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  • Taking Care of Your Body: Answers for Boys With Autism for Teens


    When you're a teen, your body changes — this is part of growing up. You will have to learn new routines to keep yourself clean and healthy. Here's what to expect.

  • A to Z: Obstructive Sleep Apnea for Parents


    Learn about this common sleep disorder, where a blockage of the airway during sleep can cause someone to temporarily stop breathing.

  • Sleep and Your 4- to 7-Month-Old for Parents


    By this age, your baby should be on the way to having a regular sleep pattern, sleeping longer at night, and taking 2 or 3 naps during the day.

  • Cancer: Readjusting to Home and School for Teens


    If you've just finished a long hospital stay, you may have questions about reconnecting with friends and family. Get answers in this article for teens.

  • Juvenile Myoclonic Epilepsy for Parents


    Kids with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy have myoclonic seizures that usually begin during the teenage years. Seizures may happen less often in adulthood, but medicine will likely be needed for life.

  • Childhood Stress: How Parents Can Help for Parents


    Stress is a normal response to changes and challenges. And life is full of those, even during childhood. Here are tips for parents on helping kids cope with normal stress and how to tell when stress is serious.

  • Epilepsy Factsheet (for Schools) for Parents


    What teachers should know about epilepsy, and what they can do to help students with the condition succeed in school.

  • Varicocele for Teens


    A varicocele is an enlargement of the veins in the scrotum. Although there is no way to prevent a varicocele, it usually needs no special treatment.

  • Fears and Phobias for Teens


    Fear is a normal human reaction that protects us by signaling danger and preparing us to deal with it. Get the facts about fears and phobias and what causes them.

  • Heart Transplant for Parents


    If your child needs a heart transplant, you're probably feeling lots of emotions. Fortunately, many kids who undergo heart transplants go on to live normal, healthy lives.