Program (CHIP) at Boston Children’s Hospital, he’s seen patient data ... Read More about Beyond HIPAA: Maintaining patient privacy in a big data era
Tagged: big data, digital health, electronic health records, policy, research
surgeons working in the OR

New study ties residual lesion score (RLS) to cardiac surgery outcomes

Clinical Care
How well a patient does after surgery for congenital heart disease (CHD) depends on a large number of variables, ranging from patient characteristics to preoperative status to anatomic complexity to perioperative factors. One of the most important predictors of adverse events or reintervention is the presence of residual lesions — structural cardiac abnormalities that remain ... Read More about New study ties residual lesion score (RLS) to cardiac surgery outcomes
Tagged: cardiac research, cardiac surgery, congenital heart defect, research
suicide prevention intervention concept

Suicide prevention in teens: Can we intervene through primary care?

Clinical Care, Primary Care
The past year has seen a disturbing rise in suicidal thoughts and attempts among adolescents, with a spike of suicidal teens going to emergency departments (EDs). This adds to a growing trend: From 2007 to 2016, ED visits for deliberate self-harm more than quadrupled nationwide among children age 5 to 17. In a recent review ... Read More about Suicide prevention in teens: Can we intervene through primary care?
Tagged: adolescent medicine, emergency medicine, mental health, primary care, psychiatry, research, safety
Man and woman with a small baby

You’re not alone in asking: Five common questions about your baby’s first year

Primary Care
Having a baby often comes with a lot of two things: love and questions. While every infant and family are different, many pediatricians agree that there are common themes in what parents want to know in their child’s first year. We spoke with providers from Briarpatch Pediatrics and Wareham Pediatric Associates of Boston Children’s Primary ... Read More about You’re not alone in asking: Five common questions about your baby’s first year
Tagged: primary care, primary care alliance
an infographic suggesting home monitoring

Single Ventricle Cardiac Home Monitoring Program empowers families to care for fragile newborns at home

Clinical Care
A single ventricle heart condition is a congenital cardiac defect in which only one of the heart’s two ventricles is functioning properly. It is most often corrected with three surgeries: the first, shortly after birth, the second, when a baby is 4 to 6 months old, and the third in the toddler years. The Single ... Read More about Single Ventricle Cardiac Home Monitoring Program empowers families to care for fragile newborns at home
Tagged: cardiac surgery, heart, nursing, single ventricle defects
Nurses involved in launching new treatments for genetic disorders.

Nurses Week 2021: Integrating new therapies into nursing practice and patient care delivery

Clinical Care
A revolution in pharmacological gene therapy is underway, as indicated by a significant acceleration in the creation of new therapies to treat genetic disorders at the molecular level. Boston Children’s Hospital Nursing and extended team members, in collaboration with hospital researchers and scientists, biotech, and biopharma partners, have developed a set of specific processes to ... Read More about Nurses Week 2021: Integrating new therapies into nursing practice and patient care delivery
Tagged: gene therapy, leukemia, nursing, spinal muscular atrophy
Group of nurses from the HPN Program standing over a hospital bed

Nurses Week 2021: Parenteral nutrition: Nurses help lead the journey from hospital to home

Clinical Care
For children needing parenteral nutrition (PN) — nutrition given through an intravenous line (IV) — the journey from the hospital to home was once long and arduous. But the prospects for these patients are much brighter today, thanks to the care provided by the Boston Children’s Hospital Home Parenteral Nutrition (HNP) Program. The program — ... Read More about Nurses Week 2021: Parenteral nutrition: Nurses help lead the journey from hospital to home
Tagged: nursing, nutrition
newborn screening for cancer concept

Newborn genetic screening for pediatric cancer risk could save lives

Clinical Care, Primary Care
Numerous genetic mutations increase children’s risk for various cancers. When they are detected early, cancers can potentially be caught at an early, more treatable stage — or avoided entirely. Could adding such “cancer predisposition” genes to routine newborn “heel-stick” screening save lives? Lisa Diller, MD, chief medical officer at the Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood ... Read More about Newborn genetic screening for pediatric cancer risk could save lives
Tagged: cancer, genetics and genomics, newborn medicine, oncology, policy, research

Posts navigation

Older posts
Newer posts

Stay connected!

Sign up for our weekly email newsletter for the latest parenting tips, patient stories, and news for your family from Boston Children's

 

Subscribe now
Clinical Trials
Connect With Boston Children’s Hospital
U.S. News Badge Newsweek Badge
    • 300 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA 02115

    • 617-355-6000 800-355-7944

  • How Can We Help

    • International Visitors
    • Centers and Services
    • Conditions + Treatments
    • Find a Doctor
    • Get a Second Opinion
    • Locations
  • About

    • About Us
    • Giving to Boston Children’s
    • Newsroom
    • Quality & Patient Safety
  • Legal

    • HIPAA Notice of Privacy Practices
    • Patient & Family Rights
    • Terms of Use
    • Public Policy