Dr. Bill Speck's two guiding passions were the care and welfare of babies, children, and young adults, and a commitment to provide excellent training to young pediatricians.
Lewis Silverman, MD will join the Department of Pediatrics as director of the Hope and Heroes Division of Pediatric Hematology, Oncology and Transplantation.
Our inaugural Columbia Children's Health Innovation and Learning Day showcased the depth and breadth of research conducted by Columbia physician-scientists to improve the care of children.
The most commonly used asthma inhaler was taken off the market and replaced with a generic version that is more costly for many patients, impacting doctors and the children with asthma they care for.
Pediatric gastroenterologist Dr. Kara Gross Margolis explains a new questionnaire that enables caregivers to better identify and alleviate GI pain in children with autism spectrum disorder.
Breast cancer special featuring acupuncture. CUIMC oncologists conduct groundbreaking research on the benefits of acupuncture for joint pain caused by Aromatase Inhibitors.
Columbia’s pediatric critical care team is offering genetic sequencing to children admitted to the ICU. The goal: to arrive at more accurate diagnoses of complicated disorders.
Jordan Orange, MD, PhD, chair of Pediatrics and a pioneer in immune diseases in children, has been elected to the National Academy of Medicine for his contributions to medical science and health care.
Darrell Yamashiro, MD, PhD, has been named director of the Division of Pediatric Hematology, Oncology, & Stem Cell Transplantation at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians & Surgeons.
A University-wide initiative based in the Department of Pediatrics will help Columbia scientists and physicians make their expertise available to policymakers involved in global health security.
To meet the growing demand for advanced treatments, CUIMC’s Food Allergy Program is building its research portfolio and offering multidisciplinary specialized care.
Columbia pediatric rheumatologist Alexis Boneparth, MD is interested in understanding the origins of often complex conditions and the challenges inherent in diagnosing them.
Mothers whose infants end up in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) after delivery say their most difficult moment is when they are discharged from the hospital—without their baby.