Home Contact Us Site Map
Search for:
About Us Services News Calendar
Health Info Find a Job Find a Physician
Hospitals
Children’s Hospital
Clinic
Health Plans
Foundation
Ways to Give
Areas of Excellence
Web Nursery
For Patients and Visitors
E-mail a Patient
Patient Pre-registration
For Physicians,
Co-workers and Volunteers
Libraries
Vendor Resources
Privacy Practices and Web Use Information
 
Home > Health Information > Adult Health > Pediatric  Printable VersionPrintable Version
Pediatrics

The Pediatrician

What is a pediatrician?

A pediatrician is a child's physician who provides:
  • preventive health maintenance for healthy children.
  • medical care for children who are acutely or chronically ill.

Pediatricians manage the physical, mental, and emotional well-being of their patients, in every stage of development - in good health or in illness.

Generally, pediatricians focus on babies, children, adolescents, and young adults from birth to age 21 years to:

  • reduce infant and child mortality.
  • control infectious disease.
  • foster healthy lifestyles.
  • ease the difficulties of children and adolescents with chronic conditions.

Pediatricians diagnose and treat the following:

  • infections
  • injuries
  • genetic defects
  • malignancies
  • organic diseases and dysfunctions

However, pediatricians are concerned with more than physical well-being. They also are involved with the prevention, early detection, and management of other problems that affect children and adolescents, including the following:

  • behavioral difficulties
  • developmental disorders
  • functional problems
  • social stresses
  • depression or anxiety disorders

Pediatrics is a collaborative specialty - pediatricians work with other medical specialists and healthcare professionals to provide for the health and emotional needs of children.

Education:

Following graduation from medical school, primary care pediatricians complete three years of education in an accredited pediatric residency program.

Pediatric residency training emphasizes care of the whole infant, child, adolescent, and young adult. Following the pediatric residency, the pediatrician is eligible for board certification by the American Board of Pediatrics with successful completion of a comprehensive written examination. Recertification is required every seven years.

Although nearly 60 percent of pediatricians are involved in the provision of primary care for their patients, many others choose to continue their education in pediatric subspecialties such as the following:

  • adolescent medicine
  • cardiology
  • critical care medicine
  • emergency medicine
  • endocrinology
  • gastroenterology
  • hematology/oncology
  • infectious diseases
  • neonatal/perinatal medicine
  • nephrology
  • pulmonology
  • rheumatology

Click here to view the
Online Resources page of this Web.

Topic Home Page - Topic Index

A member of the
Sisters of Mercy Health System