Babies

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences

Kinds of Babies

  • breastfed baby
  • female baby
  • first baby
  • healthy baby
  • heavier baby
  • immature baby
  • low-birthweight baby
  • male baby
  • new baby
  • newborn baby
  • normal baby
  • premature baby
  • preterm baby
  • sga baby
  • term baby

  • Terms modified by Babies

  • baby boom
  • baby hamster kidney
  • baby scale
  • baby syndrome

  • Selected Abstracts


    How Do Mothers Feel About Their Very Low Birth Weight Infants?

    INFANT MENTAL HEALTH JOURNAL, Issue 2 2006
    Development of a New Measure
    The early relationship between a mother and her very low birth weight (VLBW; <1.5 kg) infant may be difficult to evaluate. Therefore, we aimed to develop a useful and practical method to describe a mother's early relationship with her VLBW infant. Mothers (mean age=27 years, 46% married) of 119 singleton VLBW infants (mean BW=1,056 g, mean GA=28 weeks) admitted to the neonatal ICU at Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital completed a novel questionnaire regarding their feelings about their infant at 3 weeks' postnatal age, and at 35 weeks', 40 weeks' (term), and 4 months' postmenstrual ages. Factor analysis of initial interview data was used to construct subscales to measure unique domains hypothesized to underpin the beginning maternal,infant relationship. Three subscales were identified: (a) The Worry subscale focuses on the mother's concerns about her infant's current medical condition and future development, (b) the Enjoyment subscale examines the mother's positive feelings about and responsiveness to her infant, and (c) the Separation Anxiety subscale examines the mother's mental anxiety about being physically separated from her infant. Statistical and clinical validation of the subscales produced positive supporting evidence that the subscales are a meaningful measure of the mother,infant relationship. We have developed a unique and practical measure for describing the early mother,VLBW infant relationship. [source]


    A challenging intervention with maternal anxiety: Babies requiring surgical correction of a congenital anomaly after missed prenatal diagnosis

    INFANT MENTAL HEALTH JOURNAL, Issue 6 2003
    Lucia Aite
    The objective of this study is to assess the impact on maternal anxiety of a short-term intervention in a particularly stressful situation, such as a surgical anomaly diagnosed only at birth after repeated negative prenatal ultrasounds. The patients were 30 mothers of babies requiring surgical correction of a congenital anomaly who were randomly assigned to an intervention (N = 16) or control (N = 14) group. The intervention group received standard care plus short-term intervention that included weekly meetings with the psychologist and weekly team meetings. The control group received only standard care available on the Neonatal Surgery Unit. The main outcome measure was maternal anxiety levels, assessed at birth and on discharge with the Spielberger State,Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI,S). Statistical comparisons were made, and no significant differences were found at birth in the STAI,S scores of the two groups. At discharge, the intervention group exhibited a much lower STAI,S score than the group without short-term intervention. The authors concluded that psychological counseling for parents of newborn babies has been shown to be helpful. However, the impact of such assistance was shown to be particularly beneficial for parents facing the emotional stress of their children requiring unexpected surgical corrections of congenital anomalies at birth. Therefore, the presence of a psychologist, as part of the standard care of newborns requiring surgical correction, is recommended. ©2003 Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health. [source]


    Babies and bath water: regulating to protect the public or control the professions?

    INTERNATIONAL NURSING REVIEW, Issue 2 2007
    David Benton RN, MPhil
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Enzyme Replacement Therapy for Murine Hypophosphatasia,

