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⚕️Emergency? Severe bleeding, stroke symptoms, fever in sickle cell disease/neutropenia, chest pain, extreme sleepiness, or little/no urine needs urgent medical care now.
🩸 Pediatric hematology, explained with care
Evidence-informed pediatric hematology for children’s blood disorders.
KidBloodCure.com is a clinically structured education hub for families and healthcare professionals, translating pediatric hematology science into safe, precise, and actionable understanding.
🔬 Pathophysiology🧪 Diagnostics🚨 Emergency triage📈 Long-term follow-up
10 core topicsAnemia, hemoglobinopathy, bleeding, platelet, neutrophil, and MAHA disorders.
Dual audienceParent-friendly explanations plus clinician snapshots.
Safety firstRed flags, referral prompts, and emergency guidance.
Parent clarityWhat the diagnosis means, what tests show, and what to ask next.
Clinical utilityStructured workups, differential diagnosis, and referral triggers.
Scientific structureBiology → presentation → tests → managementEach topic follows a consistent clinical reasoning sequence.
Clinical safetyRed flags are separated from routine educationUrgent symptoms are highlighted for families and triage teams.
Dual literacyPlain language plus professional depthSame condition, different level of detail for each audience.
Governance readyBuilt for expert review and protocol alignmentContent is organized so a medical director can validate it efficiently.
About the clinical lead
Senior consultant pediatric hematologist with 25+ years of experience.
Led the establishment of comprehensive pediatric sickle cell disease, thalassemia, and hemophilia programs, introducing modern therapies, advanced screening tools, and patient-centered pathways to improve quality of life.
Selected achievements
- Introduced TCD stroke-risk screening for sickle cell disease.
- Introduced cardiac and liver T2* MRI monitoring for iron overload.
- Introduced inhibitor testing and modern hemophilia therapies including recombinant factors VIII/IX and Hemlibra.
- Chaired the International Pediatric Hematology Conference, editions 1 through 7.
Choose your path
One site. Two experiences.
Every major section separates family education from professional reference content, helping users find the right depth quickly.
Explore all conditions
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Parent Center
Plain-language education for diagnosis day, lab results, treatment choices, school planning, and when to seek urgent help.
- Condition explainers in everyday language.
- Questions to ask your child’s hematology team.
- Emergency warning signs organized by disorder.
Enter Parent Center
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Professional Desk
Concise pediatric hematology references for triage, initial evaluation, counseling, referrals, and shared-care communication.
- Approach by presentation: anemia, bleeding, thrombocytopenia, neutropenia, and MAHA.
- Workup frameworks and high-risk features.
- Handoff and referral checklists.
Open Professional Desk
Condition library
Coverage across common and urgent pediatric blood disorders.
Each topic includes parent explanations, red flags, diagnostic concepts, treatment overview, and clinician-focused pearls.
🥬Iron Deficiency AnemiaMicrocytic anemia, diet, iron therapy.
🌙Sickle Cell DiseasePain crises, fever, stroke prevention.
🧬ThalassemiaTrait, transfusions, chelation.
🔴ITPPlatelets, bruising, observation.
🛡️NeutropeniaANC, fever, infection risk.
🧩HemophiliaFactor VIII/IX, joints, prophylaxis.
💧Von Willebrand DiseaseNosebleeds, menses, procedures.
⭐Rare Bleeding DisordersFactor and platelet function disorders.
⚡TTPMicroangiopathy emergency.
💧HUSKidney injury after MAHA.
Safety first
When blood disorders become urgent.
This website educates; it does not replace your child’s medical team. Use these warning signs to decide when to call urgently or seek emergency care.
See urgent care guide
Fever risks
Fever in sickle cell disease, severe neutropenia, chemotherapy, or central line patients should be treated as urgent.
Bleeding risks
Head injury, persistent bleeding, black stools, blood in urine, heavy menstrual bleeding with dizziness, or swollen painful joints need prompt evaluation.
MAHA risks
Confusion, seizures, severe headache, pallor, bruising, jaundice, or reduced urine can signal TTP/HUS and needs emergency assessment.
Evidence-informed architecture
More scientific, more usable.
The website is organized like a pediatric hematology consultation: define the phenotype, identify immediate risk, interpret targeted diagnostics, then build a longitudinal care plan.
01
Phenotype-first navigationAnemia, bleeding, thrombocytopenia, neutropenia, hemoglobinopathy, and thrombotic microangiopathy pathways.
02
Laboratory interpretationCBC indices, reticulocytes, smear, coagulation testing, VWF assays, factor activity, hemolysis markers, renal markers, and hemoglobin studies.
03
Management principlesClear separation between education, emergency triage, treatment concepts, and specialist-directed protocols.
Clinical content domains
PathobiologyWhat cellular or coagulation process is abnormal?
Diagnostic signatureWhich laboratory pattern supports or challenges the diagnosis?
Risk stratificationWhich symptoms or test patterns require urgent escalation?
Continuity of careHow should follow-up, school, procedures, genetics, and family counseling be planned?
Care journey
Designed to support the whole visit.
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Before the appointment
Learn the diagnosis, gather symptoms and family history, and bring prior labs or newborn screen results.
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During evaluation
Understand CBC patterns, platelets, ANC, hemolysis markers, iron studies, coagulation tests, and hemoglobin testing.
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After the plan
Prepare school letters, emergency plans, medication reminders, vaccine questions, and follow-up tracking.
Launch-ready foundation
Built as a professional static site.
This prototype can be expanded into a full clinic website with appointment booking, physician bios, secure forms, analytics, SEO pages, and multilingual content.