Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . The Ponseti method for treating pediatric idiopathic clubfoot produced better results compared with traditional ...
Dr. Ignacio V. Ponseti, an orthopedist whose gentle, nonsurgical method of correcting clubfoot has become the global standard for treatment, helping thousands of children to walk, died Sunday in Iowa ...
Dr. Ignacio Ponseti, a refugee from the Spanish Civil War who created a nonsurgical way of treating clubfoot in infants that prevented a lifetime of disability, died Oct. 18 at the University of Iowa ...
Parents from around the world put their children in Dr. Ignacio Ponseti's hands. “He was very gentle, very, very bright with tremendous insight,” said Dr. Jose Morcuende. “Not just in medicine, but in ...
Clubfoot affects one in a thousand babies born in the United States, but with proper corrective treatment and follow-up, infants born with clubfoot can have feet compatible with an active, normal ...
About one in every 1%2C000 babies is born with clubfoot. An estimated 150%2C000 to 200%2C000 children are born with clubfoot each year worldwide%2C including 5%2C345 in the U.S. An estimated 80 ...
It's been five years since Dr. Ignacio Ponseti last saw patients at University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, but the reach of the renowned doctor and his revolutionary technique for treating clubfoot ...
Dr. Ignacio Ponseti, a refugee from the Spanish Civil War who created a nonsurgical way of treating clubfoot in infants that prevented a lifetime of disability, died Oct. 18 at the University of Iowa ...