The first hospital in the nation devoted to children, the Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children helped pioneer the practice of caring for patients in specialty clinics. Hopkins Children’s Center has ...
Learn more about our history of developing and delivering a revolutionary brand of medicine. Since its inception as the Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children nearly a century ago, Johns Hopkins ...
We opened in 1912 as The Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children, the nation’s first pediatric hospital affiliated with an academic research institution, Johns Hopkins. Baltimore banker Henry Johnston ...
The PCRU’s first home was in Johns Hopkins’ Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children, considered the founder of American research-based, academic medicine. Our PCRU’s first director was pediatrician ...
Hopkins Children’s has ensured healthier futures for generations of children around the world for more than 100 years. The Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children — our predecessor — was the first ...
The clinic has a case manager to help families meet their children’s most basic needs through community supports including: WIC, medical assistance, DSS entitlements, as well as employment and ...
John Howland, M.D., professor of pediatrics at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the first director of the Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children (now Johns Hopkins Children’s Center ...
The Center for Adolescent/Young Adult Health at Johns Hopkins Harriet Lane Clinic is your home for primary care. We have been caring for teens and young adults (ages 10 to 26) in Baltimore for more ...