Sentences with phrase «because of obstetrics»

Guess what else still born babies are born all the time at hospitasl and babies, (often born to low risk mothers) die all the time, often BECAUSE of obstetrics interventions not despite them.

Not exact matches

Anemia is more likely to occur in closely spaced subsequent pregnancies because of this, the Journal of Gynecology, Obstetrics and the Biology of Reproduction reports.
You don't see the tremendous risk that birth still carries BECAUSE of modern obstetrics and how safe it has become.
Genetics in obstetrics can be complicated because the genetic make - up of three people — the mother, the father of the baby, and the unborn child — must be considered.
«Our survey reveals that perinatal death has a profound effect on obstetricians, and 8 percent had considered giving up obstetrics because of the emotional difficulty of caring for patients with perinatal death,» says lead author Katherine Gold, M.D., MSW, of U-M's Department of Family Medicine and Department of Obstetrics and Gobstetrics because of the emotional difficulty of caring for patients with perinatal death,» says lead author Katherine Gold, M.D., MSW, of U-M's Department of Family Medicine and Department of Obstetrics and GObstetrics and Gynecology.
Because of modern obstetrics.
You are confusing certified nurse midwives, who have nursing degrees and usually an advanced degree with a focus on obstetrics, with lay midwives, whose level of regulation varies by state, but they mostly operate in a legal grey zone where they aren't regulated because they specifically aren't medical professionals, but then they promote themselves as having the training to handle just about anything.
• Roger Pedersen, a noted professor of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive sciences, announced he was leaving his laboratory at the University of California at San Francisco and moving to Cambridge University because British laws do not restrict work on embryonic stem cells.
Co-author Dr. Susan Cu - Uvin, professor of public health and of obstetrics and gynecology at Brown, said women with HIV are especially susceptible to cervical cancer from HPV because their weakened immune systems are less able to clear the virus.
«It's important that we gain a better understanding of how these signals interact and work in normal full - term pregnancies because it can provide insights into how and why these signals activate too early and trigger the labor and delivery process prematurely,» said lead author and UTMB assistant professor in the department of obstetrics and gynecology, Ramkumar Menon.
«We were interested in this study because we believe this data provides a valuable window into the problems with the U.S. system of obstetric care delivery,» said Amirhossein Moaddab, M.D., with the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Baylor College of Medicine and the presenter of the study at the SMFM annual meeting.
«This research is important because extended use of these devices will reduce cost to both the individual and insurer and improve convenience for women, who can delay removal and re-insertion,» said first author Colleen McNicholas, DO, assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology.
Tamara Minko, professor in the Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy, and Lorna Rodriguez, professor of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sciences at Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, say because there is not a good screening method for ovarian cancer, most women with the disease are not diagnosed until after it has metastasized to other organs and surgery and chemotherapy are not as effective.
Another explanation: «Postmenopausal women may use less protection because they're no longer worried about getting pregnant,» says Paula Castaño, MD, assistant clinical professor of obstetrics and gynecology at New York — Presbyterian Hospital / Columbia University Medical Center.
«The test for hepatitis C virus is usually not done until 18 months of age, because it can be falsely positive before then,» explained Chappell, an assistant professor of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive sciences.
«It's not that birth control pills aren't effective, because they are — when they're used perfectly,» says Jeffery Peipert, M.D., a study author and professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Washington University Medical School, in St. Louis.
Vaginal seeding is in the news right now because a new report published in BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology looked into the practice (which appears to be more popular in Europe than in the United States) and found no evidence of any benefit.
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