Skip to content
See all events

Pediatric Complex Care Seminar Session 3: Feeding Intolerance

Thursday, November 11, 2021 | 10:00 am

Register Now
Pediatric Complex Care Seminar Session 3: Feeding Intolerance

The series is led by complex care pediatricians Dr. Eyal Cohen and Dr. Catherine Diskin from the Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) in Toronto, Canada, and Dr. Rishi Agrawal from Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago, as well as Family Voices representatives Nora Wells, Cara Coleman, and Kate Robinson. 

Each one-hour seminar will be hosted on Zoom and will include a panel of national experts, both clinical and caregiver. Seminars will begin with an overview of the topic and a conversation on shared decision making in pediatric complex care. The goal is to build a community of practice. Attendees are encouraged to ask questions, share insights, and engage with the panel.

Family caregivers, youth, and friends of children with medical complexity (CMC) are welcome to join along with health care professionals, researchers, policy makers, and anyone invested in advancing clinical care in CMC.

The C6 seminar series is funded through a grant from the Lucile Packard Foundation for Children’s Health.

Upcoming Events

See all events

Join the Lucile Packard Foundation for Children’s Health at Putting Care at the Center 2024 in Pittsburgh, PA. Co-hosted by the Camden Coalition’s National Center for Complex Health and Social Needs and UPMC Health Plan, it is the only dedicated venue for members of the complex care field to learn, network, and create a shared agenda for improving care for people with complex needs.

Join Café 5 of The Future of Care for Children with Medical Complexity Virtual Café Series to hear examples of the pressing need to address bias in systems of care and move from a medical to social model of care. This interdisciplinary café-style series is led by the Center for Innovation in Social Work and Health at the Boston University School of Social Work.

Hosted by the San Francisco Auxiliary, the Jewel Ball raises funds to pay for undercompensated care at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford.