Face to Face Portrait Project
The Face to Face Portrait Project creates portraits of children and adolescents with craniofacial conditions to help them see themselves in a different light.
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The Face to Face Portrait Project creates portraits of children and adolescents with craniofacial conditions to help them see themselves in a different light.
The Newborn/Infant Intensive Care Unit (N/IICU) at CHOP's Middleman Family Pavilion in King of Prussia, Pa., is a Level III unit that provides specialized care.
The Harriet and Ronald Lassin Newborn/Infant Intensive Care Unit (N/IICU) located on our Philadelphia Campus is one of the biggest and best in the world.
Important questions to ask potential providers when looking for a program to treat your child’s craniofacial difference.
The Ronald McDonald House serves as a "home-away-from-home" for families whose children are being treated at nearby hospitals. The Philadelphia Ronald McDonald House has rooms available for patient families as well as mothers undergoing fetal surgery or delivering in CHOP’s Special Delivery Unit.
March of Dimes is an international organization that works to prevent birth defects, premature birth, and infant mortality and to support expectant and new parents.
Researchers at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia are working to create a non-invasive device to measure brain oxygenation during CPR and critical care, with the goal to reduce brain injury and death.
Learn more about craniosynostosis and surgical treatment for the condition.
Learn more about jaw surgery and how it's managed at CHOP.
This guided video recording can help create a more peaceful and restful state of mind for parents, caregivers, and adolescent/young adult patients.