    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, Issue 6 2008
    José Luis Millán PhD
    Abstract Introduction: Hypophosphatasia (HPP) is the inborn error of metabolism that features rickets or osteomalacia caused by loss-of-function mutation(s) within the gene that encodes the tissue-nonspecific isozyme of alkaline phosphatase (TNALP). Consequently, natural substrates for this ectoenzyme accumulate extracellulary including inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi), an inhibitor of mineralization, and pyridoxal 5,-phosphate (PLP), a co-factor form of vitamin B6. Babies with the infantile form of HPP often die with severe rickets and sometimes hypercalcemia and vitamin B6 -dependent seizures. There is no established medical treatment. Materials and Methods: Human TNALP was bioengineered with the C terminus extended by the Fc region of human IgG for one-step purification and a deca-aspartate sequence (D10) for targeting to mineralizing tissue (sALP-FcD10). TNALP-null mice (Akp2,/,), an excellent model for infantile HPP, were treated from birth using sALP-FcD10. Short-term and long-term efficacy studies consisted of once daily subcutaneous injections of 1, 2, or 8.2 mg/kg sALP-FcD10 for 15, 19, and 15 or 52 days, respectively. We assessed survival and growth rates, circulating levels of sALP-FcD10 activity, calcium, PPi, and pyridoxal, as well as skeletal and dental manifestations using radiography, ,CT, and histomorphometry. Results:Akp2,/, mice receiving high-dose sALP-FcD10 grew normally and appeared well without skeletal or dental disease or epilepsy. Plasma calcium, PPi, and pyridoxal concentrations remained in their normal ranges. We found no evidence of significant skeletal or dental disease. Conclusions: Enzyme replacement using a bone-targeted, recombinant form of human TNALP prevents infantile HPP in Akp2,/, mice. [source]


    Can haptoglobin be an indicator for the early diagnosis of neonatal jaundice?

    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL LABORATORY ANALYSIS, Issue 6 2008
    Alpay Cakmak
    Abstract Neonatal jaundice is the result of an imbalance between bilirubin production and elimination. Bilirubin conjugation in newborns is significantly impaired in the first few days; even a small increase in the rate of production can contribute to the development of hyperbilirubinemia. Hemolysis has a significant role in bilirubin increase in newborns. Intrauterine is tolerated by the maternal metabolism in life. When hemolysis takes place, a decrease is accepted in the haptoglobin and hemopoexin blood levels binding hemoglobin in the environment. Therefore, it may be considered that haptoglobin and hemopoexin from the early period umbilical cord (UC) blood in newborns may be an indicator in determining jaundice likely to develop in later stages. Babies were called to the control polyclinic in the third and fifthdays. Eighty-four babies with normal termbirth were included in the study. Gestational age of the mothers was 39.5±1.5 weeks in average. A significant negative correlation was found between the haptoglobin level from the UC taken during delivery and the bilirubin value in the fifth day (r=,0.345; P=0.001). The haptoglobin value from the blood of the UC can be used as a guiding indicator to demonstrate the future occurrence of jaundice in newborns. This way, the babies with high jaundice risk may be detected earlier and closer follow-up of these babies can be obtained. As a result, the haptoglobin level of the blood from the UC during delivery allows us to make an early prediction on whether neonatal jaundice will occur. J. Clin. Lab. Anal. 22:409,414, 2008. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Demonstrably Awful: The Right to Life and the Selective Non-Treatment of Disabled Babies and Young Children

    JOURNAL OF LAW AND SOCIETY, Issue 4 2004
    Janet Read
    Twenty-five years ago it was common practice to bring about the deaths of some children with learning disabilities or physical impairments. This paper considers a small number of landmark cases in the early 1980s that confronted this practice. These cases illustrate a process by which external forces (social, philosophical, political, and professional) moved through the legal system to effect a profound change outside that system , primarily in the (then) largely closed domain of medical conduct/practice. These cases are considered from a socio-legal perspective. In particular, the paper analyses the reasons why they surfaced at that time, the social and political contexts that shaped the judgments, and their legacy. [source]


    Patients' Desire to Keep Their Babies in Their Rooms: What Does That Mean for Unit Staffing?

    JOURNAL OF OBSTETRIC, GYNECOLOGIC & NEONATAL NURSING, Issue 2010
    Professional Issues
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    The Perinatal Patient Safety Nurse: A New Role to Promote Safe Care for Mothers and Babies

    JOURNAL OF OBSTETRIC, GYNECOLOGIC & NEONATAL NURSING, Issue 3 2006
    Susan Brown Will
    Medical malpractice premiums and costs of obstetric claims, settlements, and jury awards are at an all-time high. This article describes one professional liability company's initiative to promote safer perinatal care and decrease costs of claims, including the development of the perinatal patient safety nurse role. The primary responsibility of the perinatal patient safety nurse is to promote safe care for mothers and babies by keeping patient safety as a focus of all unit operations and clinical practices. JOGNN, 35, 417-423; 2006. DOI: 10.1111/J.1552-6909.2006.00057.x [source]


