As one of the largest pediatric research teams in the United States, our @cincychildrens.bsky.social discoveries and innovations have changed modern medicine.
Cincinnati Children’s Research
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How should healthcare systems respond when social needs complicate care and threaten outcomes? A recent article, co-led by Cincinnati Children's researchers, highlights how medical-legal partnerships help address housing instability and other health-harming legal needs in neonatal care. Learn more:
The emotional and mental health needs of children and teens are rising—and so is the urgency for solutions. A Cincinnati Children's study shows how a coordinated primary care model reduced behavioral health ED visits by 25% and hospital admissions by a remarkable 58%. Learn more:
We’re excited to announce that Cincinnati Children's has received a five-year grant of up to $17.25M from Aligning Research to Impact Autism (ARIA) to join the IMPACT Network as one of 12 global sites advancing autism research, clinical trial readiness, and more precise, individualized therapies.
Promising news for Tourette syndrome research: a Phase III clinical trial led by researchers at Cincinnati Children's found that ecopipam reduced tics and lowered relapse risk in children.
Findings published in JAMA Neurology.
Learn more:
#TouretteSyndrome #Neuroscience #PediatricResearch
Research led by Sonya Tang Girdwood, at Cincinnati Children's shows that higher cefepime exposure in critically ill children is linked to increased neurologic symptoms, informing safer care in the PICU. Read more on our Science Blog:
Learn more about one of Cincinnati Children's 30 state‑of‑the‑art Shared Facilities, the Qualitative Methods & Analysis Collaborative (QMAC), in our latest Shared Facilities Spotlight. QMAC partners with internal and external researchers to support rigorous qualitative and mixed‑methods research.
Join us in congratulating Mary Greiner, MD, MS, who has been named the next director of the Mayerson Center for Safe and Healthy Children, following a national search. A recognized leader in child abuse pediatrics and foster care health, Greiner brings deep experience in research, care and advocacy.
Cincinnati Children’s researchers collaborate with colleagues in Uganda and beyond to help children where the disease burden is highest. Learn more on our Science Blog:
@cincychildrens.bsky.social
Curiosity can spark a career, but collaboration helps it grow. Kyle McCracken, MD, PhD, shares how Cincinnati Children's mentorship, teamwork and scientific culture shaped his path in kidney regenerative medicine. A look at what makes this a place where scientists thrive:
#WeAreCincyKids
The physician-scientist shares how an interest in kidney biology grew into a career in regenerative medicine and organoid research at Cincinnati Children’s.