Office of Diversity and Inclusion Awarded for Outstanding Diversity Program
Published on
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia’s Office of Diversity & Inclusion (ODI) wins 2019 Excellence Award for Outstanding Diversity Program.
Published on
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia’s Office of Diversity & Inclusion (ODI) wins 2019 Excellence Award for Outstanding Diversity Program.
Published on
CHOP-led scientists uncovered key details of a basic process in biology: how a cell’s nucleus and chromosome structures reorganize after cell division. The research may offer insights into human health and disease.
Published on
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) is proud to announce a partnership with The Enterprise Center, in conjunction with Philadelphia Housing Development Corporation (PHDC), to build the number of licensed contractors in Philadelphia and expand CHOP’s Community Asthma Prevention Program Plus Home Repairs (CAPP+) initiative.
Published on
The US Food and Drug Administration has approved two new breakthrough therapies for patients with sickle cell disease (SCD), and we believe both may enhance the treatment of our patients here at CHOP.
Published on
The US Food and Drug Administration has granted accelerated approval to two novel drugs to treat sickle cell disease.
Published on
Three physicians were presented with the Alan R. Cohen Master Clinician Award in CHOP’s Department of Pediatrics.
Published on
Jake Orlick, an 11-year-old boy, is fighting a courageous battle against Ewing Sarcoma, a rare form of bone cancer. Our Patrick Grohar, MD, PhD, an attending physician with the Cancer Center and the Director of Translational Research with the Center of Childhood Cancer Research, may be on the verge of a breakthrough with a novel new experimental treatment for relapsed Ewing sarcoma.
Published on
CHOP cardiologists report milestone results for Fontan survivors during American Heart Association Scientific Sessions in Philadelphia.
Published on
A CHOP researcher has identified spinal patterns in younger children that may predict later scoliosis—and may open the door to the first-ever methods to prevent that condition.
Published on
For families of picky eaters, dinner time can be a nightmare. Many parents blame themselves, thinking there’s something they did to cause their child’s extreme eating habits.