    Prevalence of hepatitis B and C: A Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre experience

    JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNAECOLOGY RESEARCH (ELECTRONIC), Issue 3 2009
    Shehla Sami
    Abstract Aim:, To determine the prevalence of carriers of hepatitis B and C viruses among the obstetrical and gynecological population, the incidence of vertical transmission in obstetrical patients and to ascertain the risk factors associated with their transmission. Methods:, We conducted a prospective study over a 1-year period, from 1 January to 31 December 2005, comprising of an obstetrical population of 5902 deliveries and 548 major gynecology surgery patients. The study population was recruited by simple convenient sampling at Unit-I, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre, Karachi, Pakistan. Booked obstetrical and major gynecological surgical patients were routinely screened by Enzyme Immunoassay for hepatitis B surface antigen (HbsAg) and anti-hepatitis C antibodies (anti-HCV) on venous blood samples. Liver function and carrier profile tests were performed on mothers who were positive for HBsAg. Babies of mothers with HbsAg were tested at birth for both HbsAg and HbeAg. Results:, Hepatitis B was detected in 275 pregnant women (4.6%) and in 70 (12%) gynecological patients. Hepatitis C was detected in 108 (1.8%) pregnant women and in 89 (16%) gynecological patients. Babies born to mothers with HBV or HCV infections tested negative. Four gynecological patients tested positive for both HBV and HCV infections. Unsafe surgery, injections and inadequately screened blood transfusions were the main underlying causes of infection. Conclusion:, Routine screening of the obstetrical population detected more cases of HBV infection than HCV, whereas HCV was more prevalent in the gynecological population, emphasizing the need for safe medical practices and patient education. [source]


    Audit of feeding practices in babies <1200 g or 30 weeks gestation during the first month of life

    JOURNAL OF PAEDIATRICS AND CHILD HEALTH, Issue 7-8 2006
    Barbara E Cormack
    Aim: In 2002, the composition of the breast milk fortifier used in our hospital changed, giving increased protein and energy. We therefore decided to prospectively audit nutritional management in our unit and to compare nutritional intake and growth in our babies with published data. Methods: Data were prospectively collected over a 3-month period on infants <1200 g or 30 weeks gestation. Prescribed and delivered volumes of all parenteral and enteral fluids were recorded. Babies were weighed as per unit protocol. Results: Thirty-four infants met the audit criteria. Data are median (range). After the first week of life, energy and protein intakes were 147 (78,174) kcal/kg/day and 3.9 (2.1,4.8) g/kg/day respectively. Daily weight gain was 17 (,3.2,35.4) g/kg and was significantly associated with both energy and protein intakes (P < 0.001). However, standard deviation scores for weight fell from 0.15 (,1.9,2.0) at birth to ,1.0 (,2.9,0.8) by 36 weeks corrected age. Time to commencing enteral feeds was 1 (1,3) day and to full enteral feeds was 8 (5,28) days. One infant was diagnosed with necrotising enterocolitis and eight with chronic lung disease. Mean protein intake was significantly lower in babies with chronic lung disease (P = 0.005). Conclusion: Overall, nutritional intakes and weight gain in this cohort of babies lie within the recommended ranges, although protein intakes in the smallest babies are at the lower end of the range. Enteral feeds are introduced early and advanced rapidly, but we have a low incidence of necrotising enterocolitis. However, babies still fell across weight centiles, suggesting that actual intakes for these tiny babies may be inadequate. [source]


    Building Bridges for Babies in Foster Care: The Babies Can't Wait Initiative

    JUVENILE AND FAMILY COURT JOURNAL, Issue 2 2004
    SHERYL DICKER
    ABSTRACT In 2001, the New York State Permanent Judicial Commission on Justice for Children, chaired by New York State's Chief Judge Judith Kaye, developed the Babies Can't Wait Initiative to maximize the well-being and permanency prospects of infants in foster care. This court-based innovation became a path to healthy development for babies in foster care, a bridge to unprecedented collaboration among the New York City Family Court, child welfare system, and service providers and merged knowledge about child development with court and child welfare practice. This article tells the story of the Babies Can't Wait Initiative,its creation, implementation, successes, and lessons. [source]


