News

When immigrant families enter your practice, their legal status affects every aspect of their health care. This primer on immigration law will help you understand their problems and provide care that meets their needs.

This 5-year-old girl with multiple congenital abnormalities presented for a routine checkup. She was born with Apert syndrome, also known as acrocephalosyndactyly.A peaked head, sloping eyes, and "mitten hands" are typical features.

A 16-year-old boy is concerned that his right index finger looks "odd." The finger is several centimeters longer than his left index finger, and it is also wider. The boy's mother reported that the finger had always seemed to be a little larger than the others, even when the patient was an infant, but no one paid it much attention.

A 9-week-old Caucasian infant is brought to the primary care physician for evaluation of purpura and petechiae. His parents noted the bruising the previous night, which grew progressively worse throughout the next day. The lesions seemed to appear "out of the blue" without apparent cause, including trauma.

An otherwise healthy 16-year-old girl presented with medial arm pain after falling on her left elbow while skating. Robert P. Blereau, MD, and Timothy J. Haley, MD, of Morgan City, La, write that a radiograph of the left upper arm showed a spur projecting from the distal humerus; there was no fracture or dislocation.

Parents worry when children don't eat. Once you've ruled out underlying problems, offer reassurance and simple strategies to reduce mealtime stress. Includes a Guide for Parents.

Eye on Washington

Children and the federal budget, FDA woes, and a call to standardize CAM