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The Hospital for Sick Children (HSC), corporately branded as SickKids, is a major pediatric teaching hospital located on University Avenue in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Affiliated with the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Toronto, the hospital was ranked the top pediatric hospital in the world by Newsweek in 2021. [1]
[2] [6] Sass-Kortsak was leading the Genetic Metabolic Program of the Hospital for Sick Children and was looking for a young basic scientist to join in his program. [2] [6] Sass-Kortsak offered Sarkar a Staff Scientist’s position in the Genetic Metabolic Research Program with start-up funds and his own laboratory in a newly built wing in ...
The product was developed at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto to combat infant malnutrition. Developers of Pablum included Canadian pediatricians Frederick Tisdall, Theodore Drake, Pearl Summerfeldt, Alan Brown, [1] laboratory technician Ruth Herbert (all of the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto), and Mead Johnson chemist Harry H ...
Institutions named (or formerly named) Hospital for Sick Children include: The Hospital for Sick Children (Toronto), a children's and teaching hospital in Canada; Victoria Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, a former hospital; Victoria Hospital for Sick Children, Kingston upon Hull, a former hospital; Great Ormond Street Hospital, London
Motherisk was a clinical and research program at The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, established in 1985 as a teratogen information service to provide evidence-based safety information on exposures in pregnancy and lactation. [1] [2]
Victoria Hospital for Sick Children is a building in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The building served as a hospital until 1951 and currently serves as the Toronto regional headquarters of Canadian Blood Services. The building has received a Commendation of Adaptive Re-use from the Toronto Historical Board.
The Mustard procedure was developed in 1963 by Dr. William Mustard at the Hospital for Sick Children.It is similar to the previous atrial baffle used with a Senning procedure, the primary difference being that the Mustard uses a graft made of Dacron or pericardium, while the Senning uses native heart tissue.
The Hôpital des Enfants Malades (Hospital for Sick Children), not to be confused with the foundling hospital, the Hôpital des Enfants Trouvés, was created by the Conseil général des Hospices (General Hospices Council) in January 1801 to help manage the health and social structures of Paris. With the aim of reorganising the hospital, the ...