    Babies Can't Wait: A Judicial Response

    JUVENILE AND FAMILY COURT JOURNAL, Issue 2 2004
    JUDGE SHARON S. TOWNSEND
    During my career as a Family Court Judge over the past 12 years, I was faced daily with the difficult task of deciding whether or not to remove a newborn infant from the care of her mother and place the child in foster care upon discharge from the hospital. In the huge majority of cases, removal was ordered based upon the mother's history of substance abuse and the subsequent positive toxicology of the infant at birth. I could not risk the health and safety of this often premature and vulnerable infant to a mother with such an addiction to drugs that she would expose her child in utero to these toxic substances. Such a mother was incapable of caring for the basic needs of this vulnerable infant, and therefore removal was ordered. This decision saddened me because, as a mother myself, I knew of the critical bond existing between infant and mother during those critical first days and weeks of a child's life. That bond must be nurtured and strengthened and is crucial to a child's development. [source]


    Babies and bathwater: a comment on the premature obituary for nested clade phylogeographical analysis

    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, Issue 6 2008
    R. C. GARRICK
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Babies Born At Risk for Nerve Damage With Mothers Who Drink

    NURSING FOR WOMENS HEALTH, Issue 3 2004
    Carolyn Davis Cockey MLS executive editor
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Prepping for Healthy Moms & Babies

    NURSING FOR WOMENS HEALTH, Issue 4 2001
    Making the Case for Preconception Care & Counseling
    First page of article [source]


    Building Bones in Babies: Can and Should We Exceed the Human Milk-Fed Infant's Rate of Bone Calcium Accretion?

    NUTRITION REVIEWS, Issue 11 2006
    Steven A. Abrams MD
    Increasing calcium absorption and bone calcium accretion to levels above those achieved by human milk-fed, full-term infants is possible with infant formulas. However, no data support such a goal or suggest that it is beneficial to short- or long-term bone health. Small differences in the bioavailability of calcium between infant formulas are unlikely to have long-term consequences. Long-term studies of the effects of infant feeding type on ultimate bone mass are needed. For now, the vitamin-replete breast-fed infant's rate of calcium accretion during the first year of life should be the standard targeted for infant formulas [source]


    Infertility, infertility treatment and psychomotor development: the Danish National Birth Cohort

    PAEDIATRIC & PERINATAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, Issue 2 2009
    Jin Liang Zhu
    Summary Babies born of infertile couples, regardless of treatment, have a higher risk of preterm birth and low birthweight, conditions associated with delayed development. We examined developmental milestones in singletons as a function of parental infertility [time to pregnancy (TTP) > 12 months] and infertility treatment. From the Danish National Birth Cohort (1997,2003), we identified 37 897 singletons born of fertile couples (TTP , 12 months), 4351 born of infertile couples conceiving naturally (TTP > 12 months), and 3309 born after infertility treatment. When the children were about 18 months old, mothers reported 12 developmental milestones by responding to structured questions. We defined a failure to achieve the assessed milestone or the minimal numbers of milestones in a summary (motor, or cognitive/language skills) as delay. Naturally conceived children born of infertile couples had a pattern of psychomotor development similar to that of children born of fertile couples, but increasing TTP correlated with a modest delay. When the analysis was restricted to infertile couples (treated and untreated), children born after treatment showed a slight delay in cognitive/language development (odds ratio 1.24, [95% confidence interval 1.01, 1.53]) for not meeting at least three out of six cognitive/language milestones); children born after intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) had the highest estimated relative risk of delay for most milestones, especially motor milestones. These results suggest that a long TTP may be associated with a modest developmental delay. Infertility treatment, especially ICSI, may be associated with a slight delay for some of these early milestones. [source]


