He announced that nurses and midwives would also be trained to counsel patients and administer the drug. |
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The study of its principles is now part of the registration requirement for nurses and midwives. |
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Indeed, the Huguenots symbolised the Protestant work ethic and, with their business acumen, became the midwives of British capitalism. |
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Pregnant women with epilepsy were recruited to the study, predominantly by community midwives. |
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Nurse practitioners, doctors, dieticians and midwives can recommend people for the supplement. |
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As well as the GPs, the surgery also has a district nurse, health visitor midwives and podiatrist. |
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We also should be aware of alternative sources of support personnel, such as local doulas or training programs for medical students or midwives. |
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We sampled many more midwives than other health professionals because they provided most antenatal care and disseminated most of the leaflets. |
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Find experienced midwives and doulas and save the hospital births for those women who truly need them. |
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Organize your local midwives, doulas, childbirth educators, and any other advocates of natural childbirth in your community into a birth network. |
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My dearest wish is to be asked to teach midwives the importance of a new baby seeing faces close-to in the first 24 hours. |
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Its facilities include a baby clinic, midwives, health visitors, a speech therapist, a community dentist and an audiologist. |
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This lineage includes village healers, community midwives, and family herbalists. |
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With three midwives, a doctor, my mother and Lucas in the room, my legs were splayed and my mind focused on staying calm and pushing. |
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Since then she has heard nothing despite the PCT's stated concern about the shortage of midwives. |
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Abi was taken to an admissions room, where she was poked and prodded and monitored by various midwives and doctors. |
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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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Online is a new website offering reliable, unbiased advice from real midwives. |
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The tight budget, Azrul said, meant there were few midwives in many areas nationwide, leading to unassisted and dangerous births in many cases. |
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Mums-to-be in Swindon are meant to be given the different birthing options when they meet with their community midwives. |
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For the closing ceremony, Monroe called upon the elder midwives to come into a healing circle. |
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Possible adverse events were detected by two nurses in medicine and surgery and two midwives in obstetrics. |
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Women were identified through hospital computer systems and the records of midwives and clerks in hospital and community antenatal clinics. |
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The Chippenham unit employs a total of 21 midwives and auxiliaries, some of whom work part time. |
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The unit is led by eight midwives, three of them are full-time, and there are five auxiliaries. |
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On top of abuse, midwives also face a far more assertive and confident middle class mother than they did even 15 years ago. |
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Lord Stevenson is of the opinion that candidates for the peerage might range from midwives to tycoons. |
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Predictably, those trying to be midwives to these new theologies are being criticized as heretics, unorthodox, disturbers of the peace, etc. |
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Maya folk medicine includes the ministrations of ritual healers called curanderos and female herbalists who may double as midwives. |
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In six units midwives spent time away from clinical areas performing clerical duties. |
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The management of the hospital tried to implement compulsory service at a Tours law court, forcing midwives to work, but did not succeed. |
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In addition to doctors, the bill also fails to protect registered nurses and midwives who are out on call. |
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Old-school birthing is back in style, with well-read women forsaking obstetricians for midwives and epidurals for warm baths. |
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Once the bleeding has been evaluated its management may remain with general practitioners or midwives. |
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Even midwives are being given rewards, such as cellular phones with free air time, for promoting certain brands of prophylactics. |
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The health industry recruits nurses, midwives, radiographers and mammographers. |
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Various forms of simple models are now being used to train midwives, doctors and obstetricians. |
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Childbirth without fear should become a reality for women, midwives, and obstetricians. |
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Lynn says it helps that a number of nurses and midwives have trained in the courses. |
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Physicians, nurses, midwives, and pharmacists, among others, are to be roped in for the campaign. |
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In Puebla the plant is used by midwives as a corroborant after childbirth. |
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If midwives jump in and act on confessions, pregnant women are likely to clam up, become reticent about confiding in them or even leave antenatal care. |
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With its profusion of midwives and naturalistic post-natal care, it is one of the few representations we have in western art that touches on the actual process of childbirth. |
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Let us be, as Comrade Lula said, midwives of the new history, prevailing over those who would bury it. |
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The survey was mailed to a random sample of pediatricians, psychiatrists, obstetricians and gynecologists, midwives and family physicians. |
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These efforts led to more literacy programs, more midwives and more self-sustaining clinics. |
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Both midwives eventually see the light and accept Christ as the Savior. |
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India's LifeSpring hospitals slash the price of childbirth by augmenting doctors with less expensive midwives. |
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Some of the midwives were trained in modern modes of delivery. |
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There are health clinics staffed by nurse midwives in rural areas. |
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Among midwives, asking a woman or couple if they are consanguineously married is often a standard question during an intake in early pregnancy. |
