THE UNMET NEEDS OF CHILDREN

Abstract
IT IS a real pleasure for me to be discussing pediatrics with pediatricians. More than any other group, you share my educational background and my earliest dedication as a physician. And, although my period of actual pediatric practice was rather brief, I feel that I share with you a basic orientation and a store of common experiences. Reading through some of the recent periodical literature in our field, I have been impressed with a growing sense of professional restlessness. One article used the phrase "unhappy pediatrician syndrome"—partly but not entirely in jest. I confess that I am not altogether unhappy with this kind of unhappiness.

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