    Maternal age and preterm births in a black population

    PAEDIATRIC & PERINATAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, Issue 2 2000
    Edem E. Ekwo
    Babies born to teenagers aged 15,19 years have a substantial risk of dying within the first year of life. Although associated socio-demographic factors may account for an increase in the risk of adverse reproductive outcomes for teenagers, there is a concern that young maternal age may also be a biological risk factor. We examined the effects of maternal age of primiparous black women on the incidence of preterm births using data from 6072 black women delivering between 1989 and 1995 at an urban perinatal network of 17 hospitals and health centres serving residents in a well-defined geographical area. Maternal age was grouped as: 15, 16,17, 18,19, 20,24, 25,29 or 30 years age groups. The 20,24 age group with the highest number of births and lowest preterm rate was used as the reference age. Preterm birth was defined as delivery < 37 completed weeks of gestation. Of the 6072 infants born to the cohort, 1170 (19.3%) were preterm. The unadjusted odds for a preterm birth for the 15-year-olds (odds ratio [OR] = 0.97; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.69,1.36), for the 16- to 17-year-olds (OR = 1.21; CI = 0.94, 1.57) and for the 18- to 19-year olds (OR = 1.15, CI = 0.92, 1.43) were not significantly different from that for the reference group. The risk for the 25-to 29-year-old mothers was 1.26 times [CI = 1.05, 1.50] and for the > 30-year-old mothers 1.28 times [CI = 1.07, 1.52] that for the reference group. Adjustments using logistic regression analysis for the effects of maternal smoking, drug abuse during pregnancy, insurance status, having prenatal care and median family income from census tract of residence did not result in a significantly increased risk for preterm birth or low birthweight for the teenage groups compared with the reference group. We conclude that primiparous teenage black mothers do not have an inherent biologically increased risk for preterm births. [source]


    High-grade gliomas: Babies are not small adults! (commentary on Sanders et al., pp 888)

    PEDIATRIC BLOOD & CANCER, Issue 7 2007
    Didier Frappaz
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Self-perception levels of mothers dealing with infant care problems for babies 0,12 months old

    PEDIATRICS INTERNATIONAL, Issue 5 2009
    nar Bayhan
    Abstract Background:, Babies need the presence of an adult, especially their mothers, from the moment they are born in order to have their needs fulfilled. The significance of the care, particularly during the newborn and the babyhood period, increases gradually as the children grow older. The adequate and efficient fulfillment of needs during the newborn and babyhood period are fundamental in terms of child development. On the other hand, many mothers don't know what to do about problematic situations related to infant care that they might encounter when they have a newborn baby. Methods:, The self-perception of 864 mothers, in various educational level groups, with 432 male and 432 female babies, was analyzed in regards to dealing with problems that arise related to infant care. A questionnaire, developed by Pridham and Chang (1991), was filled out during interviews with the mothers. The analyses of the data obtained as the result of the study were evaluated with the Kruskal,Wallis test while the statistically significant findings were dually compared using the Mann,Whitney test. Results:, At the conclusion of the study it was determined that the gender of the baby did not effect the mother's self-perception during problem solving, whereas their educational levels created remarkable differences amongst their responses. [source]


    Of Diabetic Mothers and their Babies by Harold Kalter, Published by Harwood Academic 2000.

    PRACTICAL DIABETES INTERNATIONAL (INCORPORATING CARDIABETES), Issue 3 2002
    ISBN: 90 5702 617, £45.00
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Existential function of babies: Babies as a buffer of death-related anxiety

    ASIAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 1 2009
    Xinyue Zhou
    The present study examined babies as death anxiety buffers with Chinese participants in three experiments. In Experiment 1, death-related thoughts increased college-aged participants' interest in human babies. In Experiment 2, images of newborn animals reduced the number of death-related thoughts recorded by college-aged participants. In Experiment 3, female factory workers who read news articles describing deaths of babies had pessimistic estimations of their own life expectancies. An explanation of these results is provided within a terror management theory framework, with a primary focus on how babies reinforce cultural worldviews and enhance self-esteem via the notion of symbolic immortality. Thus, the anxiety-buffering function of baby is subsumed under cultural worldviews validation and self-esteem enhancement. [source]


    Screening of antenatal depression in Pakistan: risk factors and effects on obstetric and neonatal outcomes

