It’s not always easy to know which flu symptoms can be treated at home and which require a doctor. Learn when it’s best to go to the doctor and when it’s best to stay home with fever, chills and more.
It’s not always easy to know which flu symptoms can be treated at home and which require medical attention. Learn when it’s best to go to the doctor and when it’s best to stay home.
When temperatures drop in winter months, parents and coaches should be aware of how to keep growing athletes safe from cold-weather injuries.
Heat, dehydration, and improper stretching or warmups can increase a growing athlete’s chance of getting leg and muscle cramps.
Learn the symptoms of dehydration, heat cramps, heat exhaustion and heat stroke in teen and youth athletes. Our experts provide tips to avoid these heat-related illnesses.
Learn why your teen’s pediatrician should perform their annual pre-participation sports physical exam.
Shin splints can be painful for growing athletes. Here are some ways to recognize risk factors for shin splints and tips for preventing them in kids and teens.
Parents and coaches should be mindful of how to help a growing athlete safely return to sports after the offseason.
Young female athletes may have low energy availability, which can lead to amenorrhea or missed periods and low bone density. This is known as the female athlete triad.
Young female athletes are built differently, with their own unique needs. Our pediatric orthopedic expert discusses common injuries in girls’ sports.