In Australia one in four pregnancies end in a loss and 50,000 babies die each year from miscarriage, stillbirth or prematurity. |
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He is seeking a certificate from the Court of Criminal Appeal to declare that the conviction was a miscarriage of justice. |
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Accordingly, he claims there has been a miscarriage of justice and that all of his convictions are bad and should be set aside. |
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You seem to concede that by saying there is a miscarriage of justice in the particular circumstances of the case. |
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Well, it is not a miscarriage of justice if the law has been properly applied, and that is the point. |
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The question is whether or not, as a consequence of that error, there has been a demonstrated miscarriage of justice. |
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There needs to be a robust system in place, in all our courts, to see that this does not result in a miscarriage of justice. |
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It will grant leave in a criminal case only where there is something special about the case or there is a miscarriage of justice. |
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It would seem unlikely, therefore, that the dilemma which you posit can arise if there truly is a miscarriage of justice. |
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How can you say that the sentence in this case constitutes a miscarriage of justice? |
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After the age of 35, women are more likely to suffer miscarriage, ectopic pregnancy and pre-eclampsia. |
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Low-dose aspirin is currently prescribed for women with a history of recurrent miscarriage and for those undergoing in-vitro fertilization. |
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My next novel has a miscarriage of justice case but you won't find an investigative journalist or a copper in the background. |
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I confessed to David that my wife and I had a similar miscarriage, as do so many professional couples who wait until their thirties to have kids. |
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The second option is known as a medically induced abortion and is similar to a late miscarriage. |
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Abortion, or miscarriage, implies the premature expulsion of the contents of the impregnated Uterus. |
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It is a perverse verdict and it is a miscarriage of justice in relation to costs. |
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After her first miscarriage Sue had to quit her job in a dentists' surgery. |
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Second-trimester miscarriage often is caused by problems with the uterus or by a weakened cervix that dilates prematurely. |
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It damages unborn babies, and may cause miscarriage if the mother catches the disease while pregnant. |
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Spontaneous miscarriage, premature delivery and stillborn birth are possible results of an infected foetus. |
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Smoking during pregnancy is associated with low birth weight, premature delivery, placenta previa, miscarriage and post-delivery death. |
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Pregnancy is considered risky for women with diabetes because of the increased risk of miscarriage, stillbirth and birth defects in their babies. |
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It's clearly an explicit miscarriage of justice, and I'm glad to see that these young guys are being free. |
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In 12 cases the pregnancies had already failed as a result of missed abortions or miscarriage and so would not have led to a live child. |
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You've just had what is called a threatened abortion, where the mother bleeds but miscarriage does not follow. |
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Smoking in pregnancy raises the risk of miscarriage, stillbirth, preterm birth and low birth weight. |
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The community, seeing the whole affair as a great miscarriage of justice, will welcome them back with open arms. |
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Rangers star Ronald de Boer last night angrily labelled the one-year ban imposed on his brother Frank as a miscarriage of justice. |
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Measles in pregnancy can cause miscarriage, premature labour or a baby with low birth weight. |
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You see the main complication of an amnio is that it can cause a miscarriage in a proportion of women. |
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That means that about one woman in every 100 having an amniocentesis will suffer a miscarriage as a result. |
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Since they were available, they could be approached in the event of miscarriage of justice, or excess of jurisdiction, elsewhere. |
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Our study was powered primarily to look at the influence of bacterial vaginosis rather than chlamydial infection on miscarriage. |
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For most of the 20th century spontaneous miscarriage was managed by evacuation of retained products of conception. |
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Alcohol abuse can cause mental retardation, malformation, growth retardation, miscarriage, and behavioral disorders in infants. |
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When miscarriage occurs under 10 weeks, it is more likely to complete spontaneously. |
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But it is a question of fact as to whether or not there was a miscarriage of justice. This Court does not sit as a Court of Criminal Appeal. |
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Experts say there is no need to abstain unless there is a history of miscarriage or the woman has experienced a bleed. |
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Too much stress may increase the risk of preterm labor, low birthweight and possibly miscarriage. |
