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Cystic fibrosis is the most common genetic killer. In the past, most children with the disease died by the age of 20; today a variety of antibiotics are helping some to live into their 40s. Progress is also being made on creating a genetic test for parents that would detect the defective gene before a child is born. This program from The Doctor Is In looks at how families cope with the uncertainties accompanying the disease and the daily therapies it requires. The camera follows a two-year-old, twenty-year-old, and forty-year-old around at their homes. It also interviews pediatrician William Boyle of the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center; Joan Milsaps, CF Coordinator for the State of New Hampshire; and Dr. Walter Nolls, a researcher in genetic testing at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. A Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center production. (26 minutes)



 
    

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Copyright date: ©1990




     







Cerebral Palsy: What Every Parent Should Know

This program covers the causes, symptoms, and range of possible treatments of cerebral palsy, including the relationship between physical and mental handicaps, and the role of medications and physical therapy in treatment. Animation illustrates the a...(more details)
 
Kidney Disease
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This program from The Doctor Is In deals with end-state renal disease-progressive kidney failure which, up until a generation ago, was routinely fatal but which can now be treated by means of hemodialysis and organ transplantation. Neither of these i...(more details)
 
Childhood Asthma

This program deals with the nature of bronchial and allergic asthma and with the diagnosis and treatment of childhood allergies. It explains how asthma attacks can be triggered by allergies, respiratory infections, exercise, and emotional stress; sho...(more details)
 
Pediatric Diabetes
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Children can develop diabetes at a very young age, requiring them to deal with the daily complexities of this disease. The children who do best are those who handle most of the responsibilities of disease management themselves. This program from The ...(more details)
 
HB Masters Sickle-Cell Anemia

A teacher and her foil, a clay-mation character named HB after the hemoglobin molecule, explain the nature of this debilitating disease so common among African Americans and how school-age patients can manage their disease. (20 minutes)(more details)
 


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