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After 20 years of village practice, Smellie went to London to give obstetrical lecture-demonstrations to midwives and medical students. |
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For midwives services, access limited to sole proprietorship only and economic needs test may be applied. |
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It is a requirement not a recommendation, as previously stated, that nurses and midwives set up an NMC Online account in order to revalidate. |
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Accepting and supportive mothers, grandmothers, informed midwives and mothers-in-law as a source of encouragement, insight and strength. |
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It will be pretested with a small group of midwives meeting inclusion criteria. |
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A special gathering attended by the Aboriginal midwives was held after the lunch break. |
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The strikes are the latest in a series of protests over the last few months by staff in the public health service including doctors, midwives and hospital interns. |
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Our first two children were born in hospital, where the care provided by our midwives was excellent, and both births passed without incident. |
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When I was pregnant for the first time seven years ago, I had two friends who were midwives. |
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All the limitations pertaining to medical, and dental services, as well as services of midwives and nurses, are applicable. |
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Also, what measures were being taken to train women doctors, nurses and midwives? |
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Village midwives are also required to notify births to the health centres on a regular basis. |
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The program keeps running with midwives training, training on epidemiological data collection, and administrative training. |
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Other private groups include Active Birth classes, which specialise in water births and yoga during pregnancy, and classes run by independent midwives. |
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Public patients receive antenatal care and birth care at public hospitals, and care is provided by rostered midwives, residents, registrars, and staff obstetricians. |
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In Holland, midwifery is part of the medical system, and doctors and midwives work in close collaboration. |
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While childbirth was acknowledged as potentially dangerous to both mother and child, birthing was viewed as a natural process, and midwives intervened as little as possible. |
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Women labored in groups, with female neighbors, midwives, aunts and mothers around for womanly support. |
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The hampers will be dished out to families on the estate who have been recommended by health professionals like midwives, social workers or health visitors. |
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A multicentre randomised controlled trial of routine antenatal care by general practitioners and midwives compared with shared care led by obstetricians. |
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In the early 19th century, doctors were eager to distinguish themselves from midwives and homeopaths, and embraced anatomy as a critical source of their exclusive knowledge. |
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Whether the object of destruction by the medical monopoly be homeopaths, midwives, chiropractors, or internet prescribers, the purge is conducted in the same manner. |
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During the first six months of a two-year field trial beginning in 1982, nurses and midwives, instead of physicians, performed 543 of the 828 implant insertions and 79 of the 122 removals. |
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We are trying so hard as a profession to change and to give one another the courage to question the entrenched practice we see every day – but one or two midwives in each trust is not enough. |
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Greeting participants at the front door of the hospital were two midwives in Driza-Bone coats, their Akubra hats filled with gum flowers. |
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In some camps in the past, fathers served as midwives. |
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In the least favored neighborhoods of Kabul, midwives make home visits in order to monitor pregnant women, improve hygiene measures and conditions for childbirth, and ensure quality care for newborns. |
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Another example of CAM's work to strengthen local capacities was the training of midwives and health workers and the rehabilitation of mother and child welfare centres in order to promote safe motherhood. |
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In addition to the wider coverage by health and medical services, academic training for doctors and midwives is a priority in the work of the Ministries of Higher Education and Health. |
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In the spring of 1998, the Government of Québec undertook to follow up on the report and gave the Québec Professions Board a mandate to consult the stakeholders on a model for exclusive practice for midwives. |
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Abdominal palpation in pregnancy is a routine procedure performed by midwives. |
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The midwives have to bring their gloves with them in their handbags. |
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Listen to that woman screaming,' she deadpans, 'I thought it was one of the midwives who'd opened her payslip. |
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These initiatives have utilized local health centres and midwives. |
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We need to train substantially more health care professionals, including more doctors, nurses, nurse practitioners and midwives to ease staffing shortages and cut wait times. |
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Women used to think that midwives would cut them open, using episiotomy. |
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The SOGC promotes the building of interprofessional relationships between midwives and other obstetrical care providers in the interests of providing excellent health care for women and their babies. |
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This can be achieved through improved training of TBAs by establishing them as liaisons with local midwives with access to the appropriate expertise and back up referral systems. |
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The diverse forms of evidence that midwives and women call on function as an important rhetorical strategy that reflects and refigures these discursive tensions. |
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In 2008, the NHS in Scotland had around 158,000 staff including more than 47,500 nurses, midwives and health visitors and over 3,800 consultants. |
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In a hospital setting, midwives are following protocols that are part of a more interventive model of care. |
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Taliban fighters killed and raped female relatives of police commanders and soldiers as well as midwives. |
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This non-drug realm includes practitioners who operate outside of the dominant paradigm: midwives, community healers, witches, sagefemmes, herbalists and many others. |
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Those women already circumcised need care and rehabilitation, and we must therefore put our faith in more knowledgeable midwives, social workers and teachers. |
