Sentences with phrase «where home and hospital»

Not exact matches

Liu and his partners, like most Canadian companies operating in the health - care space, see their home country as a big opportunity, but they also have eyes on the broader U.S. market, where the pressure for hospitals to smarten up is even greater.
Telemedicine keeps the sickest patients at home, and out of the hospital, where there is greater risk of infection.
She plans to run her business from home and personally market her books in hospitals, day - care centers, schools, libraries and bookstores, where she will read her stories to children and sell the books to parents.
The nonprofit 16 - room house, located near the Salah Foundation Children's Hospital, is a temporary home where ill children and their families...
Among them are the rights to: bullet joint parenting; bullet joint adoption; bullet joint foster care, custody, and visitation (including non-biological parents); bullet status as next - of - kin for hospital visits and medical decisions where one partner is too ill to be competent; bullet joint insurance policies for home, auto and health; bullet dissolution and divorce protections such as community property and child support; bullet immigration and residency for partners from other countries; bullet inheritance automatically in the absence of a will; bullet joint leases with automatic renewal rights in the event one partner dies or leaves the house or apartment; bullet inheritance of jointly - owned real and personal property through the right of survivorship (which avoids the time and expense and taxes in probate); bullet benefits such as annuities, pension plans, Social Security, and Medicare; bullet spousal exemptions to property tax increases upon the death of one partner who is a co-owner of the home; bullet veterans» discounts on medical care, education, and home loans; joint filing of tax returns; bullet joint filing of customs claims when traveling; bullet wrongful death benefits for a surviving partner and children; bullet bereavement or sick leave to care for a partner or child; bullet decision - making power with respect to whether a deceased partner will be cremated or not and where to bury him or her; bullet crime victims» recovery benefits; bullet loss of consortium tort benefits; bullet domestic violence protection orders; bullet judicial protections and evidentiary immunity; bullet and more...
Halfway houses (where small groups of patients who are not ready to return to their homes live together and receive help in social rehabilitation), day hospitals, foster home services, rehabilitation centers, and ex-patient clubs are still in short supply in all parts of our country.
He finds himself spiritually at home in the hospital ward for the insane, where he and his fellow inmates are free to acknowledge the misery which most of us suppress.
Day care centers, night hospitals, walk - in clinics (where persons in crisis can go for help without appointments), halfway houses, and foster home programs for recovering mental patients who can not return to their families are examples of the types of new facilities that are beginning to appear in various parts of the country,
I remember mama and her brother coming home early one evening from the hospital where daddy had lay dying.
They tell me to expect between 2 and 3 nights in hospital then back home but in a recovery state where I'll not be able to do much... they obviously don't know me very well.
Beset by breathing difficulties caused by a strep infection that made his tonsils and adenoids swell, the kid was confined to an oxygen tent inside a hospital room in Whitefish, Mont., where Drew and John and the rest of the Bledsoe family (wife Maura and sons Stuart and Henry) make their off - season home.
I live in a state where I can not have a home birth unless it is unattended and I live more than an hour away from a hospital and 1 / 2hour from a town.
After two magical days in the hospital where he slept like an angel for 5 and 6 - hour stretches, I quickly became frustrated to bring him home and find he was eating every 30 min to an hour, and would not nap more than 15 min to an hour.
You'll also learn where to park your car when you get to the hospital, how to get through labor, and how to care for your baby and your partner when you get home from the hospital.
One good thing to do is know which hospital you would plan to go to in a transfer, and make sure you know the route there from your home as well as where to park and where to enter the hospital during both daytime and nighttime hours.
A private effort, the Idaho Perinatal Project run by St. Luke's, documented 138 instances between 2005 and 2011 where mothers who planned a home birth were transported to a hospital.
This class is specifically designed and taught for any setting where babies are born, including hospital, birth centers and home births.
We might also find a number of babies who had lethal congenital anomalies, who would not have survived no matter where they were born or who attended the birth; there may be important differences between home and hospital populations with regard to whether these anomalies were detected prenatally and whether parents changed their birth plans because of it.
My wife and I had our first 2 in a hospital and it almost killed them because of the drugs they forced on my wife the last 2 were born at home in a pool the 1st homebirth we had a midwife present the 2nd one the midwife was an hour and a half late so I delivered our daughter by myself it was awsome and now my wife is PG with our 5th baby we have the same midwife who was late to our last birth and we already know she is not going to be here ontime mostly because she lives 2 hours away from where we live and we are ok with this.
My son was born 7 lbs 1oz, he lost more than 10 % of his birth weight and they still released him from the hospital, I gave him a bath the next day by this point 4 days old, he didn't wake up, took him right to another hospital where the admitted him and put him on an IV and under the lights, they had me pumping every hour producing a max of 5 ml a time, finally they discovered I had insufficient milk glands, I was not allowed to have a bottle until I got home.
