Only if it’s after hours and if you’ve talked with our after hours nurse. Most illnesses can safely wait until the following day, and our nurse advice line can help you decide. If the nurse refers you to an urgent care center, ER, or follow up in our office the following day, there is no charge for the call.

If you’re concerned about poison exposure, call the Poison Control Center at 1-800-222-1222. Do not wait for your child to act or look sick.

We know children get sick at inconvenient times. Our office is open late every evening for sick patients and we have appointments available on Saturday mornings. Although it’s tempting to go to an urgent care center, please contact the office first. Many urgent care centers are staffed with adult doctors that are unfamiliar with childhood illnesses, and they also don’t know your child or his/her medical history. With access to your child’s chart, your doctor, or another provider in our office, is your best bet.

If you do take your child to an urgent care center, we think it best to use a pediatric focused facility to increase the chance that you’ll see a pediatricians or a pediatric nurse practitioner. After being treated, it’s important to follow up at our office.

Only if it’s after hours and if you’ve talked with our after hours nurse. Most illnesses can safely wait until the following day, and our nurse advice line can help you decide. If the nurse refers you to an urgent care center, ER, or follow up in our office the following day, there is no charge for the call.

If you’re concerned about poison exposure, call the Poison Control Center at 1-800-222-1222. Do not wait for your child to act or look sick.

We know children get sick at inconvenient times. Our office is open late every evening for sick patients and we have appointments available on Saturday mornings. Although it’s tempting to go to an urgent care center, please contact the office first. Many urgent care centers are staffed with adult doctors that are unfamiliar with childhood illnesses, and they also don’t know your child or his/her medical history. With access to your child’s chart, your doctor, or another provider in our office, is your best bet.

If you do take your child to an urgent care center, we think it best to use a pediatric focused facility to increase the chance that you’ll see a pediatricians or a pediatric nurse practitioner. After being treated, it’s important to follow up at our office.

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“Calling All Athletes… It is Time for Your Sports Physical” by Robyn Lilly, CPNP-PC

Spring is in the air! Only a few more months of the school year remain for many students. It is an exciting time to anticipate summer and its laid-back routines. One thing to consider for your junior high, high school kids, and athletes, is a wellness exam and a pre-participation sports physical for next school year. Spring and Summer are great times to have both exams done so your child is ready for athletics in the Fall.

“Pediatrics: 20th Century Success” by Chafen Watkins Hart, MD

During nights up with small sick children, I think most often about the terror of diphtheria, a bacteria which causes a thick covering of pus and mucous membrane to the throat and killed children in the millions. This death was horrific—parents watched their children die while fully conscious of suffocation secondary to sloughing debris in their small airways.

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