«A high intake of certain dietary fats associated with
lower live birth rates in IVF.»
«More specifically, we found that obese recipients of eggs from normal weight donors had a 23 % lower implantation rate than normal weight recipients, 19 % lower clinical pregnancy rate, and 27 %
lower live birth rate.»
Compared to using fresh oocytes (eggs) for in vitro fertilization, use of cryopreserved (frozen) donor oocytes in 2013 was associated with
lower live birth rates, according to a study in the August 11 issue of JAMA.
The authors write that the reasons for
lower live birth rates with use of cryopreserved oocytes remain to be established.
They add that the added convenience and lower cycle costs with use of cryopreserved oocytes must be balanced against
the lower live birth rates.
This follows a review and meta - analysis published today (Wednesday) in Human Reproduction one of the world's leading reproductive medicine journals, that shows a strong link between low vitamin D concentrations in women and
lower live birth rates after ART compared to women who have the right amount of vitamin D in their bodies.
Not exact matches
But those numbers reflect
life expectancy at
birth and are dragged
lower by people who die young.
In Italy, however, despite facing the same problem of a declining population — in 2014, only 509,000
live births were recorded, the
lowest number since the unification of Italy in 1861, according to the country's statistics agency, ISTAT — the broader economic backdrop is the source of reluctance.
(For example, Optiva ads that ran in national consumer magazines claimed that using the competing Braun product wouldn't prevent the growth of bacteria that might contribute to heart disease, stroke,
low birth weight, and other
life - threatening conditions.)
The result is a shortened
life expectancy,
lower birth rate, depression.
Low fertility, the one - child policy and the cost of raising children in a system without adequate maternity facilities have all caused the
birth rate to fall just as more old people are
living longer.
, and by working to
lower the occurrence of unwanted pregnancies in the first place — which means better sexual health education in schools, funding for
birth control measures and education about using that
birth control, promoting research into methods of safe male
birth control, and creating an environment where the women in your
life can come to you to discuss safe sexual choices.
And just so you know I 100 % believe adoption is a phenomenal choice, but we aren't just talking about abortions performed as a terrible form of after the fact
birth control... We are talking about the abortions performed due to health risks that could cause a severely
low quality of
life as well.
While it is true that 80 to 90 per cent of all
births out of wedlock are to black teen - agers, and that half of all black children
live in female - headed families, it is also the case that black males form the largest unemployed group in the total population, and are the
lowest - paid of employed males.
Since the United States is a rich, powerful, humanitarian country, it might seem that the rate of 20 deaths per 1,000
live births were a threshold that could not be
lowered.
Influenced by
lowering birth rates and increasing
life expectancy, all major European countries such as the UK, France, Germany, Spain and Italy have more than 16 % of population who are aged above 65 years in 2012.
The programme is designed for
low - income mothers who have had no previous
live births and starts in the second trimester of pregnancy.
So, in other words, like if you
live with somebody who's smoking in front of you all the time and during your pregnancy, that could potentially lead to
low birth weight baby or smaller baby.
I didn't know anything about having a
low milk supply, being a working mom on top of caring for a newborn, having D - MER, and the millions of other things that would affect my
life after giving
birth to another human, breastfeeding, and going back to work.
This year's event will help to benefit Cradles to Crayons, a nonprofit organization that equips children from
birth through age 12
living in homeless or
low - income situations with the essential items they need to thrive.
While not everyone will have access to a
birth center or a home
birth because of where you
live or because of medical conditions, these are potentially safe options for
low - risk women with qualified providers.
For example, if we look at deaths per 1000
live births, Netherlands has a much
lower rate than the U.S..
Especially with planned cesarean, some babies will inadvertently be delivered prematurely.1 Babies born even slightly before they are ready may experience breathing and breastfeeding problems.21 One to two babies per 100 will be cut during the surgery.33 Studies comparing elective cesarean section or cesarean section for reasons unrelated to the baby with vaginal
birth find that babies are 50 % more likely to have
low Apgar scores, 5 times more likely to require assistance with breathing, and 5 times more likely to be admitted to intermediate or intensive care.4 Babies born after elective cesarean section are more than four times as likely to develop persistent pulmonary hypertension compared with babies born vaginally.17 Persistent pulmonary hypertension is
life threatening.
Donor milk provides
life - saving nutrients to vulnerable newborns and reduces the rate of necrotizing enterocolitis, a deadly intestinal infection that afflicts
low birth weight infants.
Based on those charts you could hypothesize that a c - section rate between 22 - 30 % is the «sweet spot» as it correlates with the
lowest rates of death per 1000
live births.