    ASIA-PACIFIC PSYCHIATRY, Issue 1 2010
    Nazish Imran MBBS MRCPsych
    Abstract Introduction: To determine the frequency of probable antenatal depression (AD) in pregnant women in third trimester, assess the risk factors and its impact on obstetric and neonatal outcomes in a developing country. Methods: A prospective study conducted in a tertiary care hospital in Lahore from March 2007 to July 2007. Two hundred and thirteen pregnant women in the third trimester, attending the Gynecology Outpatient Clinic were recruited. They were assessed by a semistructured questionnaire to gather demographic details and various risk factors for AD. AD was assessed by Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale. All women were followed until delivery to determine their obstetric and neonatal outcomes. Results: Out of 213 women, 91 (42.7%) scored above the cut-off for AD. More women with depression reported problems in their marriage, problems with parents/in laws, history of domestic violence, past history of psychiatric problems and history of postnatal depression. In the obstetric risk factors history of previous miscarriages, stillbirths, and complications in previous pregnancy reached statistical significance. Thirty-seven (17.3%) women were lost to follow up. Women with AD had more obstetric complications during delivery. Babies of mothers with AD had significantly low birth weight, as well as low mean APGAR scores at 1 and 5 minutes following birth. Discussion: AD is a common problem in Pakistani Society. In view of the risk factors and adverse outcomes associated with depression during pregnancy, there is need for close liaison between Gynaecologists and Psychiatrists in managing these patients. [source]


    Birth outcomes for teenage women in New South Wales, 1998,2003

    AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNAECOLOGY, Issue 4 2006
    Stephen ROBSON
    Abstract Background:, Pregnancy and childbirth in teenage women are associated with obstetric and social risks, and there is evidence that the birth rate among teenagers in rural and remote areas of Australia is not in decline. The combination of non-urban residence and young age at delivery might define a subgroup of women at special risk of adverse birth outcomes. Aims:, To compare birth outcomes of New South Wales (NSW) teenagers residing in rural and remote areas with those living in larger centres with greater access to services. Methods:, Outcomes for all singleton deliveries to teenage women living in NSW during the period 1998,2003 were reviewed. The women's place of residence was assigned an ARIA (Accessibility/Remoteness Index of Australia) classification according to remoteness and access to services. Analysis included obstetric factors (such as parity), and smoking status. Logistic regression analysis was undertaken to examine the impact of maternal factors on obstetric outcomes. Results:, During the study period, 21 880 teenage women had singleton deliveries. Babies of teenage mothers in very remote areas had higher rates of preterm birth, small-for-gestational age and stillbirth. Rates of smoking were higher in more remote areas, and smoking correlated with preterm birth and stillbirth. Conclusions:, Teenagers living in remote areas of NSW face a higher risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes than their urban cousins. [source]


    Selling Out Mothers and Babies: Marketing of Breast Milk Substitutes in the USA

    BIRTH, Issue 3 2002
    Eileen Ahearn Shea BSc, IBCLC
    First page of article [source]


    The hidden mortality of transposition of the great arteries and survival advantage provided by prenatal diagnosis

    BJOG : AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS & GYNAECOLOGY, Issue 9 2008
    M Blyth
    Objective, To describe the sensitivity of fetal anomaly scanning at detecting transposition of the great arteries (TGA) and to investigate whether prenatal detection improves survival. Design, Retrospective review of survival by comparing those who had an antenatal diagnosis with those who did not. Setting, Population-based study in Wessex region over 13 years. Population, Babies with isolated TGA and an intact ventricular septum. Methods, Review of outcomes by comparing those who had an antenatal diagnosis with those who did not. Main outcome measures, Mortality rates in each group. Results, TGA occurred more commonly in boys than in girls. Using the existing national screening policy, the antenatal detection rate of TGA was only 6.9% over the study period, improving to 25% in the last 4 years. This contrasts with a 40% detection rate when TGA was associated with a ventricular septal defect (VSD). All the babies who had TGA diagnosed antenatally survived through surgery. Of those who were not diagnosed antenatally, two were stillborn, five died before the diagnosis was made and four died after surgery. Although the difference in survival rates between those who were antenatally diagnosed and those who were not is not statistically significant (,2= 3.9; P = 0.11), some of these deaths could have been prevented if a prenatal diagnosis had been made. Conclusions, Improved antenatal diagnosis could lead to a significant reduction in the mortality associated with TGA. The current low detection rate of TGA in the UK could be improved by the inclusion of outflow tract views in routine fetal anomaly scans, and we believe that the extra workload is justified. [source]


