Arkansas Children's provides right-sized care for your child. U.S. News & World Report has ranked Arkansas Children's in seven specialties for 2022-2023.
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We're focused on improving child health through exceptional patient care, groundbreaking research, continuing education, and outreach and prevention.
Our ERs are staffed 24/7 with doctors, nurses and staff who know kids best – all trained to deliver right-sized care for your child in a safe environment.
Arkansas Children's provides right-sized care for your child. U.S. News & World Report has ranked Arkansas Children's in seven specialties for 2022-2023.
Find health tips, patient stories, and news you can use to champion children.
Our flu resources and education information help parents and families provide effective care at home.
We are dedicated to caring for children, allowing us to uniquely shape the landscape of pediatric care in Arkansas.
Our researchers are driven by their limitless curiosity to discover new and better ways to make these children better today and healthier tomorrow.
We're focused on improving child health through exceptional patient care, groundbreaking research, continuing education, and outreach and prevention.
Then we're looking for you! Work at a place where you can change lives...including your own.
When you give to Arkansas Children's, you help deliver on our promise of a better today and a healthier tomorrow for the children of Arkansas and beyond
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General information:
501-364-1100
Primary care appointments: 501-364-1202
Specialty care appointments: 501-364-4000
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All patient satisfaction surveys are submitted by verified patients and families of Arkansas Children's. The star rating is an average of all responses to the provider-related questions by an independent patient satisfaction company. Responses are measured on a scale of 1 to 5 with 5 being the best score. The comments listed reflect the positive experiences submitted by patients and families through the survey process. The comments are not endorsed by and do not necessarily reflect the views or Arkansas Children's.
The Spinal Cord Disorders Clinic provides care for children with spina bifida, spinal cord anomalies or acquired spinal cord injury.
Neuromuscular disorders like myopathies, muscular dystrophies, neuropathies and more are treated by specialists in the ACH Neuromuscular Program.
Arkansas Children’s has the only team of pediatric neuro-oncology specialists in the state dedicated to helping children with brain and spinal cord tumors.
The Head Injury Clinic helps children and their families with long-term effects of post-traumatic complications from head injuries.
The Neurofibromatosis Clinic provides a comprehensive evaluation of neurofibromatosis.
The Spasticity and Intrathecal Baclofen Pump Clinic provides diagnosis, evaluation, and management of patients with hypertonia and cerebral palsy, and provides evaluation for treatment of spasticity using botulinum toxin or intrathecal baclofen pump therapy.
The Arkansas Children's Neurosurgery Clinic offers a full range of inpatient and outpatient services for children from newborn to age 21.
The Neurology Clinic at Arkansas Children's provides expert epilepsy care for a full range of neurological conditions and diseases.
The Neurovascular Multidisciplinary Clinic at Arkansas Children's provides the diagnosis, evaluation and management of pediatric patients with neurovascular disorders.
Neurodevelopmental & Neurobehavioral Clinic. This clinic provides evaluation and developmental concerns (autism developmental delays, and general learning disability) and dual diagnoses (learning problems combined with attention problems, anxiety, etc.)
Neurology patients get inpatient care in the Epilepsy Monitoring Unit (EMU).
The Spinal Muscular Atrophy Clinic provides family-centered care for children with SMA, a progressive genetic disease that affects parts of the nervous system that controls voluntary muscle movement.
Specialized pediatric epilepsy care, can fundamentally change the short and long-term quality of life for patients who suffer from seizures.
Our neurosciences team provides evaluations, treatments, surgery and other services for children with specific neurologic disorders.
At Arkansas Children’s, our board-certified and fellowship trained neurosurgeons and neurologists work together for the surgical treatment of epilepsy in children.
If a child has a seizure, it does not mean they have epilepsy. The number of seizures and the time frame when those seizures happen are important to diagnose epilepsy, a brain disease where normal nerve activity becomes abnormal.
Learn how the neurology team at Arkansas Children's Northwest diagnoses and treats both of these conditions.
Is looking at your child like looking in a mirror? Genetic traits passed along from parents to kids can create strong family resemblances. Genes can also pass along less obvious similarities, like being prone to headaches or migraines.
Learn the difference between a migraine and headache and how migraines can be prevented.
Arkansas Children's reviews the signs of a concussion in children and young athletes.
MEG is the latest advanced technology implementation at Arkansas Children's. MEG is a non-invasive procedure to study human brain activity.
If your child has been diagnosed with Epilepsy, there is a chance that your child could lose consciousness during a seizure, so there could be certain circumstances and activities that should be avoided or closely monitored.
Learn what to expect from EEG testing and monitoring.
Learn how epilepsy treatments at Arkansas Children’s helped stop Rikesh’s seizures.
Kids may suffer from occasional headaches, but tension, migraine and chronic headaches are cause for concern.
Experts at Arkansas Children's diagnosed 7-year-old Kelley with a rare neurological disorder. Read her story of a healthier tomorrow.