Within six days, however, the infant was admitted to a pediatric hospital with diarrhea, bluish skin, and respiratory failure. |
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In fact, I described them this way myself when I wrote about infant memory two years ago for babble. |
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Pettway brought the infant to her home in Bridgeport, Connecticut, and renamed her Nedjra Nance. |
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By the 1950s the rapid assignment of gender to an ambiguously gendered infant had become standard. |
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A Utah mother charged with killing six of her infant children was described as cold and aloof by a neighbor. |
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Born to an Algerian father who fought on the side of the French, Nabil came to Paris as an infant. |
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For six long months, the Youngs had the difficult task of babysitting Hunter and her infant child. |
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It. must be borne in mind that the bones of a young infant are little more than gristle, and are liable to bend, and so become deformed. |
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Health professionals and caregivers are faced with a bewildering array of infant formulas for non-breastfed infants. |
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Sirenomelia with an angiomatous lumbosacral myelocystocele in a full-term infant. |
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Some anti-circumcisionists would outlaw the practice of infant circumcision, even for religious reasons. |
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Such kidnapping rarely results in serious injury or death with infant patas monkeys. |
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Brevity is the Soul of Wit. Talking to your infant is good, but uttering individual words might be better. |
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The infant whose heart is decompensating has a rapid pulse, rapid respirations, and respiratory distress. |
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From the very dawn of existence the infant must envisage self, and body acting on self. |
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Claudian in the description of his infant Titan descants on this glory about his head, but has run his description into most wretched fustian. |
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Scientists know little about where many species spend different parts of their life cycles especially in the infant and juvenile years. |
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After birth, the mother carries the infant to the surface for its first breath. |
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Sweden ranks in the top five countries with respect to low infant mortality. |
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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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Its population enjoys the highest life expectancy and the third lowest infant mortality rate in the world. |
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The city has 129 infant, junior and primary schools, 17 secondary schools, and three learning centres. |
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After the Danish conquest of England in 1016, King Canute the Great had the infant Edward exiled to the continent. |
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The type specimen was the Taung Child, an australopithecine infant which was discovered in a cave. |
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A mother abandoned an infant in hopes that someone less desperate might find and adopt the child before the cold or animals killed it. |
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After this span of time, the fully grown fetus is birthed from the woman's body and breathes independently as an infant for the first time. |
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In some areas primary, infant and junior schools cater for ages four to eleven, after which the pupils move on to secondary schools. |
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Beckham's teammate Gary Neville was the best man, and the couple's infant son, Brooklyn, was the ring bearer. |
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In addition primary education is provided through a mix of around 240 infant, junior, primary, first and middle schools. |
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Life expectancy at birth is forecast to increase from 80 years to 85 years in 2050 and infant mortality is expected to decline. |
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Upon their deaths, his infant son, and niece, Julia Flavia, were likewise enrolled among the gods. |
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There is a legend that as an infant, a swarm of bees settled on his face while he lay in his cradle, leaving behind a drop of honey. |
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Harald's supporters would not accept him and had Harald's two infant sons, Sigurd Munn and Inge Crouchback, named king. |
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His successor was the infant Guttorm, who himself died later the same year. |
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Primary care is available throughout the island and infant and maternal mortality rates compare favorably with those in developed nations. |
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Disease and infant mortality increased in the 1960s immediately after the revolution, when half of Cuba's 6,000 doctors left the country. |
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The infant mortality rate in Haiti in 2013 was 55 deaths per 1,000 live births, compared to a rate of 6 per 1,000 in other countries. |
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Babies were not given human social status until they reached two or three years of age due to the high infant mortality rates. |
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The World Bank has helped the Paraguayan government reduce the country's maternal and infant mortality. |
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This was always a great torment to my infant mind, although many people may smile at such an 'anguish for the world' in a child. |
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Both parents feed the infant puffling until it is very fat, then leave the chick, who must make its own way to the sea. |
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Later, in his conflict with the Anabaptists, he defended the practice of infant baptism, noting that there is no law forbidding the practice. |
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In the Baptism service the priest explicitly pronounces the baptised infant as being now regenerate. |
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Since the creation of faith is exclusively God's work, it does not depend on the actions of the one baptized, whether infant or adult. |
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This usually requires the presence of no periods, exclusively breastfeeding the infant, and a child younger than six months. |
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He was born in Nebraska and moved as an infant to Grand Rapids and grew up there. |
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Economists have identified a number of cases across different countries and industries where attempts to shelter infant industries failed. |
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Percy did not care about the condition of this premature infant and left with Claire, Mary's stepsister, for a lurid affair. |
