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The High-Risk Pregnancy

Hospital Practice, 1971
After one recognizes that the most important factors in the high-risk pregnancy are socioeconomic in origin—including even many of the apparent medical risks—two major considerations arise. One is to identify early the patient in whom complications may be expected; the other, to cope with the logistics of giving her the services she may need ...
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The development of an index of high-risk pregnancy

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1982
Presented is a scheme by which an index of high-risk pregnancy can be evaluated. The proposed scheme is applied to a risk index developed for the purpose of illustration. The usefulness of risk indices (or any other predictive measure) can be judged in clear statistical terms. The illustrative model developed here behaves similarly with each of the two
Edward W. Whitehorne, Judith A. Fortney
openaire   +3 more sources

Pregnancy in high risk cardiac conditions

Heart, 2008
Heart disease is present in 0.5–1% of all pregnant women and is the biggest killer of pregnant women in the developed world (fig 1). Surprisingly, there have been no signs of decline in this incidence over the past two decades (fig 2). In the UK, all maternal deaths (during pregnancy and within the first post partum year) are recorded and examined in ...
Jolien W. Roos-Hesselink   +2 more
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High-Risk Pregnancy

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1974
To the Editor.— The recent summary on the management of high-risk pregnancy by Pearson (229:1439, 1974) was clear, concise, and almost comprehensive. There is, however, one additional general consideration that practicing obstetricians should keep in mind. Pregnancy is a time of joy for most couples, but also a time of great stress and anxiety. There
openaire   +2 more sources

Management of the High-Risk Pregnancy [PDF]

open access: possibleObstetrics and Gynecology Clinics of North America, 2004
and her family with a physiologic process to produce a healthy full-term infant. In fact, the raison d’etre of prenatal care is to identify women who have risk factors with the potential to adversely affect this expected outcome of a healthy mother and child. A particular challenge for the clinician in the prenatal period is the management of pregnancy
Michael O. Gardner, Manju Monga
openaire   +1 more source

Medically high-risk pregnancy: Women’s perceptions of their relationships with health care providers

Social work in health care, 2019
The purpose of this article is to examine women’s perceptions of the patient-provider relationship in the context of medically high-risk pregnancy (MHRP).
S. Munch   +3 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Management of High-Risk Pregnancy

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1974
ANY practicing obstetrician should have a schema for the identification and management of his high-risk pregnancy population. The science of obstetrics has progressed so rapidly in the last two decades that it has become increasingly difficult for the average practitioner to keep up with advances, much less to incorporate them into his practice.
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Women's Needs on Bed Rest during High-risk pregnancy and Postpartum Period: A Qualitative Study

, 2018
Background & aim: pregnancy is a normal part of life, however, high-risk pregnancy that need bed rest can be stressful and affect woman and her family. Therefore, understanding the needs of women on bed rest seems to be necessary to enhance the quality ...
Moghgan Janighorban   +3 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

A high-risk pregnancy management protocol

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1976
A simple hihg-risk pregnancy management protocol is presented. Three basic quantitative tests of fetal-placental function are utilized. The advantages and proper application and interpretation of these laboratory tools are discussed. Perinatal outcome is analyzed in the initial 225 high-risk pregnancies managed according to the protocol.
James P. Crane   +2 more
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Fetal habituation in high‐risk pregnancies

BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, 1982
Summary. Habituation is a basic form of learning and probably requires an intact central nervous system. Habituation in the behavioural response to vibration in 40 normal human fetuses was compared with that in a group of high‐risk pregnancies with an increased risk of fetal neurological damage.
Bahia Martin   +3 more
openaire   +3 more sources

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