Either way, being a healthy 27 - year - old, with a
low risk pregnancy, I couldn't understand why I
lived in this amazing city, with access to just about everything else, except a variety of
birth options.
The risk of death to a newborn delivered vaginally to a
low - risk woman is only 0.62 per 1,000
live births.
Urban and
lower class women were driven to hospitals to give
birth because dirty and crowded
living conditions made home
births more difficult.
The risk of death to a newborn delivered by C - section to a
low - risk woman is 1.77 deaths to 1,000
live births.
Most
low risk babies that are stillborn or die at
birth, die as a result of congenital defects incompatible with
life or unexplained stillbirths and would die no matter where the
birth takes place.
Shoulder Dystocia: Big shoulders getting stuck after the head is out occurs in 1/200
births and is the most
life threatening event of
low risk
birth.
When this 20 % risk of death is compared to the 0.02 % rate of cord prolapse during labor at homebirth that might have a better outcome if it happened in hospital, this means that a
low risk woman has a 1000 times higher chance of having a
life threatening complication either to her
life or her fetus / newborns
life at planned hospital
birth, than if she plans to have an attended homebirth with a well - trained practitioner.
If she is only attending a few
births and all
low risk
births she may be certified in many things but doesn't get to run drills (hospitals run shoulder dystocia drills) and probably has never used to skills in real
life.
Meaning, for every 10,000
births of
low risk women, there are 6 - 7 babies that die in the USA during planned, midwife - attended home
births that would have
lived if the mothers were giving
birth at home in the Netherlands.
In fact, if one considered just three factors (maternal education, maternal prenatal alcohol or tobacco, and marital status) one could predict to a high degree postneonatal mortality: children born to unmarried women with
lower education and evidence of prenatal drug use had a postneonatal mortality of about 30 per 1000
live births (similar to Ivory Coast); children born to women with none of these risk factors had a postneonatal mortality of about 2 per 1000
live births (similar to Norway); that is, children in this latter category almost never die despite evidence from PRAMS surveys that they are as likely to co-sleep with their parents.
It can cause premature
births,
low birth weights, and in rare cases, developmental problems later in
life.
Here are the mortality rates (excluding lethal anomalies) for babies born to
low risk women that were confirmed to be alive at the start of labor but die either during
birth (intrapartum) or in the first week of
life (early neonatal):
Babies who are born at less than 36 weeks or who have a
birth weight less than 2.5 kg (5.5 lbs) require extra vitamins during their first year of
life because the stores of vitamins in their bodies are
low.
Blood pressure support in the very
low birth weight infant during the first week of
life.
Future research should also attempt to establish whether or not these results also apply to more
life - threatening categories of PPH (e.g. > 1,500 ml of blood lost), and whether the
lower incidence of PPH among planned home
births translates to fewer cases of PPH - related severe morbidity.
In
low - income countries, rates of between nine and 18 per 1000
live births have also been reported (Smits 2011).
It saves
lives under extreme conditions: from
low birth weight neonates in incubators to elderly people in nursing homes; in conditions of stress in refugee camps and on mountain sides; in people with AIDS; and in children with severe dehydration when intravenous fluids are unavailable.
A friend with a history of
low progesterone (with 1 miscarriage and 1 progesterone supported
birth) become pregnant while
living in Norway and could not get to see an OB or even a midwife to get a prescription for the hormone.
lower risk of ovarian cancer, as does having used
birth control at any point in your
life.
This means for every 10,000 babies born to
low risk moms at home with a CPM, 7 babies will die that would have
lived had the mother been under the care of a CNM at a
birth center.
The combined incidence of serious infection, the intestinal disease necrotizing enterocolitis and death was similar in very
low -
birth - weight infants who received either pasteurized donor milk or preterm formula supplementation during their first 10 days of
life when their own mother's milk was not sufficiently available, according to an article published online by JAMA Pediatrics.
If infants with classic galactosemia are not treated promptly with a
low - galactose diet,
life - threatening complications appear within a few days after
birth.
Low - risk pregnancy and
birth should be treated as a normal
life event and not as a sickness or trauma.
For example, a woman with PCOS being treated with Clomid at age 23 doesn't have the same
live birth success rate as a 42 - year - old woman with
low ovarian reserves.
The intrapartum and neonatal mortality among women considered at
low risk at start of labour, excluding deaths concerning
life threatening congenital anomalies, was 1.7 deaths per 1000 planned home
births, similar to risks in other studies of
low risk home and hospital
births in North America.