I think the folks posting here should travel to a Third World country where home birth is the norm — and where people are clamoring for decent hospitals and trained obstetricians to save them from the horror of dead babies and dead mothers.
I am planning a home birth so if I do end up in hospital its because I absolutely have to be there or its an emergency situation where a C - section is called for I going to be meeting those people pretty much for the first time [laughs] and I don't know what they are, how receptive they would to something like this, so you know there are certain things you think might be easier to ask for verses asking of all of this things, perhaps you know, maybe it doesn't have to be all or nothing but I don't know are there certain things that you think might be good for me to ask for in lieu of asking for everything.
So let's meet the moms that are joining our conversation today, ladies, tell us a little bit about yourself, your family, and also let us know where your kids were born, as far as, you know, were they all born in hospitals, did anyone do any home birth, what about birthing centers and all that good stuff?
If you've had a baby, and weren't lucky enough to wear your pre-pregnancy jeans home from the hospital, you know about that post-baby belly issue - where you can't suck it in or make it appear flat no matter what you do.
Her «Help» when I came home from hospital was to take the baby and give it water during the night, which was something i would never have done during later births, where I was one of the people in the maternity ward who always asked to be woken if baby cried!
I've had my last 3 babies at home with a midwife, and I can tell you that where I live in Florida it would've cost over $ 9,000 - 11,000 for the OB visits and a hospital birth (not including an epidural, another $ 1200 - 1500 or it were C - section that would've been thousands more).
In Canada where I am, they are affiliated with the hospitals and often work very closely with OBs, so arrangements are made for transfer if you choose a home birth.
No matter how many kids you babysat as a teen, how many baby books you read in preparation for parenthood, or how much you wanted to have a baby, when you strap your baby into their car seat and head home from the hospital there's inevitably a moment where you're shocked that you've been entrusted to the total care of another human being.
Or how maybe consulting 3 different lactation consultants and home plus two at the hospital where I delivered wasn't enough.
Where you've gone wrong is in claiming that home birth is no more risky to the baby's life and brain function than hospital birth is.
Everybody should have the best information available about birthing at home AND in hospitals so that each family can make their own decision about where to give birth.
I live in an area where there actually are home birth CNMs with hospital privileges and practice agreements with OBs.
AIMSI campaigns on the grounds that birth choice is a basic human right as declared at the International Conference of Human Rights and Childbirth, «It is a fundamental human right for women to choose the circumstances in which they give birth, with whom and where, including a choice between hospital and home birth» and Article 8, European Court of Human Rights
Ina May Gaskin's C - section statistics over 40 years: 1.7 % American hospital C - section statistics: 32 % not including routine episiotomy and so on... Oh yes, I know who I would trust for my child's birth... And if the price of an intact body and a peaceful birth was «gentle stimulation» I would accept it with no hesitation... Of course I live in France where obstetric violence is the norm and home birth nearly considered as criminal by the establishment, but where puritanism is long gone (thank God)... You may remove this post as you did for my previous one... It's OK we've got lots of you this side of the Atlantic telling us what's good or bad for us and we trust them less and leand so on... Oh yes, I know who I would trust for my child's birth... And if the price of an intact body and a peaceful birth was «gentle stimulation» I would accept it with no hesitation... Of course I live in France where obstetric violence is the norm and home birth nearly considered as criminal by the establishment, but where puritanism is long gone (thank God)... You may remove this post as you did for my previous one... It's OK we've got lots of you this side of the Atlantic telling us what's good or bad for us and we trust them less and leAnd if the price of an intact body and a peaceful birth was «gentle stimulation» I would accept it with no hesitation... Of course I live in France where obstetric violence is the norm and home birth nearly considered as criminal by the establishment, but where puritanism is long gone (thank God)... You may remove this post as you did for my previous one... It's OK we've got lots of you this side of the Atlantic telling us what's good or bad for us and we trust them less and leand a peaceful birth was «gentle stimulation» I would accept it with no hesitation... Of course I live in France where obstetric violence is the norm and home birth nearly considered as criminal by the establishment, but where puritanism is long gone (thank God)... You may remove this post as you did for my previous one... It's OK we've got lots of you this side of the Atlantic telling us what's good or bad for us and we trust them less and leand home birth nearly considered as criminal by the establishment, but where puritanism is long gone (thank God)... You may remove this post as you did for my previous one... It's OK we've got lots of you this side of the Atlantic telling us what's good or bad for us and we trust them less and leand we trust them less and leand less.
I would love to see a system here similar to Canada, where the midwifery training includes cross-training in home, birth center, and hospital settings, allowing midwives to care for women in all locales.
We believe all women have the choice to birth where they feel safest and will be most supported to welcome their baby, whether this be a hospital, birth center, or at home.
