Preventing Swimmer’s Ear in Your Child
A nurse practitioner in the Division of Otolaryngology (ENT) at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia shares her tips for preventing swimmer’s ear.
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A nurse practitioner in the Division of Otolaryngology (ENT) at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia shares her tips for preventing swimmer’s ear.
This Smartphone App was designed by the Children’s Oncology Group (COG) nursing team for parents and caregivers of children with cancer. Input from COG experts with recommendations for providing patient and family education was provided.
Want to learn more about gene therapy for blood disorders? These are trusted resources that can give you helpful information and explanations.
ASHA is the national professional, scientific and credentialing association for speech-language pathologists, audiologists, speech, language and hearing scientists, audiology and speech-language support personnel, and students.
Watch video demonstrations about CPR, AED and First Aid.
Review the video presentations given by experts from the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) at our IBD Education Day.
Please join us next year, on 2/23/2025 for the 34th annual Inflammatory Bowel Disease Education Day.
Topics included:
• current and future therapies for IBD
• diet and nutrition guidance
• ongoing IBD research
• unique challenges related to VEO-IBD
Dr. Paul Offit discusses the use of nirsevimab, a monoclonal antibody that protects infants from RSV. He talks about its effectiveness in clinical trials, who should receive it and when.
For the first time, vaccines are available to prevent three typical winter respiratory viruses: influenza, COVID-19 and RSV. In this short video, Dr. Offit talks about the vaccines that protect against each of these viruses and who should get them.
Dr. Paul Offit talks about the COVID-19 vaccine recommendations for the 2023 fall season and who is most likely to benefit from getting a dose of the updated COVID-19 vaccine.
Dr. Paul Offit explains why it’s virtually impossible for DNA fragments in COVID-19 mRNA vaccines to cause harms, such as cancers or autoimmune diseases.