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Bad behavior in children may come from a lack of certain cognitive skills. Studies show that those skills can be taught.
The success of pediatric cancer therapies has a downside: adults with lingering health problems caused by their treatments.
A mother assures doctors who tried to save her son from an incurable disease that their compassionate care was a true success.
A cholesterol test for 10-year-olds could show early signs of cardiovascular disease, yet critics warn that this could lead to unnecessary treatment.
A father and son fight through the ordeal of multiple surgeries to repair the boy’s skull.
If residents’ long shifts endanger patients, lightening the load should reduce the risk. Trouble is, there’s no evidence it does.
To treat her young patients, Nadine Burke uses research on how adverse childhood experiences affect health.
One writer planned to write a book about the willful overmedication of children, but what she found was the opposite.
Confronted with her son’s diagnoses with three rare diseases, a mother contemplates luck—good and bad.
When troubled kids erupt, the traditional view calls for tougher parenting. A new approach substitutes skill building for punishment.
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