Sentences with phrase «babies die too»

Unfortunately, the truth is that healthy babies die too.
Even in 2015 women all over the world in 3rd world counties DIE in birth and their babies DIE too.
Their baby died too.
This same fear is echoed for those that don't have a living child, but who's first baby died too soon.
Oh, and her baby died too.
i was married i lost my wife when she was about giving birth to my second child she died and the baby died too

Not exact matches

«The day that my baby died I realised that I had died, too
Even babies that die at infancy, it's too late for them.
The kind of broke when businesses and economies slump, dragging incomes down with them, when babies are born without insurance and ginormous hospital bills go unpaid for far too long and interest heaps on, when businesses die and new jobs can't be found, when mortgages can only be covered by the good grace of family members, and when food is bought on credit or gift cards from kind friends.
I don't think it's wise to say that your relative's baby would have died at home too because that certainly may not be the case.
As many have stated, babies (and mothers) die in the hospital, too.
You want this baby so much, but at the same time you are scared to death to attach because you fear this baby might die too.
Babies have died or suffered brain damage / kidney failure from too much sodium.
First of all, those deaths could have been something like Trisomy 13 or 18, where the babies can't survive outside of the womb, and no doctor can save them — meaning they would've died at the hospital, too.
My healthy baby died because the midwife at the birth center did not pick up the falling heart rate and by the time I was blue - lighted to a hospital, it was too late to resuscitate my boy.
She'll probably be reminded that babies die in the hospital, too, and that any unpleasantness she or her baby are experiencing in the hospital are BECAUSE it's the hospital.
You missed the mother saying (or hearing) she was told «it wasn't your fault, sometimes babies just die, in hospitals too» which was in the original article.
Keep quiet and hope not too many babies get sick or die so you will be forced to pull the plug on one of the most lucrative and ubiquitous products available in the world, which will destroy several major corporations and leave tens of millions of women with no safe or cheap alternative.
«Some babies are too weak to grow properly, so they die in their mother's body and the pregnancy ends before the baby can be born.
1 2 Before the invention of forceps, men had been involved only in difficult deliveries, using destructive instruments with the result that babies were invariably not born alive and the mother too would often die.
Let's not sugar coat reality too much by saying if a baby dies in hospital it's never the OB or nurse or surgeon's fault.
I need to consult the sidebar, but I do believe with the «babies die in hospitals too
Sure, babies are dying, but the overall number is low (8 last year IIRC) enough, and the moms «made the choice to HB», so the public just doesn't care (I say ONE baby loss is too many!).
Yes and babies die in the hospital, too.
I would have thought she'd go with the more tried and true «babies die in hospital too» especially as she could have tried to claim that most of the Oregon babies died in hospital and that it was therefore unfair to blame intended OOH for their demise Shows home birth advocates are getting desperate if they are willing to slice and dice the data in completely nonsensical ways to still try and make their point that OOH birth is safe.
I think no matter how many babies die or how they die, it's too many, but let» t not pretend that midwives are the only ones who make mistakes.
The problem there is that babies who are transferred too late due to the incompetence of a homebirth midwife or merely being too far away and then die in the hospital (most certainly as a result of the homebirth) are counted as hospital deaths and therefore the number is far too low.
I will now translate «but babies die in hospitals too» as «So I effed up.
«Babies die in hospitals, too
So, yes, babies die in hospital too — but they die at a much higher rate at home.
In the wake of the Karen Carr homebirth debacle, homebirth advocates have trotted out a classic homebirth lie: «Babies die in the hospital, too
I, personally, received too many books about babies dying.
Perinatal and neonatal are the time periods when babies killed by labor and delivery accidents generally die (usually perinatal and early neonatal, but sometimes late neonatal too).
It's true that babies die in the hospital too.
I care about babies who die at homebirth, and the regular readers of this blog do, too.
Babies who don't get their heads crushed die, too.
Otherwise healthy babies do not die in the hospital, too.
Perhaps it will eventually dawn on Bielanko that women and babies were dying in droves at those homebirths, but that's probably too much to hope for.
I know far too many babies that have died as a result of interventions.
If her baby died of cardiac arrest it could have done so in the hospital too.
Babies and mothers DO die at hospitals and birthing centers too — sometimes even deaths that were preventable if different choices had been made.
The problem is that the lay midwives who generally attend OOH births tend to object to such analysis (using such slogans as «babies die in hospitals, too») and, in fact, to any regulations whatsoever.
So, MANA, what you're willing to say is that the extra babies per thousand who die because they were born too far from medical care don't matter.
Will the numbers be enough of a wake up call, or are they still going to insist that «babies die in hospitals too»?
Now, in December 2011, my due date was still three months away, and I knew too much about pregnancy and babies dying to let my guard down.
Some pregnancies are too short and the baby dies; some pregnancies are too long and the baby dies.
Her excuse of «babies just die, they die in hospital too» makes me very angry.
Maybe it's because we are a bit further from our loss, a little less desperate to have it acknowledged, more quietly accepting of our pain, or that progress feels too slow and you find yourself wondering «why didn't this happen before my baby died» or perhaps you are crushed by the overwhelming responsibility an awareness week gives you.
And also, Hannah Dahlen is an apologist for the murderous midwife Lisa Barrett, and claims that babies died not because Lisa Barrett was a dangerous halfwit with no skill and less insight, but because midwives were facing too much regulation and oversight.
When someone tells you your baby has died, you want to die too.
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