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I do not think that the tribunal's misdirection regarding section 129 can be said to have led to any substantial wrong or miscarriage. |
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We performed a questionnaire based survey of miscarriage services in all 26 consultant led gynaecology and obstetric units in Scotland. |
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But it's also a miscarriage of justice when delays and time-wasting deny victims justice for months on end. |
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Confusingly, healthcare professionals sometimes refer to miscarriage as spontaneous abortion. |
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Chinese herbal medicine has properties of detoxicating, stops bleeding, and prevents miscarriage. |
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My husband had lost his desire to live since my first miscarriage, and for more than two years he had been profoundly depressed. |
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She had been starving herself for so long, and she induced a miscarriage on herself. |
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Another possibility is that women with premenopausal breast cancer may simply have a higher risk of miscarriage. |
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Thirdly, there were serious matters which gave rise to a substantial miscarriage of justice. |
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If the error is one of law, the onus will then shift to the Crown to demonstrate that the error did not result in a miscarriage of justice. |
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I realise that, and we would endeavour to prevent a miscarriage of justice if we can, but you have to show error. |
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He could not be sentenced otherwise, otherwise there would be a miscarriage of justice. |
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For 829 days he languished in an Indian jail, the result of a terrible miscarriage of justice. |
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If the conduct of counsel has resulted in an unfair trial, that of itself constitutes a miscarriage of justice. |
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Nor are we persuaded that the applicant has suffered a miscarriage of justice upon any of the grounds argued by him. |
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The facts of a given case or the necessary logic of a jury's verdict may rule out any possibility of a miscarriage of justice. |
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The Court is not convinced that any error resulting in a miscarriage of justice has been shown in this case. |
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One pregnant woman reported that she suffered a miscarriage after she was kicked by a Border Patrol agent. |
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Explaining why she had recently missed several days of shooting, Lohan blurted out the news that she had a miscarriage. |
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Their pregnancies led to 10 births, four abortions, and one miscarriage. |
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It is possible for infection to occur, and miscarriage is a further possibility, for example if the amniotic sac has been punctured during the procedure. |
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When a pregnant woman is infected with listeriosis, she may have a miscarriage, premature delivery or stillbirth, or her newborn baby may become seriously ill and may die. |
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One year later, at age 41, they reconciled, and the couple came back to Jain's clinic for IVF after she had had a miscarriage. |
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Approximately 1 percent of women experience recurrent miscarriage, which is defined as three consecutive miscarriages of pregnancies conceived with the same partner. |
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Almost all women go on to have a healthy pregnancy after a miscarriage. |
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In this particular case there was an egregious miscarriage of justice. |
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The Crown says the misdirection did not produce a miscarriage of justice. |
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Exposure to high levels of lead during pregnancy contributes to miscarriage, preterm delivery, low birthweight and developmental delays in the infant. |
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I was at MacDowell three days after the miscarriage and tried to write that piece. |
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But after nearly a year of trying and a miscarriage, she is still not pregnant. |
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A recent study found that women with an infection called bacterial vaginosis were nine times more likely to have a miscarriage than uninfected women. |
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Stanley is the victim of such an appalling and unlikely miscarriage of justice and yet he remains stoical and philosophical about everything that befalls him. |
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Evidence also exists that the incidence of miscarriage may be increased in women with an intramural fibroid having in vitro fertilisation treatment. |
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Given the way the accused conducted his defence, and the evidence, we do not think that any miscarriage of justice has occurred in this particular case. |
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Each amniocentesis carried a risk of miscarriage or preterm labour, and as some pregnancies needed several of these procedures the risk was not inconsequential. |
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Ms Reynolds, a 25 year old woman, primiparous with one miscarriage, presented to her general practitioner when eight weeks pregnant complaining of nausea and vomiting. |
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In the 1940s and 1950s, another estrogen, diethylstilbestrol, was widely given to Western women early in their pregnancies in a misguided attempt to prevent miscarriage. |
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In a previous study Swan found that women who drank tap water with elevated levels of certain chlorination by-products had higher miscarriage rates. |
