Dermatology
Who we are
The Dermatology Program at Boston Children's Hospital provides care for children and adolescents with all forms of congenital and acquired disorders of the skin, nails, hair and mucous membranes.
Our program is one of the most experienced programs of its type, caring for more than 6,000 children from communities throughout the New England area.
Children are typically referred to our program by their pediatrician or primary care physician for consultation, treatment and long-term management.
Program highlights include:
- over 9,000 outpatients visits each year
- four full-time attending physicians, six part-time physicians
- inpatient consultative dermatology
- combined specialty programs in Rheumatology/Dermatology, Atopic Dermatitis Center/Dermatology and Vascular Anomalies
- Pulsed dye laser services
In the News
Ask the expert
What's the latest in managing atopic dermatitis?
By: Robert Sidbury, MD, MPH
Assistant in Medicine, Dermatology Program
When a mole becomes melanoma
Ever wonder what genetic switch is flipped that turns a harmless mole into a potentially deadly melanoma?
Discover: Dermatology
Protein that inhibits cancer is also found to underlie skin tanning
An important cancer-suppressing protein appears to protect people from skin cancer in more ways than one, report researchers at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Boston Children's Hospital in the March 9 issue of the journal Cell. The protein, p53, not only guards against cancer-causing DNA damage, but also prompts the skin to tan in response to ultraviolet light from the sun, thus providing protection against melanoma, the fastest-increasing form of cancer in the world.
Conditions & Treatments
- Acne
- Bathing and skin care
- Blepharitis
- Bruises
- Cold sores
- Dermatology Program
- Diaper dermatitis
- Drug rashes
- Fifth disease
- Frostbite
- Hand-foot-mouth disease
- Herpes zoster (shingles)
- Insect stings
- Marfan syndrome
- Molluscum contagiosum
- Pityriasis rosea
- Pulsed dye laser
- Ringworm (tinea infections)
- Roseola
- Sarcoidosis
- Scarlet fever
- Spider telangiectasias
- Stye (hordeolum)
- Urticaria (hives)
- Warts
- Atopic dermatitis
- Birthmarks
- Blisters
- Cellulitis
- Cutis marmorata telangiectatica congenita (CMTC)
- Diagnostic procedures for allergies
- Diphtheria
- Fibromyalgia
- Folliculitis, boils and carbuncles
- Genetics disorders
- Herpes simplex virus and cold sores
- Impetigo
- Juvenile dermatomyositis
- Measles (rubeola)
- Orbital cellulitis
- Poison ivy and poison oak
- Rheumatic Fever
- Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF)
- Rubella (German Measles)
- Scabies
- Skin Pigment Disorders
- Sturge-Weber syndrome
- Swimmer's ear (otitis externa)
- Venous malformation
- X-Linked agammaglobulinemia
