Holtz Children's Hospital
Helping to Raise Healthy
and Happy Children
Holtz Children’s Hospital has served the
community since 1918 and is one of the largest children’s hospitals in the
southeast United States. Located at the University of Miami/Jackson Memorial Medical Center, we are known
worldwide for our team of pediatric specialists experienced
in treating children with all types of needs — from
routine care to life-saving procedures. Our goal is to provide all the support
and services parents and families need to raise healthy and happy children.
Click here
to view a special television ad about Holtz.
Holtz News
Holtz Children's Hospital Ranked among the Best Children's Hospitals by U.S.News & World
Report
Holtz Children’s Hospital is among the country’s elite when it comes to
treating kidney disorders in children and providing intensive care to the
tiniest babies according to U.S.News & World Report’s America's
Best Children's Hospitals. Holtz was ranked 10th on the specialties list
for kidney disorders and 23rd for neonatal care. Click on the image at the right
to access the rankings online. The list will also be featured in the August
issue of U.S.News & World Report.
This is an important honor for the physicians, nurses and entire medical team
at Holtz Children’s Hospital and the University of Miami Miller School of
Medicine. “We are proud of the cutting-edge treatments and medical expertise we
provide to children in South Florida and around the world. Being named on
this prestigious list is certainly a reaffirmation of the incredible care we
deliver,” said John A. Brandecker, senior vice president and chief
administrative officer at Holtz Children’s Hospital and Jackson Memorial
Hospital’s Women’s Hospital Center.
For more on this story, click here.
Holtz Children’s Hospital's Pediatric Bone Marrow
Transplant Program Awarded FACT Accreditation
Holtz Children’s Hospital’s Pediatric Bone Marrow Transplant Program, in
affiliation with the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, has been
awarded a three-year accreditation by the Foundation for the Accreditation of
Cellular Therapy (FACT), a national accreditation program. This accreditation
opens the door for those children whose insurance companies require them to
undergo treatment at FACT accredited institutions. Before this development, many
children who needed bone marrow transplants would have to go to All Children’s
Hospital in St. Petersburg or out of state to be reimbursed for the highly
specialized types of bone marrow transplants that can be conducted at Holtz
Children’s Hospital. The Pediatric Bone Marrow Transplant Program at Holtz is
the only university-based program in South Florida. Thanks to our highly trained
and specialized pediatric bone marrow transplant doctors, coordinators and
nurses, we can provide a transplant for any condition that requires this
treatment.
Extremely Rare Surgery Saves Newborn’s Life at
Holtz Children’s
At just four months into her pregnancy, Kimberly
Robinson was told by doctors that something was very wrong. A large mass was
protruding from her unborn son’s mouth, which is extremely rare and occurs in
only about one in 100,000 infants. When several physicians said her child
wouldn’t survive, Robinson searched for other opinions. She found Dr. Elvire
Jacques, an obstetrician and gynecologist at Jackson Memorial and Holtz
Children’s Hospital, who took on her case.
Jordan Jamal Smith was born at 38 weeks. A mass larger
than the baby’s head covered his face and was millimeters from his brain. Dr.
Ramzi Younis, chief of pediatric otolaryngology at UM/Holtz, had the difficult
task during the delivery of making sure Jordan was breathing. He had just
minutes to intubate the baby before the umbilical cord could be cut. Nine days
after Jordan was born, Dr. Younis successfully removed the entire growth.
For more on this story click
here.
Toddler Receives
Rare Liver Transplant
Brenner was a normal, energetic toddler before he became
sick in the last week of July. When his skin and eyes began turning
yellow, his parents took him to a local hospital and were given devastating news:
Brenner was suffering from fulminant hepatic failure, a severe form of acute
liver failure, and might require a liver transplant in order to survive.
For more on this story, click here.
1611
N.W. 12TH Avenue East Tower Miami, FL
33136-1096 (305)585-KIDS
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