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There are also three infant schools, two junior schools, and five primary schools. |
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This knowledge about supplementing their diet is transmitted from mother to infant. |
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Peter Rabbit had also appeared on the packaging of the infant formula Enfamil. |
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The family regularly holidayed at Nibthwaite in the Lake District, and he was carried up to the top of Coniston Old Man as an infant. |
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The child was sained then. Fir candles were lighted and whirled round the bed in which mother and infant lay. |
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Losses of any kind seem to evoke shamelike responses in the infant. This is particularly true of loss of the familiar. |
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Or why was I not hidden in the ground like a stillborn child, like an infant who never saw the light of day? |
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However, in a hypoalbuminemic, acidotic newborn, such as a premature infant, this may occur at a much lower serum bilirubin concentration. |
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The tremendous energy available during this early epoch, Guth realized, would endow the infant cosmos with a kind of antigravity. |
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Howbeit, crying and wrawling as like as possibly might be to an infant new come into the world. |
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The actual number of infant abandonments is unclear because many infants are never located. |
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The report offers information about the number of both legal and illegal infant abandonments in the states where such laws have been passed. |
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The infant, who was strapped in the buggy, was swept into the water as his mother walked along Watchet Harbour, Somerset. |
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Upon Henry V's death, the infant Prince was made king and was crowned Henry VI of England. |
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As his son and successor, James V, was an infant, the government was again taken over by regents. |
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She fled to England, and the Crown went to her infant son James VI, who was brought up as a Protestant. |
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In the same way that he unconsciously and automatically libidinizes his body systems, the infant also libidinizes the mother. |
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Compulsory infant vaccination was introduced in England by the 1853 Vaccination Act. |
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Although theoretically still compulsory, the 1907 Act effectively marked the end of compulsory infant vaccination in England. |
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Compulsory infant vaccination was regulated by only allowing access to school for those who had been vaccinated. |
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In populations with high infant mortality rates, LEB is highly sensitive to the rate of death in the first few years of life. |
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Life expectancy at birth takes account of infant mortality but not prenatal mortality. |
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The purpose of this is to present the infant to the God and Goddess for protection. |
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Samuel Wilderspin opened his first infant school in London in 1819, and went on to establish hundreds more. |
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He published many works on the subject, and his work became the model for infant schools throughout England and further afield. |
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With the male infant it is, no doubt, attributable either to a maldescent of the testes, to phymosis, or to a partial atresia of the urethra. |
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While Lancelot is an infant, his father is driven from his kingdom in Britain by his enemy Claudas de la Deserte. |
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His will reveals that he had two infant children in England, of whom nothing is known except that they were in the care of a nurse. |
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He attended infant and elementary schools in Castleford, where he began modelling in clay and carving in wood. |
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Once again, Scotland's monarch was an infant, this time Mary, Queen of Scots. |
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Following her deposition in 1567, her infant son James VI was raised as a Protestant. |
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In general, Singapore has had the lowest infant mortality rate in the world for the past two decades. |
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Some are linked, with automatic progression from the infant school to the junior school, and some are not. |
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As an infant he briefly lived, with his family, at Braziers Park in Oxfordshire. |
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This casts some doubt on 23 April date, as high infant mortality rates meant parents would usually baptise their children shortly after birth. |
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He also encouraged invention and new ideas through his patent enforcement and support of infant industry monopolies. |
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Ricardo pointed out that Smith was in support of helping infant industries. |
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Maternal and infant mortality are high partly because of poor access to health facilities in isolated rural areas. |
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His death in 1542 left the infant Mary, Queen of Scots as his heir, allowing a series of English invasions later known as the Rough Wooing. |
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James V died in 1542, leaving the infant Mary, Queen of Scots as his heir, with the prospect of a long minority. |
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Margaret had opposed the war, but was still named in the royal will as regent for the infant king, James V, for as long as she remained a widow. |
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As Mary was an infant when she inherited the throne, Scotland was ruled by regents until she became an adult. |
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On 29 July 1567 the infant son of Mary, Queen of Scots, was anointed James VI of Scotland in the church. |
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Little is known about his father, Iorwerth Drwyndwn, who died when Llywelyn was an infant. |
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When the death rate falls or improves, this may include lower infant mortality rate and increased child survival. |
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No extra ingredients to calculate, because it's a complete infant formula. |
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There his infant son by Galla Placidia was buried, and there Ataulf was assassinated by one of his household retainers, possibly a former follower of Sarus. |
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Henry's premature death in 1422, at the age of 36, led to his only son Henry VI coming to the throne as an infant and the country being ruled by regents. |
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When she was only two years old, she was promised to Francis, the infant son of King Francis I of France, but the contract was repudiated after three years. |
