NICU Remains an Important Part of Patients’ and Families’ Lives Years After Their Stay
Nearly 800 people attend Stanford Medicine Children’s Health’s 40th NICU & ICN Graduation Party.
Nearly 800 people attend Stanford Medicine Children’s Health’s 40th NICU & ICN Graduation Party.
No one expects to get any sleep with a new baby. It takes a while for babies to settle into a sleep cycle, and they have to eat often. Yet these usual reasons are not what kept Katie and Ryan Bridge awake when their daughter Claire was just 4 weeks old. It was her noisy breathing.
At our aerodigestive center, we have a large multidisciplinary team—ENTs who intimately understand airway disorders, speech-language pathologists and occupational therapists who specialize in babies with swallowing disorders, pulmonologists who concentrate on aspiration, and gastroenterologists who understand reflux in the context of cleft.
The Moore family of Concord, California, has set a record for having the most kids from one family receiving care at Stanford Medicine Children’s Health. We couldn’t think of a nicer family to reach this milestone.
Repairing a baby’s pulmonary artery sling and congenital tracheal stenosis requires experience and interdisciplinary teamwork.
Packard Children’s Hospital is one of the few medical centers that can offer EXIT procedure.
Stanford Medicine Children’s Health’s Aerodigestive and Airway Reconstruction Center uses collaborative, multispecialty approach to get to root of puzzling symptoms.
Meet the Riccomini family whose son Anthoney was battling tracheomalacia, a patient at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford and the Aerodigestive Center.
Meet the Muñoz family with 4-year old Jack, a patient at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford and the Aerodigestive Center.