    The relationship between the onset of electrographic seizure activity after birth and the time of cerebral injury in utero

    BJOG : AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS & GYNAECOLOGY, Issue 4 2005
    P. Filan
    In the fetal lamb model of hypoxic,ischaemic injury, the insult is followed by EEG depression, after which seizures emerge at 7,13 hours. We explored the relationship between the emergence of electrographic seizures and our estimate of the time of the cerebral injury in nine babies who underwent continuous video-EEG monitoring from soon after birth. Babies with prelabour insults had their first seizures before 12 hours of age, whereas those whose insult was peripartum had seizure onset at 18,20 hours of age. EEG seizure onset time could have important clinical and medico-legal applications, and be related to the time or severity of the insult, or both. [source]


    Intimate Transformations: Babies With Their Families , Edited by Jeanne Magagna

    BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOTHERAPY, Issue 4 2008
    Judith Nesbit
    First page of article [source]


    Kangaroo Mother Care, home environment and father involvement in the first year of life: a randomized controlled study

    ACTA PAEDIATRICA, Issue 9 2009
    R Tessier
    Abstract Aims:, This study tested the hypothesis that Kangaroo Mother Care creates a climate in the family, which enhances infants' performance on the developmental quotient scale. Setting:, The largest social security hospital in Colombia with a neonatal intensive care unit. Subjects:, At 12 months of corrected age, 194 families in the Kangaroo Mother Care group and 144 families in the Traditional Care group were available for analysis. Interventions:, Infants were kept 24 h/day in an upright position, in skin-to-skin contact until it was no longer tolerated by the infants. Babies in the Traditional Care were kept in incubators on the Minimal Care Unit until they satisfied the usual discharge criteria. Outcome measures:, The Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment (HOME), Father Involvement and Developmental Quotient (Griffiths) scores. Results:, 1) Kangaroo mothers created a more stimulating context and a better caregiving environment than mothers in the Traditional Care group; 2) this environment was positively correlated to father involvement and 3) the family environment of male infants was most improved by Kangaroo Mother Care. Conclusion:, Kangaroo Mother Care has a positive impact on home environment. The results also suggest, first, that both parents should be involved as direct caregivers in the Kangaroo Mother Care procedure and secondly, that this intervention should be directed more specifically at infants who are more at risk at birth. The Kangaroo Mother Care intervention could be an excellent means to ensure parents' mature involvement in the future of their children. [source]


    Costs of neonatal care for low-birthweight babies in English hospitals

    ACTA PAEDIATRICA, Issue 7 2009
    Hema Mistry
    Abstract Aim:, To estimate mean costs of neonatal care for babies with birthweights ,1800 g in a regional Level 3 unit and three Level 2 units providing short-term intensive care. Method:, Babies ,1800 g admitted to units in four hospitals in England over 15 months in 2001,2002 were audited until discharge. Unit costs (2005,2006 prices) were attributed to their resource items, including neonatal cot occupancy, pharmaceuticals, blood products and ambulance transfers. Bootstrapped mean costs were derived for the Level 3 unit and the Level 2 units combined. Results:, The mean gestation period for 199 Level 3 babies was 29.5 weeks compared with 30.4 weeks for 192 Level 2 babies (p = 0.003). Mean costs excluding ambulance journeys were £17 861 per Level 3 baby and £12 344 per Level 2 baby. Level 3 babies <1000 g averaged £26 815, whereas Level 2 babies <1000 g were generally less costly than babies 1000,1499 g. Ambulances transported 76 Level 3 babies and 62 Level 2 babies; their adjusted mean costs were £18 495 and £12 881, respectively. Conclusion:, By comprehensively costing resource components, the magnitude of total costs for low-birthweight babies has been revealed, thus demonstrating the importance of budgets for neonatal units being realistically determined by commissioners of neonatal services. [source]