All three hospitals offer Early Transfer home where the woman leaves hsopital after 6 - 24 hours and is cared for at home
And in Canada, where it appears safest of all, several studies have demonstrated that in carefully selected populations, there is no difference between the number of babies who die at home or in the hospital.
Keep in mind that most reports that CPM / lay midwives / direct entry midwives use to try and legitimize their practices here are compiled from data that uses numbers from midwives in places like Canada, Australia, the UK and New Zealand, where the standard education and training is university level and the midwives are independent practitioners and able to attend women in hospitals as well as at home.
I've done many home and hospital visits where clients tell me, «I never had these issues with my previous breastfeeding experiences, this baby is so different!»
In a previous study where we explored women's preferences for aspects of intrapartum care regarding planned place of birth we reported that women with a preference for a hospital birth — both midwife - led and obstetrician - led — found the possibility of pain relief treatment much more important compared to women with a preference for a home birth [18].
Although not directly comparable, our findings are in broad agreement with those from routine data in Scotland that have indicated a positive association between Baby Friendly accreditation, but not certification, and breastfeeding at 1 week of age.17 Our findings reinforce those of Coutinho and colleagues who reported that high exclusive breastfeeding rates achieved in Brazilian hospitals implementing staff training with the course content of the Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative were short - lived and not sustained at home unless implemented in combination with post-natal home visits.35 Similarly in Italy, training of staff with an adapted version of the Baby Friendly course content resulted in high breastfeeding rates at discharge, with a rapid decrease in the days after leaving hospital.36 In contrast, a cluster randomized trial in Belarus (PROBIT) found an association between an intervention modelled on the Baby Friendly Initiative with an increased duration of breastfeeding37 an association also reported from an observational study in Germany.38 Mothers in Belarus stay in hospital post-partum for 6 — 7 days, and in Germany for 5 days, with post-natal support likely to be particularly important in countries where mothers stay in the hospital for a shorter time, with early discharge likely to limit the influence of a hospital - based interHospital Initiative were short - lived and not sustained at home unless implemented in combination with post-natal home visits.35 Similarly in Italy, training of staff with an adapted version of the Baby Friendly course content resulted in high breastfeeding rates at discharge, with a rapid decrease in the days after leaving hospital.36 In contrast, a cluster randomized trial in Belarus (PROBIT) found an association between an intervention modelled on the Baby Friendly Initiative with an increased duration of breastfeeding37 an association also reported from an observational study in Germany.38 Mothers in Belarus stay in hospital post-partum for 6 — 7 days, and in Germany for 5 days, with post-natal support likely to be particularly important in countries where mothers stay in the hospital for a shorter time, with early discharge likely to limit the influence of a hospital - based interhospital.36 In contrast, a cluster randomized trial in Belarus (PROBIT) found an association between an intervention modelled on the Baby Friendly Initiative with an increased duration of breastfeeding37 an association also reported from an observational study in Germany.38 Mothers in Belarus stay in hospital post-partum for 6 — 7 days, and in Germany for 5 days, with post-natal support likely to be particularly important in countries where mothers stay in the hospital for a shorter time, with early discharge likely to limit the influence of a hospital - based interhospital post-partum for 6 — 7 days, and in Germany for 5 days, with post-natal support likely to be particularly important in countries where mothers stay in the hospital for a shorter time, with early discharge likely to limit the influence of a hospital - based interhospital for a shorter time, with early discharge likely to limit the influence of a hospital - based interhospital - based intervention.
We also excluded those with no missing breastfeeding data (3), or who were born outside the UK (25), or who moved UK country between birth and 9 months (144), or were delivered at home (346) or on the way to hospital (36), or for whom hospital of birth was missing or not identified (95) or were delivered in units where the Baby Friendly Accreditation Award had been removed (142).
As a Certified Nurse Midwife, I started working in a hospital based practice, and then opened my own home birth midwifery and gynecology practice - where I've learned so much from helping to bring over 1000 new babies into this world.
When studies were done to find out the actual causes of marasmus and where and why it happened, it was actually found to occur «quite often among babies in the «best» homes, hospitals, and institutions and among babies receiving the «best and most careful attention.
I live in a country where home birth is the standard and going to a hospital (with your personal midwife) is considered abnormal.
And Watterberg points out that in British Columbia, where midwives routinely offer either home or hospital delivery, studies have revealed no difference in infant mortality.
It was traumatic because, had I not chosen to have the care of an obstetrician and go for a hospital birth, had I bought into this home birth culture that is huge in the city where I live, my son would likely not be here today or we'd have been left with a child with severe brain or neurological damage.
I'm planning to go all natural, I really wanted a home birth, but we live on a smaller rural island quite a distance from a hospital and midwives will not attend births where we live.
When we have moms who are going home from the hospital and they're stepping right back into their lives, he said that that's kind of ridiculous, when you look into some of these other cultures where mothers are pretty much sort of isolated and cared for anywhere from 6 weeks to 3 months after the baby is born.
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