Healthy newborns are traditionally given sponge baths in many parts of the world. |
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Medication had to be sourced from district health facilities, private nursing homes and pharmacies for newborns. |
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They occur almost exclusively along the alveolar ridge of the maxilla in white female newborns. |
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The ultimate responsibility for screening newborns rests with the attending physician. |
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There are published data indicating that approximately two-thirds of high risk newborns can be anticipated by careful antepartum evaluation. |
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Transgenic animals had more than threefold the activity levels of those observed in wild-type littermates, as in the 7-day exposed newborns. |
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All newborns with 95 percent or less saturation underwent echocardiography. |
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Many ignored his advice and went back to feeding their newborns crushed wine biscuits mashed with water in a bottle with a large-holed teat. |
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In newborns, it usually shows up as diaper rash, but new babies can also develop oropharyngeal candidiasis, or thrush, in the mouth and throat. |
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Take this visual tour to familiarize yourself with the rashes and birthmarks that affect numerous newborns and infants. |
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Although natal teeth are frequently found in normal infants, they are more often present in newborns with cleft palate. |
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Experts with Gymboree said not only adults need sociality, children from newborns to five-year-olds also need an interest in social events. |
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Clavicular fractures are the most common broken bones in newborns, especially large neonates. |
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Although smaller than average newborns, 35 rather than 45 kilos, the triplets are fit and healthy. |
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It was impossible not to buy anything from these women as they cradled their newborns in the cold. |
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Down's syndrome occurs in 1 of 700 newborns, but the risk varies with the mother's age. |
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A significant number of newborns die because the family lacks money for treatment, the heart surgeon said. |
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They included photos of newborns, newly married couples, and those who had recently died. |
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Selective elimination of genetically flawed newborns is necessary if we are to prevent their inferior genes from entering the gene pool. |
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And it can be a problem not just for adults, but for children as young as newborns. |
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Some Inuit newborns are born with high blood pressure that persists into elementary school. |
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It would be outrageous if this child's death did not result in improved treatment for other mothers and newborns. |
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Infant colic, a common condition of abdominal pain persisting in some newborns, is known by many names, we are told. |
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From the birthing classes I attended in the last months of my wife's pregnancy, I know that newborns can't see. |
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If you know other families with newborns and young kids, it may be helpful to spend time with them. |
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It is hoped that by 2005 all areas in England will be testing all newborns at birth as the hearing screening program. |
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Yet teenagers need parental guidance and attention just as intensely as do newborns or young children. |
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The disease kills young men and women and the newborns of infected parents. |
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Nevirapine won't cure then, but it can prevent them from passing the disease on to their newborns. |
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The figures have alarmed doctors and midwives who fear the increasing popularity of Caesareans is putting mothers and newborns at risk. |
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The manual contains vital information on non-contagious diseases, first aid methods, and diet charts for women, young girls and newborns. |
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Injected into the thigh muscle of newborns, vitamin K is given to enhance blood clotting and prevent hemorrhaging. |
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The left hip is more commonly affected, presumably because of the left occiput anterior position of most vertex-presenting newborns. |
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About half of all newborns with chlamydial pneumonia have also had chlamydial conjunctivitis. |
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Because newborns have an immature immune system, 90 percent of infants infected perinatally progress to chronic infection. |
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Although it can be frightening, periodic breathing typically causes no other problems in newborns. |
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Serotypes of isolates from 56 newborns after a preterm or complicated birth whose diagnosis was not specified, were not included in the study. |
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They propose genetic screening for newborns to potentially benefit both the child and the rest of the family. |
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In this case the most frail and fragile patients, newborns, are the ones who are being affected. |
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For newborns, colds can quickly develop into croup, pneumonia or another serious illness. |
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They acknowledged the life-saving potential of medical devices to support preemies and other ill newborns through life-and-death situations. |
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In healthy newborns, the most common form of this infection is a diaper rash. |
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There has been a real improvement in metabolic screening for newborns. |
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The three main laboratory methods used to screen newborns for PKU are the Guthrie bacterial inhibition assay, fluorometric analysis and tandem mass spectrometry. |
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And treated with more dignity and kindness than the viable newborns he butchered and discarded. |
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Some term newborns have a resting heart rate below 90 beats per minute. |
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She has created a leaflet with exercises and tick boxes for parents of newborns and has had it translated into 10 languages for use by the major immigrant communities. |
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With every breath, Wren made a cooing noise, but Jones looked online and saw that lots of newborns make funny sounds. |
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In 95 percent of newborns, meconium is passed by 24 hours of age. |