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The book deals with a miscarriage of justice, although it is fictional rather than documental, and involves not wrongful conviction but wholesale coverup. |
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She became pregnant last year, also after artificial insemination, but appeared to have suffered a miscarriage late term. |
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She has since had Naeve, aged 10, and Lewis, aged seven, although suffered another miscarriage between her last two children. |
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Each year, approximately a million pregnancies in the United States end in miscarriage, stillbirth, or the death of the newborn child. |
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After a false pregnancy or miscarriage in 1534, he saw her failure to give him a son as a betrayal. |
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Aneuploidy of autosomes is not well tolerated and usually results in miscarriage of the developing fetus. |
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Male gray langur monkeys may attack females following male takeover, causing miscarriage. |
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How much more easy had the want of a son been, than the miscarriage! barrenness, than orbation? |
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Will we reach a time when only poor women have to worry about miscarriage? |
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Offering LARC at the time of delivery, abortion, or dilation and curettage for miscarriage. |
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The only definitive test involves chorionic villus sampling and amniocentesis but that carries a risk of miscarriage. |
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After a miscarriage, we went through considerable soulsearching and lifestyle changes. |
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Another alleged miscarriage of justice by jury trial was the Wanninkhof murder case. |
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Anne may have had later pregnancies which ended in miscarriage or stillbirth. |
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It is frequently argued that capital punishment leads to miscarriage of justice through the wrongful execution of innocent persons. |
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The degree of force, if severe, can cause serious internal injuries without necessarily succeeding in inducing miscarriage. |
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Spontaneous abortion, also known as miscarriage, is the unintentional expulsion of an embryo or fetus before the 24th week of gestation. |
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The main cause of miscarriage and non-breeding was the radio collar put around the tigress's necks, he told the newspaper. |
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Amnios carry with them a risk of miscarriage and I decided not to go ahead with it and just wait and see. |
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Marie, a former factory worker, was first diagnosed with pulmonary fibrosis and polymyositis in 2006 after the miscarriage of her first child. |
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If either is taken during pregnancy, they do not increase the risk of miscarriage nor cause birth defects. |
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Anne's downfall came shortly after she had recovered from her final miscarriage. |
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During the American slavery period, cotton root bark was used in folk remedies as an abortifacient, that is, to induce a miscarriage. |
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At the time of this attack, Claxton had been four months pregnant, and subsequently suffered a miscarriage. |
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Most women will not be aware they have thrombophilia unless alerted to it by recurrent, usually early miscarriage within the first 13 weeks of pregnancy. |
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Gynaecologists have been giving women with a history of miscarriage progesterone pessaries for years but against a background of questionable evidence. |
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And pregnant women specially, should avoid drinking herbal infusions such as nettle leaf, comfrey, yarrow and ma huang as they can cause miscarriage or early labour. |
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She delivered three stillborn babies and lost one at eight weeks before doctors discovered she had Hughes syndrome, a condition that causes miscarriage. |
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She had 3 miscarriages and an extrauterine pregnancy within 2 years, and the titers that were found indicate that she was acutely infected weeks before the first miscarriage. |
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His and Gertrude's was a fairybook marriage. The fairy tale ended quickly. After a miscarriage, Gertrude Thomas winced over pregnant black women slaving under the inhuman sun. |
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In pregnant women, high levels of exposure to lead may cause miscarriage. |
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An abortion that occurs spontaneously is also known as a miscarriage. |
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Delaying another pregnancy after a miscarriage however does not appear to alter risk and women are advised to attempt pregnancy in this situation whenever they are ready. |
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These included miscarriage, stillbirth, hospital admission for preterm labor, preeclampsia, gestational hypertension, gestational diabetes, and oligohydramnios. |
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At present the only other way to diagnose these diseases is to do amniocentesis or chorionic villus sampling, both of which carry a small risk of miscarriage. |
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Before they married, she had a miscarriage, followed by two more after the wedding, experiences which she drew on for the tortured tunes on From The Choirgirl Hotel album. |
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Reduced volume and sizes of the gestational sac and embryo in women presenting with threatened and missed miscarriage are associated with increased risks of pregnancy loss. |
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