Sentences with phrase «leaving vulnerable babies»

Demand for donor milk far outstrips our supplies, leaving vulnerable babies without access to donor milk.

Not exact matches

Leaving a baby who seems amazingly vulnerable and fragile in the care of someone else can be very difficult.
Many physicians do not properly assess for tongue or lip - tie or recognize their impact on the breastfeeding relationship, leaving babies vulnerable to early weaning.
In particular an open pump system can leave you and baby vulnerable to viruses such a HIV, cytomegalovirus (CMV), HTLV - I or herpes due to contaminated parts.
For the baby, it's safer to let mom eat and hurry things along rather than sap her energy and leave her vulnerable to fatigue.
Even worse, it can lead to postpartum depression once baby has arrived, which could leave you and your baby unsafe and vulnerable.
During emergency situations, disease and death rates among babies and children are higher than for any other age group; and the younger the child, the higher the risk, leaving babies under six months most vulnerable.
Babies and toddlers are vulnerable people and we didn't survive this long as a species by putting them in a separate cave and leaving them there for 8 - 12 hours at a time.
Nevertheless, the researchers suggest that maternal ill health during pregnancy might compromise fetal health by disrupting normal physiological processes, potentially leaving the developing baby vulnerable to subsequent heart disease.
«This all is just much more pronounced with medically vulnerable babies leaving the NICU and going home with mom and dad.»
«The 10 million elephants of a century ago have dropped to less than 300,000,» she says, in large part because poachers kill adults for their tusks, leaving behind vulnerable babies.
In short time, the immunity the colostrum provides weakens; leaving the babies vulnerable to illness.
You can not attack while holding the baby, but humans will pick up infants left on the ground making them vulnerable.
Measuring up at nearly 5 feet tall, and native to the East African White Nile marshes, the shoebill has a wingspan of as much as 10 feet — and a reputation for violent nocturnal feedings of fish, turtles, baby birds, and small crocodiles; however, with as few as 5,000 left in the world, the IUCN Red List deemed it Vulnerable.
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