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A single umbilical artery is present in 0.2 to 1 percent of newborns and may be associated with asymptomatic renal anomalies in 7 percent of these infants. |
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When poor women cannot get basic prenatal care, for example, they and their newborns are more likely to suffer complications requiring round-the-clock intensive care. |
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In its infant mortality program, Richmond's public health nurses provided not only milk and ice to their patients, but also provided the layette when needed for newborns. |
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Fortunately, advances in obstetrics and neonatology, the branch of pediatrics that deals with newborns, have improved the chances for survival for even these smallest babies. |
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Karen Santorum was a neonatal intensive care nurse for nine years, caring for the most fragile newborns. |
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The mammary glands of mammals are specialized to produce milk, the primary source of nutrition for newborns. |
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From birth, newborns respond more readily to human speech than to other sounds. |
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Snorri describes them as a group of three, but he and other sources also allude to larger groups of norns who decide the fate of newborns. |
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But the dust surrounding the newborns absorbs these emissions, reradiating their energy in the infrared. |
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Sacrococcygeal teratomas are neoplasms originating from pleuripotent cells involving all three germ cell layers and occurring in newborns. |
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The most significant modification in humans compared to other extant primates is altricial birth, which is the birth of helpless newborns. |
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Studies show up to a 30-fold reduction in GBS infection in newborns whose mothers receive antibiotics during labor. |
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Incontinentia pigmenti is a rare genodermatosis that occurs in approximately 1 in 50,000 newborns. |
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Stephen Clark, a leading perinatologist, works with sick newborns and women in high-risk pregnancies. |
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He says that IGF delivered via breastfeeding would compensate for any inborn deficiency of the growth factor in newborns. |
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The newborns had pulmonary function tests at birth and at 1 year of age, and wheezing was assessed through 1 year of age. |
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Swelling of the external ears is also common in newborns with the condition and can lead to thickened, deformed ears. |
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The newborns, called eyasses, will remain in the nest for about six weeks as they develop and prepare to take their first flight. |
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Antigas medicine for babies is really effective when they're newborns and seem to always have gas pain. |
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Researchers attempt to extrapolate conception dates by comparing fetus size and characteristics with newborns. |
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Portugal's infant mortality rate has dropped sharply since the late 1970s, when 24 of 1000 newborns died in the first year of life. |
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The newborns first venture out of the nest a few days after they have opened their eyes and initially keep returning regularly. |
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We believed for 20 years that brown adipose tissue was present only in newborns. |
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Although obstruction of the nasolacrimal duct is a fairly common finding in newborns, development of a dacryocystocele is uncommon. |
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Congenital heart defects are the most common type of birth defect, affecting about 8 of every 1,000 newborns in the United States. |
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A MERSEYSIDE mum wants to see the law change so that all newborns are tested for congenital heart defects. |
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Vallecular cysts are an uncommon but well recognised cause of upper airway obstruction and death in newborns and infants. |
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Screening for metabolic disorders can also be considered in newborns prior to adoption, including testing for galactosaemia and phenylketonuria. |
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One study found newborns exposed to gestational diabetes have greater fat mass, body fat percentage and skinfold thickness than those with glucose-tolerant mothers. |
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Sami Ulus Children's Hospital in Ankara, said premature birth and medical complications caused by premature births are the greatest causes of death in newborns. |
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For newborns presenting with incomplete masculinization, this approach is not informative, since excretion of the THF and THB epimers is negligible. |
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Placing the reflexive content in the structure of the act fits better with ascribing perceptions to newborns and animals, which both lack concepts of causality. |
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Crickets can be purchased in many sizes from newborns to adults. |
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The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists in Great Britain has called for a discussion of euthanizing very ill newborns, the BBC reports. |
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Medawar of Britain, shared the Nobel Prize in 1960 for research showing that the immune system of newborns was too immature to reject foreign antigens. |
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The products were generally used to treat hemophiliacs, but they were also used as coagulating agents for treating newborns and traffic-accident victims, the officials said. |
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Rapid estimation of insertional length of umbilical catheters in newborns. |
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This observation prompts pediatricians to give newborns a healthy shot of vitamin K to lower the 1 percent risk of spontaneous bleeding they would otherwise face. |
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First, humans are altricial, with immature newborns and a long childhood. |
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This contamination runs through the bloodstreams of America's newborns. |
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Few people have heard of GBS, yet it's the most common cause of severe bacterial infection in newborns, and of meningitis in babies under three months. |
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Some newborns suffer from brachial plexus injury, a type of harm to a child's shoulder, arm, or hand that in a minority of cases results in permanent disability. |
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In recent years, however, the print media, including several medical journals, have expressed the opinion that hospitals waste time and money by footprinting newborns. |
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They wrapped tight cloth straps around the heads of newborns to shape their soft skulls into a more conical form, thus distinguishing the nobility from other social classes. |
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