Sentences with phrase «not obstetrics»

However, my recommendation would be worthless since my specialty is neurology, not obstetrics or physical medicine.
Last time I checked, Meredith Viera isn't a doctor and Nancy Snyderman specializes in head and neck cancer, not obstetrics (not that she writes the story, but you know what I mean).

Not exact matches

INSIDER spoke with Dr. Mary Jane Minkin, a clinical professor in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences at the Yale University School of Medicine to find out what you should (and shouldn't) believe about IUDs.
Dr. Lauren Streicher, associate clinical professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Northwestern University's medical school, told INSIDER unequivocally that IUDs do not cause mental health issues.
Aparna Sridhar, a clinical professor in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of California Los Angeles, says that period - tracking apps are great ways for women to understand their cycles better, but the information aggregated by them may not be 100 % accurate.
The contrast with obstetrics could not be more glaring.
Reading her tweets gives us a great deal on insight into why she is constantly (and falsely) claiming that modern obstetrics is not evidence based.
My doctor — the head of obstetrics at that hospital — was not pleased when I told him that.
Even though I am not a researcher or medical professional and the peer - reviewed study is to appear in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, I thought the results were a scare tactic.
No, not until I went to PLIDA [Pregnancy Loss and Infant Death Alliance conference] and I was talking to Lindsey Wimmer from Star Legacy and she put me in touch with Alex Heazell [Senior Clinical Lecturer in Obstetrics and Clinical Director of the Tommy's Stillbirth Research Centre, University of Manchester UK].
So, I guess even modern obstetrics and being in a hospital can't guarantee bad things won't happen.
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 long ago, the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology of the University of Wuerzburg conducted a five - year study that compared the pregnancy outcomes of older women with their younger counterparts.
This work was not done under the auspices of the Public Health Agency of Canada or the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics and the views expressed do not necessarily represent those of these agencies.
The graph above is not an indictment of obstetrics.
That isn't a record, but I can't believe anyone can simply repeat a bunch of garbage and think it makes them sound even remotely like they know something about obstetrics.
People go into obstetrics because they care about womens reproductive health, not to get rich.
ROTHMANAnd I also just want to say that it is really great to have physicians like Dr. Downing, who understand the midwifery model, understand our scope of practice and where it intersects with obstetrics, so that when we do have something going on at a homebirth where we're not sure things are going well and we were starting to feel like maybe we need to access medical technology, that we have people like Dr. Downing that we can call and say, here's what's going on, we're coming in, and that we know that we and our clients will be received with compassion and respect and understanding of what has come before, so that we never have to hesitate to bring someone in knowing that they're gonna get that good care.
I've been working in Obstetrics for a long time and I can tell you we don't «push interventions» at least not in my 10 + years experience.
It's not hard to keep up with obstetrics even if a doctor is no longer practicing.
You don't see the tremendous risk that birth still carries BECAUSE of modern obstetrics and how safe it has become.
PFC's fertility specialists only treat fertility patients and do not do any routine obstetrics (other than caring for our patients in the first 9 weeks) or gynecology.
Contributor Deena Blumenfeld takes a field trip to a history museum that fills the cup of those that love medical anthropology and the lore of the practice of midwifery and obstetrics in the recent (and not so recent) past.
Alison Stuebe, M.D., a mother of three and an assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the UNC School of Medicine, wrote yesterday in the North Carolina's News and Observer that we should take care of mothers not only on Mothers» Day, but every single day of the year.
The Obstetrics and Gynecology review also shed light on a prevalent but mistaken public perception — that ««if breast is best» then formula is implicitly «good» or «normal»» and that «lactation is viewed as a bonus, like a multivitamin, that was helpful but not essential for infant health.»
A 2009 review in Obstetrics and Gynecology entitled «The Risks of Not Breastfeeding for Mothers and Infants» stated that:
Polly Block says in «Polly's Birth Book, Obstetrics for the Home»: «The law should not be used as a political device to deny a couple a safe alternative in the setting of their choice... as long as they pursue their way of life without criminal intent or action....
«Among women who intended to birth at home with midwives in Ontario, the risk of stillbirth, neonatal death or serious neonatal morbidity was low and did not differ from midwifery clients who chose hospital birth,» writes Dr. Eileen Hutton, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology and the Midwifery Education Program, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, with coauthors.
«It actually doesn't happen that much if you give your patients good instruction about when to come in,» said Lu, who is an associate professor of obstetrics, gynecology and public health at the University of California Los Angeles.
Inclusion criteria: nulliparous pregnant women, 18 years or older, 8 - 28 weeks gestational age, who «had not yet selected a paediatrician or wanted their infant to receive paediatric care at the hospital - based paediatric clinic were recruited from the hospital - based obstetrics clinic».
Placenta trees haven't caught on the way placenta pills have, but according to Dr. Stacy Zamudio, a senior scientist and Hackensack Universal Medical Center's Director of Research, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, burial of the placenta is actually «the most common practice» and «goes back to medieval times.»
Obstetrics is not any different.
Your midwife is just not as good at the live, non-disabled baby thing as your local obstetrics ward is.
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.
Thank God you don't practice Obstetrics anymore.
Obstetrics needs to do better and provide an experience that those who would choose to birth at home will embrace... but delivering at home is not the answer the to the problem.
So we're left with not much choice but to conclude you did not understand the research or didn't read it, since people who understand statistics, researching, and the field of obstetrics have come to vastly different conclusions than you.
«If you eat a balanced diet and are not iron deficient, it is not clear that prenatal vitamins result in any health benefits during pregnancy,» says Charles Lockwood, MD, chief of obstetrics and gynecology at Yale - New Haven Hospital.
«I don't think we should go through the process of counseling and offering out - of - hospital birth to every person who comes to our practice,» said Aaron Caughey, chair of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Oregon Health and Science University and a co-author of the study.
The leveled care system that is currently in place, in which professionals in midwifery and obstetrics work autonomously, does not fully meet the needs of pregnant women, especially women with an accumulation of non-medical risk factors.
They don't realize that this is product of modern obstetrics.
Luckily, professor of clinical obstetrics and gynecology at Columbia University Medical Center Dr. Janet Choi told The Bump that when flu or cold meds are used short - term, there's not any evidence that any of the meds will have a «profound impact on conception.»
American obstetrics is so profit orientated that it is willing to use misquoted newspaper articles as ammunition and pretend that 277 women don't die in the US annually from cesarean surgery at planned hospital births.
However, as a professor of obstetrics and the leading protagonist for ultrasound, it is astonishing that he seems not to have considered the following studies.
Referring to Wagner as a perinatologist is misleading because it makes people think he has an obstetrics background, which he doesn't.
You obviously don't work in obstetrics.
While not common, it's not unheard of for babies to be born with fully formed teeth, said Dr. Laura Corio, a clinical professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City.
They report in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology that placement of a cervical pessary did not reduce spontaneous preterm births or reduce neonatal complications.
«More often than not, the risk of the medication is less than the risk of the uncontrolled disorder,» said senior author Dr. Katherine Wisner, the Norman and Helen Asher Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and Obstetrics and Gynecology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and a Northwestern Medicine psychiatrist.
«Our discovery of these mutations is a first step in developing a genetics - based system for classifying endometriosis so that clinicians can sort out which forms of the disorder may need more aggressive treatment and which may not,» says Ie - Ming Shih, M.D., Ph.D., the Richard W. TeLinde Distinguished Professor in the Department of Gynecology & Obstetrics at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and co-director of the Breast and Ovarian Cancer Program at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center.
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