Research
An illustration shows a cartoon heart set among the pipes that would be found on a wall water system.

The secret to safer heart surgery lies in modernizing an old technique

Of the many features in the recently-opened Hale Family Building at Boston Children’s, maybe one of the most impactful for patients and clinicians is an innovation that puts a new spin on an old way of conducting perfusion in open-heart surgery. Used in cardiac operating rooms (ORs) until only a few decades ago, wall water systems had ... Read More about The secret to safer heart surgery lies in modernizing an old technique
Health and Parenting
An infant smiles, displaying two lower baby teeth.

Tips for teething: How to enjoy your child’s big moment

The emergence of a baby’s primary teeth (their baby teeth) is a joyful milestone for parents but it can also be an uncomfortable time for the infant. Their gums can swell and feel tender, possibly making them feel irritable and causing them to lose sleep.  Boston Children’s Department of Dentistry shared advice on what you should expect ... Read More about Tips for teething: How to enjoy your child’s big moment
Patient Stories
Myles as a baby, smiling at the camera

Maternal-fetal care helps ‘All Smiles Myles’ beat a CPAM

Myles Gifford is “fearless and defiant,” says his mother, Katy. “We’ll be in big trouble when he’s a teenager,” she laughs. “But it’s benefited him so far.” In fact, Myles, now more than 18 months old, needed to draw on his perseverant personality almost as soon as he was born. Katy, her husband, Mike, and ... Read More about Maternal-fetal care helps ‘All Smiles Myles’ beat a CPAM
Research
Whimsical depiction of a brain with different pathways through it and an assortment of foods

New insight into dietary approaches for epilepsy

Fasting has been believed since ancient times to curb seizures in epilepsy, and small patient studies in the early 1900s have revived the idea. But the reasons have remained mysterious. New research from Boston Children’s helps explain how fasting affects the brain at the molecular level. The findings could lead the way to new approaches ... Read More about New insight into dietary approaches for epilepsy
Patient Stories
Erin Haggan holds aloft her daughter, Brooklyn, who is smiling.

With support for genetic condition trisomy 18, Brooklyn ‘tells her own story’

Erin and Tim Haggan quickly realized they would always be seeking answers after learning the child they were expecting had trisomy 18. It is a life-threatening chromosomal condition, and only about 10 percent of children live beyond their first year. Those who survive grow slowly and often have congenital heart defects (CHD) and other organ anomalies. The couple ... Read More about With support for genetic condition trisomy 18, Brooklyn ‘tells her own story’
Health and Parenting
Drawn illustration of one woman embracing another.

The art of showing up: Six ways to support a friend who has a child in the hospital

“Let me know if there’s anything I can do.” Nine little words spoken with the best of intentions but aren’t necessarily all that helpful for someone faced with having a child in the hospital. But why? “People really want to do good things,” says Annie Banks, a social worker with the Hale Family Center for ... Read More about The art of showing up: Six ways to support a friend who has a child in the hospital
Patient Stories
Quinn, who had flexible flatfoot, in a baseball uniform holding a trophy with his dad.

Innovative flatfoot surgery releases Quinn’s inner athlete

By the time he was 10, Quinn’s parents had tried almost everything. Dawn would sometimes massage his feet  to relieve the pain and tightness caused by flexible flatfoot, a condition in which a child has very little or no arch in their feet. Joseph did physical therapy exercises with him at night. But despite their ... Read More about Innovative flatfoot surgery releases Quinn’s inner athlete
Research
Research Tim Springer, PhD, dressed casually at a lab bench

Tim Springer: Scientist, entrepreneur, and mentor

As an undergraduate in 1966, immunologist, biochemist, and biophysicist Timothy A. Springer, PhD, looked askance at science. The Vietnam War was going on, and he saw science as a means of making Agent Orange and napalm. Questioning his own Ivy League education, he left Yale to spend a year as a VISTA volunteer on a ... Read More about Tim Springer: Scientist, entrepreneur, and mentor
Our Community
Nurses Marybeth Bentson and Theresa Pak sit together holding a model kidney.

If your baby or toddler needs peritoneal dialysis: Tips for parents

Marybeth Bentson and Theresa Pak have helped a lot of families cope with childhood kidney disease. As long-time nurses in the Division of Nephrology at Boston Children’s Hospital, the two have cared for children at every stage of kidney disease, including children on dialysis. Dialysis filters a child’s blood when their kidneys are unable to ... Read More about If your baby or toddler needs peritoneal dialysis: Tips for parents
Health and Parenting
Two football helmets facing each other, one with a germ logo, one with an antibody logo.

Using germs against themselves: How vaccines work

Germs are all around us. When a germ (in the form of virus or bacteria) enters your body, it tries to make you sick. Some germs cause minor colds, but others can cause serious disease. Fortunately, your immune system is your body’s internal defense system. It protects you by creating immune cells (T cells) and ... Read More about Using germs against themselves: How vaccines work