
Ranked nationally in pediatric care.
Arkansas Children's provides right-sized care for your child. U.S. News & World Report has ranked Arkansas Children's in seven specialties for 2024-2025.

It's easier than ever to sign up for MyChart.
Sign up online to quickly and easily manage your child's medical information and connect with us whenever you need.

We're focused on improving child health through exceptional patient care, groundbreaking research, continuing education, and outreach and prevention.

When it comes to your child, every emergency is a big deal.
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 2024-2025.

Looking for resources for your family?
Find health tips, patient stories, and news you can use to champion children.

Support from the comfort of your home.
Our flu resources and education information help parents and families provide effective care at home.

Children are at the center of everything we do.
We are dedicated to caring for children, allowing us to uniquely shape the landscape of pediatric care in Arkansas.

Transforming discovery to care.
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

Become a volunteer at Arkansas Children's.
The gift of time is one of the most precious gifts you can give. You can make a difference in the life of a sick child.

Join our Grassroots Organization
Support and participate in this advocacy effort on behalf of Arkansas’ youth and our organization.

Learn How We Transform Discovery to Care
Scientific discoveries lead us to new and better ways to care for children.

Learn How We Transform Discovery to Care
Scientific discoveries lead us to new and better ways to care for children.

Learn How We Transform Discovery to Care
Scientific discoveries lead us to new and better ways to care for children.

Learn How We Transform Discovery to Care
Scientific discoveries lead us to new and better ways to care for children.

Learn How We Transform Discovery to Care
Scientific discoveries lead us to new and better ways to care for children.

Learn How We Transform Discovery to Care
Scientific discoveries lead us to new and better ways to care for children.

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.

Your volunteer efforts are very important to Arkansas Children's. Consider additional ways to help our patients and families.

Join one of our volunteer groups.
There are many ways to get involved to champion children statewide.

Make a positive impact on children through philanthropy.
The generosity of our supporters allows Arkansas Children's to deliver on our promise of making children better today and a healthier tomorrow.

Read and watch heart-warming, inspirational stories from the patients of Arkansas Children’s.
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Arkansas Children's Hospital
General Information 501-364-1100
Arkansas Children's Northwest
General Information 479-725-6800

Bone Anchored Implants
Arkansas Children’s pediatric bone anchored implant program is dedicated to helping children with conductive hearing loss (CHL), mixed hearing loss (MHL), and unilateral hearing loss (UHL)/single sided deafness (SSD) hear better through direct bone conduction.
Who can benefit from a bone anchored implant?
- Conductive Hearing Loss (CHL)
- Mixed Hearing Loss (MHL)
- Single Sided Deafness/Unilateral Hearing Loss (SSD/UHL)
Conductive Hearing Loss and Mixed Hearing Loss
Causes of conductive hearing loss (CHL) or mixed hearing loss (MHL) can be present at birth or acquired later, and often include a malformed external ear, ear canal or middle ear. Many times, the ear canal has chronic infection and may result in chronic draining ears. The sound processor of the bone anchored implant can be coupled to a soft headband that uses elastic or other specially designed headbands to optimize sound and comfort. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recommends surgical intervention be performed at 5 years of age or older. Until a child reaches this age, Arkansas Children's recommends the use of the bone anchored processor on one of the available headbands.
Single Sided Deafness/Unilateral Hearing Loss
Children with normal hearing in one ear and hearing loss in the other ear are called unilateral hearing loss (UHL). When the poorer hearing ear has a complete loss of hearing it is sometimes referred to as single-sided deafness (SSD). Unilateral hearing loss or single-sided deafness in children often causes poor listening skills in areas of lots of noise, difficulty knowing where sounds are coming from (localization), and difficulty hearing from the side of the hearing loss even at close distances. Children with hearing loss in one ear and normal hearing in the other are at educational risk. These children may have normal speech and language skills but they sometimes perform poorly in their classes at school. At Arkansas Children's, we have found bone-anchored implants are beneficial to these types of hearing loss. The bone anchored implant routes sound from the ear with hearing loss to the normal hearing ear quickly through direct bone conduction and gives the sensation of hearing with two ears. At the age of 5, the sound processor can be attached to a small implant placed in the temporal bone behind the ear, transferring sound directly to the cochlea without involving the ear canal or the middle ear. The sound is transferred directly to the bone of the skull and in turn directly stimulates the organ of hearing, the cochlea. In many children this surgical intervention is performed in two outpatient surgeries, to ensure proper healing of the implant.