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Results 101 - 110 of 149 for child health. (1.34 seconds)
  • How border separations can traumatize kids

    Unplanned separation from parents is among the most damaging events a young child can experience, according to trauma research. A Stanford expert explains how it can hurt kids’ development.

  • Hormone receptor and prematurity risk

    A key hormone receptor evolved quickly as or early humans migrated from Africa, producing localized gene changes that may affect modern women’s risk of preterm birth, according to a Stanford-led study.

  • Blood test predicts premature birth

    Measuring RNA fragments in a pregnant woman’s blood gives a reliable estimate of the baby’s due date and can predict if the baby will arrive prematurely, a Stanford-led team has shown.

  • Bereavement in pregnancy affects child

    The scholars said that their study contributes to the research documenting a causal link between fetal stress exposure and mental health later in life.

  • Low hormone level may be autism marker

    In the fluid around the brain, low levels of a hormone called vasopressin are linked to low social ability in monkeys and to autism in children, Stanford scientists have found.

  • Brain link between obesity, depression

    Reward centers in the brains of children and teenagers who are obese and depressed show abnormalities that suggest the two conditions are neurologically connected, Stanford researchers have found.

  • Taubes commit $20 million to children’s hospital

    The new hospital’s south pavilion will be named in honor of Bay Area philanthropists Tad and Dianne Taube.

  • Misbehaving cells predict relapse in leukemia

    Analyzing individual cancer cells has enabled Stanford researchers to identify the small population of cells that spur relapse in some children with leukemia.

  • Newborn undergoes ‘bloodless’ surgery

    Lola Garcia of Hemet, California, was the smallest infant in North America to undergo such a procedure.

  • Gift will fund addiction, concussion initiatives

    Two gifts totaling $14.5 million from Tad and Dianne Taube will fund Stanford efforts to understand, treat and prevent concussion and addiction in children and teens.