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  • Contact Your Care Team

Send a secure message
If you get care at a Kaiser Permanente medical office, you can send a secure message to your provider or care team about your health care, scheduled appointments, and lab results.

You can also view sent or received messages from your care team, ask simple medical questions, request a medication refill, or start an online visit.

  • Offers tips to prevent illness and accidental injuries in babies and young children. Covers SIDS. Discusses common safety hazards. Also discusses healthy habits such as safe food preparation, using car seats, and immunizations. Covers safe baby products.
  • These are answers to common questions about parental access for Kaiser Permanente member accounts.
  • Make sure you know about each of the medicines you take. This includes why you take it, how to take it, what you can expect while you're taking it, and any warnings about the medicine. The information provided here is general. So be sure to read...
  • Save time by having routine, ongoing medications shipped to you before you run out. Your refills will arrive when you need them, and you won’t need to call Kaiser Permanente or log in.
  • What can you expect from your child at this age? Children in this age range are gaining many new skills. They feel more and more independent. They may be curious, want to explore the world around them, and act without thinking. At this age, children see everything that happens as it relates to themselves. And they...
  • Kaiser Permanente combines high-quality health care and coverage into one connected experience. Discover how our model helps members thrive.
  • Make sure you know about each of the medicines you take. This includes why you take it, how to take it, what you can expect while you're taking it, and any warnings about the medicine. The information provided here is general. So be sure to read...
  • Troy Horton, an athlete with autism, played soccer alongside U.S. Olympic gold medalist Naomi Girma at an event hosted by Kaiser Permanente.
  • Discusses normal growth and development of children ages 2 to 5. Covers physical growth, language skills, toilet training, and eating and sleeping habits. Also discusses how kids think and manage their feelings. Includes info on routine medical visits.
  • The 99% effective copper IUD is nonhormonal birth control that lasts for 10 to 12 years. Find out more about this and other contraception methods.
  • Children usually move in natural, predictable steps as they grow and develop language, cognitive, social, and sensory and motor skills. But each child gains skills at their own pace. It's common for a child to be ahead in one area, such as language,
  • Get the birth control injection every 3 months for lighter periods and 94% effective pregnancy prevention. Find out how it works and how to get it.
  • Birth control pills contain hormones that prevent pregnancy at a rate of 91%. Read about side effects and learn how to get a prescription for the pill.
  • The birth control implant is over 99% effective at pregnancy prevention. Find out how the arm implant works and how to get it through Kaiser Permanente.
  • The 99% effective hormonal IUD lasts for 3 to 7 years. Find out how this birth control method works and how to get it through Kaiser Permanente.
  • Covers the causes and symptoms of low back pain. Looks at treatment with rest, over-the-counter pain medicine, and heating pads. Includes steps to prevent low back pain from returning, such as practicing good posture and getting regular exercise.
  • Leave in the vaginal ring for 3 weeks and remove on week 4 for lighter periods and 91% pregnancy prevention. Find out how it works and how to access care.
  • Discusses chronic pain caused by problems other than cancer. Covers symptoms and how chronic pain is diagnosed. Covers conditions that can be treated, like neck pain, low back pain, and arthritis. Info on treatment with medicine and lifestyle changes.
  • The California Studies Association presents the Carey McWilliams Award to Betty Soskin for her contributions at the Kaiser shipyards.
  • Over-the-counter (OTC) medicines are medicines you can buy without a doctor's prescription. This doesn't mean that OTC medicines are harmless. Like prescription medicines, OTCs can be very dangerous for children if not taken the right way. Be sure to read the package instructions on OTC medicines carefully. Talk to your...
  • Get to know common health care terms with our doctors and locations glossary.
  • Information on type 2 diabetes. Describes how insulin is made and used by the body. Describes symptoms and how type 2 is treated. Provides info on blood sugar (glucose) levels. Discusses obesity's role in type 2 diabetes. Discusses exercise and diet.
  • Learn about each practitioner's gender, certifications, specialties, languages spoken, interests, and more.
  • Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are used to relieve pain and fever and to reduce swelling and inflammation caused by injury or diseases such as arthritis. Aspirin, ibuprofen, ketoprofen, and naproxen are commonly used NSAIDs. NSAIDs may cause side effects. The most common are stomach upset, heartburn, and...
  • Kaiser Permanente study examines race, ethnicity and risk of infection, hospitalization, and death.
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