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The Crown was not offered to James's infant son, who would have been the heir apparent under normal circumstances, but to William and Mary as joint sovereigns. |
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Although he was victorious, his sudden death in 1422 left his infant son Henry VI on the throne and gave the French an opportunity to overthrow English rule. |
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During the quinquennium from 1991 to 1995, infant mortality increased. |
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Henry V and Charles VI died within two months of each other in 1422, leaving an infant, Henry VI of England, the nominal monarch of both kingdoms. |
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Baptism, specifically infant baptism, in the Lutheran tradition. |
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Nay, what is your Montesquieu himself but a clever infant spelling Letters from a hieroglyphical prophetic Book, the lexicon of which lies in Eternity, in Heaven? |
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The researchers concluded that due to the negative outcome in adults, they do not recommend the use of olive oil for the treatment of dry skin and infant massage. |
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In the past 5 years infant mortality rates of malaria have dropped. |
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For the Ren did not belong to the man, but came out of the Celestial Waters to enter an infant in the hour of his birth and might not stir again until it was time to go back. |
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The new parish church of Keswick, St John's, started educational work in 1840 with a Sunday school which also educated infant boys, and later girls, on weekdays. |
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The infant voice spoken of by Rosolato believes that it is everything, and can swallow down the world, but testifies in its suffering that it is not agueproof. |
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At about the same time, in 1780, similar infant establishments were established in Bavaria In 1802, Pauline zur Lippe established a preschool center in Detmold. |
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In 1816, Robert Owen, a philosopher and pedagogue, opened the first British and probably globally the first infant school in New Lanark, Scotland. |
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A new building was built 30 years ago to house the infant classes. |
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It was at this time that a ceremony was held called rutuchikuy in which the infant was given its first haircut, name and introduced to the extended family. |
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A syndrome of methylmalonic aciduria, homocysteine, megaloblastic anemia and neurologic abnormalities in a vitamin B12 deficient breast-fed infant of a strict vegetarian. |
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At its western end it contains the font for the ritual washing service of Baptism, at which a person, most often an infant, is symbolically accepted into the church. |
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According to The World Factbook, Macau has the fourth highest life expectancy in the world, while its infant mortality rate ranks among the lowest in the world. |
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He married Elsbeth Schmid, a widow a few years older than he was, who had an infant son, Franz, and was running her late husband's tanning business. |
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Sharp never married, but in about 1812 he adopted an infant, Maria Kinnaird, who had been orphaned by a catastrophic volcano eruption in the West Indies. |
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At some point in his reign, Zeus decides to give up the throne in favor of the infant Dionysus, who like the infant Zeus, is guarded by the Kouretes. |
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His castle at Kilcolman was burned, and Ben Jonson, who may have had private information, asserted that one of his infant children died in the blaze. |
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Tragedy struck in 1818 and 1819, when Shelley's son Will died of fever in Rome, and his infant daughter Clara Everina died during yet another household move. |
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A mermother pushed an infant merbaby along the street in an old stroller. Soon Sabrina and the merman reached an enormous palace, nearly five stories high. |
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She has an air of authority and reflectiveness astonishing in an infant. |
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James V of Scotland was an infant barely a year old at his father's death. |
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To prevent civil war and possible foreign intervention from undermining the infant republic, leaders agreed to Army's demand that China be united under a Beijing government. |
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The infant responded vocally to the first stimulus in the study. |
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Before this, the mainstay of the infant colony's economy was the growth export of tobacco, but tobacco prices eventually fell in the 1630s, as Chesapeake production expanded. |
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She sighed exhaustively, and, holding the grotesque infant close to her breast, disappeared indignantly to administer the very greatly needed motherment. |
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The poverty of the region, and the high maternal mortality and infant mortality had led to calls from WHO of family planning and encouragement of smaller families. |
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A 1-month 3-week-old infant with a history of neonatal jaundice, cholestasis, and acholia is admitted to our hospital to rule out biliary atresia and further treatment. |
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Besides, most of these designes were abortive, or aborsive rather, like those untimely miscarriages not honoured with a soul or the shape and lineaments of an infant. |
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Just south of the road, the infant stream descends into a deep goyle. |
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Some doctors practiced passive eugenicide one newborn infant at a time. |
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Teenage pregnancies, especially among younger teens, are at greater risk of adverse outcomes including early birth, low birth weight, and death of the infant. |
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Birth rates, infant mortality rates, and death rates are lower in cities than in rural areas due to better access to education, medicines, and hospitals. |
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Ethiopia has a relatively high infant and maternal mortality rate. |
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Antony traveled east to Egypt where he allied himself with Queen Cleopatra VII, the former lover of Julius Caesar and mother of Caesar's infant son Caesarion. |
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The regent of infant Mary, Queen of Scots, her mother Marie de Guise, was successful in quelling the rioting but presbyterianism in Perth remained strong. |
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The Bishop of Glasgow, James the Steward, and Sir Alexander Lindsay became sureties for Bruce until he delivered his infant daughter Marjorie as a hostage, which he never did. |
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