Childhood Liver Disease Research Network
ChiLDRN Supports the discovery of new diagnostics, etiologic and treatment options for children with liver disease, and those who undergo liver transplantation.
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ChiLDRN Supports the discovery of new diagnostics, etiologic and treatment options for children with liver disease, and those who undergo liver transplantation.
PALF aims at identifying, characterizing, and developing management strategies for infants, children, and adolescents who present with acute liver failure.
This website provides information and communication about biliary atresia to the general public and a secure area for healthcare professionals.
Biliary Atresia Network is an online support group for families who are dealing with pediatric liver disease, biliary atresia pre- or post-transplant.
UNOS is a private, nonprofit organization managing the nation's organ transplant system under contract with the federal government.
NIDDK is a branch of the National Institutes of Health that offers health and research information about a variety of digestive diseases that can affect the liver.
NDDIC provides information about digestive diseases, statistics, research and more, from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.
This foundation is devoted to providing support for research and education into the causes, diagnoses, prevention and treatment of all liver disease.
If your teen has an eating disorder—such as anorexia, bulimia, or binge eating—you may feel helpless, worried, or uncertain about how you can best support them. That’s why you need real, proven-effective strategies you can use right away. Whether used in conjunction with treatment or on its own, this book offers an evidence-based approach you can use now to help your teen make healthy choices and stay well in body and mind.
This poignant and informative narrative relates how one mother rescued her daughter from the "experts" and treated the girl's life-threatening anorexia using a controversial approach. Known as the Maudsley Approach, this home-based, family-centered therapy, developed in Great Britain in the 1980s, has been receiving a lot of press here over the past few years.