Results 251 to 260 of about 462,881 (301)
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American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1932
Abstract A total of 230 fetal deaths occurred among 2635 consecutive deliveries on the Maternity Service of the University Hospital in the past fifty-eight months. Of these 42 were under twenty-eight weeks of pregnancy and because of such marked prematurity are not analyzed in this paper.
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Abstract A total of 230 fetal deaths occurred among 2635 consecutive deliveries on the Maternity Service of the University Hospital in the past fifty-eight months. Of these 42 were under twenty-eight weeks of pregnancy and because of such marked prematurity are not analyzed in this paper.
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1982
To the Editor.— In their recent article inThe Journal(1982;247:987), Drs Erickson and Bjerkedal report that the contrast in infant mortality between Norway and the United States (in 1977, 9.2 per 1,000 live births v 14.1) relates largely to differences in birth weight distribution.
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To the Editor.— In their recent article inThe Journal(1982;247:987), Drs Erickson and Bjerkedal report that the contrast in infant mortality between Norway and the United States (in 1977, 9.2 per 1,000 live births v 14.1) relates largely to differences in birth weight distribution.
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The relationship of prolonged labor to fetal mortality
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1951c REAT strides have been made in recent years in the handling of major obstetrical problems. Chemotherapy and antibiotics have virtually eliminated puerperal sepsis. Readily available blood has reduced greatly the morbidity and mortality from hemorrhage, and careful prenatal observation and early treatment have lowered both the incidence and the ...
G W, CORNER, R W, KISTNER, R L, WALL
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The Journal of Pediatrics, 1933
Summary When we sum up this estimate as to the prospects of saving the newly born infant and the child not yet born, we find that the prospects are not so bright as we could wish. Statistics of other countries are misleading because of different methods of compilation, and we are only interested in them in an academic way.
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Summary When we sum up this estimate as to the prospects of saving the newly born infant and the child not yet born, we find that the prospects are not so bright as we could wish. Statistics of other countries are misleading because of different methods of compilation, and we are only interested in them in an academic way.
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The challenge of fetal mortality.
NCHS data brief, 2009Data from the Fetal Death Data File and Linked Birth/Infant Death Data Set, National Vital Statistics System. The magnitude of fetal mortality is considerable: About 1 million fetal deaths occur at any gestational age in the United States each year, including almost 26,000 at 20 weeks of gestation or more; Even when limited to fetal deaths of 20 weeks ...
Marian F, Macdorman, Sharon, Kirmeyer
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Spatial dynamics of fetal mortality and the relationship with social vulnerability
Journal of Perinatal Medicine, 2022Myllena O Silva +2 more
exaly
Fetal Mortality in Breech Delivery
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1946openaire +2 more sources
MAJOR PROBLEMS IN FETAL MORTALITY
Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 1952J, YERUSHALMY, J M, BIERMAN
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