

Contact Information:
JHU Medical SchoolLead Coordinator: Benjamin Potts
Phone: 443-287-8997
Email: bpotts2@jh.edu
Website: Link
All Children's Hospital
Site Coordinator: Antonika Ford
Phone: 727-898-4895
Email: aford38@jh.edu
Website: Link
About Our Site: Johns Hopkins University
Johns Hopkins is recruiting for the DISCOVERY study at 2 sites:
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine (Baltimore, MD)
As the pediatric hospital at Johns Hopkins, Johns Hopkins Children’s Center brings the collaborative multidisciplinary approach and expertise of this distinguished institution to bear in treating every child that crosses its threshold.
As the birthplace of academic pediatrics in the United States more than a century ago, Johns Hopkins Children's Center has been at the forefront of research. Our physician-scientists have unraveled and continue to unravel the mechanisms of childhood disease and to develop treatments for disorders common and rare.
But today we aim even higher. Today, we are on a mission to make all medicine pediatric by identifying and uprooting the seeds of adult diseases in childhood. Our investigators are fighting this battle on many fronts: in the lab, in clinic and at the patient bedside. They are harnessing the power of genetics, epigenetics and proteomics to understand disease behavior, design treatments and even cures.
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine (Baltimore, MD)
As the pediatric hospital at Johns Hopkins, Johns Hopkins Children’s Center brings the collaborative multidisciplinary approach and expertise of this distinguished institution to bear in treating every child that crosses its threshold.
As the birthplace of academic pediatrics in the United States more than a century ago, Johns Hopkins Children's Center has been at the forefront of research. Our physician-scientists have unraveled and continue to unravel the mechanisms of childhood disease and to develop treatments for disorders common and rare.
But today we aim even higher. Today, we are on a mission to make all medicine pediatric by identifying and uprooting the seeds of adult diseases in childhood. Our investigators are fighting this battle on many fronts: in the lab, in clinic and at the patient bedside. They are harnessing the power of genetics, epigenetics and proteomics to understand disease behavior, design treatments and even cures.
Over the last 100 years, our work has altered the course of pediatric medicine in the United States-and worldwide-and we are confident that we will continue to redefine pediatrics for centuries to come.

Johns Hopkins All Children's Hospital (St. Petersburg, FL)
At Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital, we provide expert pediatric care for infants, children and teens with some of the most challenging medical problems. We are committed to providing family-centered care. Taking part in pediatric medical education and clinical research helps us to provide high quality care in more than 50 pediatric medical and surgical subspecialties.
The DISCOVERY Study – Johns Hopkins has been chosen as one of 15 sites from across the country to participate in this ground breaking study, sponsored by the National Institutes of Health. The Principal Investigator for Johns Hopkins is Dr. Sheela N. Magge, and she and the whole Hopkins team of doctors and research staff plan to recruit 240 youth from the Baltimore and St. Petersburg areas.
At Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital, we provide expert pediatric care for infants, children and teens with some of the most challenging medical problems. We are committed to providing family-centered care. Taking part in pediatric medical education and clinical research helps us to provide high quality care in more than 50 pediatric medical and surgical subspecialties.
The DISCOVERY Study – Johns Hopkins has been chosen as one of 15 sites from across the country to participate in this ground breaking study, sponsored by the National Institutes of Health. The Principal Investigator for Johns Hopkins is Dr. Sheela N. Magge, and she and the whole Hopkins team of doctors and research staff plan to recruit 240 youth from the Baltimore and St. Petersburg areas.

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