Daffodil Pediatrics
 
 

Five Locations: Forest Park, Tucker, Carrollton, Chamblee, Decatur

 

This spacious facility was remodeled and updated in June 2012. Great location near Forest Parkway and Jonesboro Road.

  • Easy access right to downtown Forest Park, I-285, I-75, I-675
  • Plenty of parking right in front of our office.
  • Enjoy short wait times in our Well, Sick and Newborn Waiting Rooms
  • Educational television in waiting rooms.
  • English, Spanish, Vietnamese, and Arabic.

Phone: 404.366.3636
Fax: 404.362.0808
Email: forestpark@rosemmc.com

Daffodil Pediatrics - Forest Park
4905 Courtney Drive
Forest Park GA 30297

 
 

Our facility in Tucker is located near Northlake Mall and Dekalb Hospital with easy access to I-285, Stone Mountain Hwy, and I-85.

  • Plenty of parking right in front of our office.
  • Enjoy short wait times (usually under 10 minutes) in our Well, Sick and Newborn Waiting Rooms
  • Educational television in waiting rooms (not in newborn room)
  • Our staff speak English, Spanish, Farsi, Pashto, Urdu.

Phone: 770.809.3332
Fax: 770.947.7904
Email: tucker@rosemmc.com

Daffodil Pediatrics - Tucker
1918 Northlake Parkway
Suite 201 and 202
Tucker GA, 30084

 
 

Our newest facility in Carrollton.

  • Plenty of parking right in front of our office.
  • Enjoy short wait times (usually under 10 minutes) in our Well, Sick and Newborn Waiting Rooms
  • Educational television in waiting rooms (not in newborn room)
  • Our staff speak English, Spanish.

Phone: 404.366.3636
Email: carrollton@rosemmc.com

Daffodil Pediatrics - Carrollton
1561 US Hwy 27 #6
Carrollton, GA 30117

 
The Healthy Sidebar
Antibiotics cannot cure a cold - the 'common cold' and 'the flu' are both viruses (also called a viral infections). Anti-biotics only work against bacterial infections. It's not too late to have your child vaccinated again the flu.
Babies may be able to sleep anywhere at any time, but this usually does not coordinate with your normal sleep patterns until about three months.
The clingy infant arrives around 10 months of age, and parents know when they see it. Suddenly, leaving the child’s line of sight causes the little one great distress—thanks in part to the child's undeveloped sense of time and lack of experience with a parent's absence. Forbidding children from eating foods doesn't work. When children think that a food is forbidden by their parents, the food often becomes more desirable.
 
 
Daffodil Pediatrics