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  4. Doctors & Your Child

Doctors & Your Child

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  • Questions to Ask a New Doctor for a Child

    One of the most important parts of taking care of your child is making sure she is healthy and helping her to get better when she is sick. Your family doctor or pediatrician plays an essential role because he treats your child when she has an illness that you cannot cure with chicken noodle soup and fluids. When choosing a doctor for your child, you will want to ask questions to get a sense of how much experience he has and how his office operates.

  • What Are the Dangers of Lollipops?

    Lollipops are distributed at local businesses, handed out during certain holidays, and are even given directly to your child from your family doctor after a routine checkup. For all you know, your child may be holding one right now. While making lollipops sound threatening is nearly impossible, it does not mean they are completely harmless. Lollipops can be a serious danger under certain circumstances; it's important to consider these dangers before your child eats her next lollipop.

  • Flecainide in Pediatrics

    Arrhythmia--irregular heart rate--in children can cause fatigue, dizziness, fainting and palpitations. These symptoms can be debilitating. There are things doctors can do to control a child's arrhythmia. These measures may include medications such as Tambocor (flecainide acetate).

  • How to Reduce an Annular Ligament Subluxation

    Annular ligament subluxation, or "nursemaid's elbow" is a type of dislocation in the elbow that can happen in children under 5. The annular ligament in the elbow is thin and delicate in small children, and it can easily move out of place and cause a child pain and trouble moving his or her elbow. While a visit to the doctor's office for treatment of annular ligament subluxation costs about $400, it is sometimes possible to maneuver the ligament back into place at home if your child has a history of annular ligament subluxation, and if there are no complications that…

  • How do Doctors Test if a Child has ADD?

    In the current days of modern medicine, there are no laboratory or imaging tests that exist in order to accurately determine if a child suffers from ADD / ADHD, but there are three main characteristics that need to be present to determine if a child could have the disorder. Inattentive, hyperactive or impulsive behaviors are those can lead to problems at home and school, and are recognized to be at the root of the condition that can prompt parents to seek medical consult.

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