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Canada will improve maternal newborn and child health in Bangladesh by increasing the number of nurses, skilled birth attendants and midwives, and improving the quality of nurse midwifery education and services. |
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This means that in an emergency, an experienced team of doctors, surgical and anaesthetics staff who have worked together before, as well as midwives and nursing staff, can respond within a very short space of time. |
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Each year the NMC receives over 22,000 newly qualified nurses and midwives from education institutions. |
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They had responsibility for the supervision of midwives and the provision of health visitors and community nursing. |
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The code contains professional standards of practice and behaviour that all nurses and midwives must keep to. |
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We can take action if registered nurses or midwives fail to uphold the Code. |
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In October 2015, the NMC introduced the new system which all nurses and midwives in the UK must go through to remain on the NMC register. |
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Pilots involving over 2,000 nurses and midwives across the UK would inform the final plans. |
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In January 2016, the NMC launched a microsite to assist nurses and midwives through the revalidation process. |
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The NMC handles complaints made about nurses and midwives, and investigates allegations where appropriate. |
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The NMC produced guidance for nurses and midwives on raising concerns which aims to help them take action in the public interest when needed. |
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They were also carried by midwives, and thrown away when the child was born. |
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But, some women earned livelihoods as midwives and in other roles in the community, which were not originally recognized as significant by men. |
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These men were excellent anatomists and were male midwives, or accoucheurs. |
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Of course, many older Africans were not born on hospital beds but traditional midwives did the job but this could be translated to mean that he was not born with a silver spoon. |
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I am tired of the negativity, the bullying that I see young midwives subjected to and the absolute inability of individuals to freely give outstanding care to women. |
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But seconds after little Cohan arrived, weighing just 1lb 11oz, midwives were stunned to see he was breathing weakly and wiggling his toes. |
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On the outskirts of Tubmanburg, Liberia, the medical hospital ship, Mercy Ships has been playing a major role in reshaping gender attitudes and training up skilled midwives. |
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Respecting physiology and the important role of pain in labour enables midwives to be alongside women, encouraging them to find their inner strength without resorting to pharmacological pain relief. |
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One of them witnessed verbal abuse from several midwives. |
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A TD has said she raised the issue of a shortage of midwives with the Health Minister and was told of positive developments. |
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Misconceptions about the role of midwives in the UAE is limiting their effectiveness in the healthcare system, a study has found. |
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For his part, 67-year-old Rasmi says that he often heard his late mother talk about midwives and particularly the one who delivered him. |
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It was observed that the low quality of services provided in the health units militate against efforts to promote good practices among student nurses and midwives during their training. |
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One key point from the conference program was: In Ontario, even as the number of midwives continues to increase, they cannot keep up with the demand for their services, turning away approximately 40 per cent of all clients. |
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An important new element of the Finca Sana project is that it will expand the health network to include indigenous people themselves, who are leaders, midwives and healers. |
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Denise Slotta is one of the community midwives taking part, offering reflexology. |
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In Liberia, Save the Children has trained more than 250 care givers and midwives and provided protective and sanitation supplies so that they can work safely. |
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For AiN and aged care nurse, Jarrod Pronk, the Association's name change means that midwives now have more industrial protection. |
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These two focus groups will collect feedback and ideas from foreign-educated midwives already registered in one of the five regulating provinces who have acculturated into the midwifery profession in Canada. |
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Special training sessions are held for midwives and also for doctors, to teach them that reproductive health covers the entire life cycle of a woman. |
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When chiefs of obstetrics services began poring over the Apgar results of their doctors and midwives, they started to think like a bread-factory manager taking stock of how many loaves the bakers burned. |
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Compared to the previous 2001 LLH surveys, the use of feldshers and midwives has fallen. |
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It is often performed by traditional practitioners, including midwives and barbers, without anesthesia and using scissors, razor blades or broken glass. |
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Others, including several gynaecologists working in the university hospitals in Ouagadougou and in BoboDioulasso, feel that many auxiliary midwives are not competent to recognize signs of danger. |
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Between 1840 and 1872, especially in rural Quebec, parish midwives could perform baptisms if it appeared unlikely that the new-born child would live long enough to be baptized by a priest. |
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The UKCC was expected to maintain a register of UK nurses, midwives and health visitors, provide guidance to registrants, and handle professional misconduct complaints. |
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A new, interactive e-learning resource has been developed to help midwives understand their responsibilities when supplying and administering medicines. |
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She attributed high percentages of c-sections in Cyprus to the medicalisation of births and to lack of midwives, whose job is to be with the pregnant woman throughout labour. |
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I had areally good experience at the unit, but the midwives were so busy. |
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It includes information on legislation that offers protection to whistleblowers and information on organisations nurses and midwives can go to for further advice. |
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Revalidation for nurses and midwives will start on 1 April 2016, with approximately 16,000 nurses and midwives going through the process initially. |
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