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  • Stools - Unusual Color
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    The stool color is strange or different. Normal stool colors are any shade of brown, tan, yellow or green. Colors that may be caused by a disease are red, black and white. Dark green may look like black, but dark green is a normal color.

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  • Straining and Grunting Baby - Normal
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Grunting, straining and pushing to pass a stool. This is normal during the first 3 months. Babies are learning how to get the poop out. Doctors call this the grunting baby syndrome

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  • Strep Exposure
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Guidance on possible strep exposure.

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  • Stubborn Toddler
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Your child says No to many normal requests. Your child disagrees with many of your normal suggestions. Your child constantly tests your rules

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  • Sty
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    A sty is a red lump or pimple on the edge of an eyelid.

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  • Sunburn
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Red or blistered skin from too much sun. The redness, pain and swelling starts at 4 hours

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  • Suture Questions
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Common questions about sutures or stitches. Stapled wounds are treated the same as sutured wounds

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  • Swallowed Harmless Substance
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Your child swallowed an unusual but harmless substance. Your doctor told you it was harmless. It was not a solid object that could get caught in the throat or esophagus. It was not a poison, chemical or drug.

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  • Swallowed Small Object
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Small harmless solid object swallowed. Child has no symptoms.

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  • Swimmer's Itch
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    An itchy harmless rash caused by tiny parasites in fresh water lakes. A less common rash can also occur in salt water (called clam digger’s itch).

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  • Tailbone Injury
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    The most common injury is a bruised tailbone. The tailbone is the small bone at the lower end of the spine. Location: upper part of the groove between the buttocks.

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  • Tear Duct - Blocked
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    The tear duct is blocked in 10% of newborns. The tear duct is the tube that carries tears from the eye to the nose

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  • Teething
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Teething is the normal process of new teeth working their way through the gums. Teeth come in between 6 and 24 months of age

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  • Temper Tantrums
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Tantrums are normal in toddlers. Tantrums may include whining, crying, screaming or yelling. It may also include pounding the floor, slamming a door, or breath-holding. Also called meltdowns or emotional outbursts.

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  • Thin Body Type (Normal Slenderness)
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Your child looks thin or slender. Their weight is more than 20% below the ideal weight for their height. However, your child is well-nourished, with a normal fat tissue layer (8–12 mm). This is measured by a skinfold calipers.

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  • Throat Infection - Viral
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    A viral infection of the throat

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  • Throat Infection - Strep
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    A bacterial infection of the throat caused by Strep

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  • Thrush
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Thrush is a yeast infection of the mouth in young babies. White patches in the front of the mouth are the hallmark

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  • Tick Bite
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    A tick (small brown bug) is attached to the skin. A tick was removed from the skin.

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  • Time-Out Technique
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Time-out means putting a child in a boring place for a few minutes to correct a misbehavior. It’s the most effective consequence (discipline technique) for misbehavior in 2- to 5-year-old children. Every parent needs to know how to give a time-out.

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  • Tinea Versicolor
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Skin infection of teens and adults caused by a fungus. Tinea versicolor means "ringworm of many colors"

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  • Toe Injury
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Injuries to toes.

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  • Toenail - Ingrown
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    The corner of the toenail grows into the skin around it. Almost always involves the big toe (great toe)

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  • Toilet Readiness Training
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Readiness training means preparing your child for later potty training. It increases his or her chances of success.

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  • Toilet Training - How to Start
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Your goal is to toilet train your child. Your child will be toilet trained when without reminders he can: Walk to the potty. Pull down his pants.

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  • Toilet Training Resistance - Constipation from Stool Holding
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    A child who refuses to be toilet trained and passes stools into his underwear. The medical term is encopresis.

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  • Toilet Training Resistance - Encopresis without Constipation
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    A child who refuses to be toilet trained. He passes stools into his underwear or pull-up. The medical term for this is encopresis.

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  • Tongue - Geographic
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Map-like red patches on the tongue. Cause not known

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  • Tonsil Infection - Strep
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    A bacterial infection of the tonsils caused by Strep. Also called Strep tonsillitis

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  • Tonsil Infection - Viral
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    A viral infection of the tonsils. Also called viral tonsillitis

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  • Tooth Injury
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Injury to a tooth

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  • Toothache
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Pain or discomfort in a tooth

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  • Umbilical Cord - Bleeding
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Bleeding occurs from cord’s point of separation. The navel is also called the belly button or umbilicus

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  • Umbilical Cord - Cord Care
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Questions about how to care for the normal umbilical cord or navel in newborns. The navel is also called the belly button or umbilicus.

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  • Umbilical Cord - Delayed Separation Past 3 Weeks
    Category: Schmitt Pediatric Care Advice

    Cord is still attached after 3 weeks. The navel is also called the belly button or umbilicus

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Contact Us

At Pediatric Partners, we encourage you to contact us whenever you have a concern or question related to your care.

Please click here to access our Patient Portal to leave a message for the phone nurse, request a prescription or prescription refill, or make an appointment.

Our Location

7303 Rogers Avenue, Suite 201 Fort Smith, AR 72903

Hours of Operation

Our Regular Schedule

Pediatric Partners

Monday:

8:30 am-5:00 pm

Tuesday:

8:30 am-5:00 pm

Wednesday:

8:30 am-5:00 pm

Thursday:

8:30 am-5:00 pm

Friday:

8:30 am-5:00 pm

Saturday:

Clinic closed, but call our office 24 hours a day 7 days a week to speak to a pediatric nurse

Sunday:

Clinic closed, but call our office 24 hours a day 7 days a week to speak to a pediatric nurse

Monday - Friday:

8:30 am - 5:00 pm

Saturday, Sunday:

Clinic closed, but call our office 24 hours a day 7 days a week to speak to a pediatric nurse

Pediatrician - Fort Smith, Pediatric Partners, 7303 Rogers Avenue, Suite 201, , Fort Smith AR, 72903 - (479) 478-7200

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