Results 261 to 270 of about 152,103 (313)
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Neonatal intensive care perspective
Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, 2011The hemodynamic evaluation and monitoring in the critically ill newborn (particularly the premature infant) poses unique challenges because of urgency, size limitations, and the persistence of fetal shunt channels. Echocardiography and other noninvasive methods are currently the mainstay of hemodynamic assessment.
Neil N, Finer, John P, Kinsella
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THE FAMILY AND NEONATAL INTENSIVE CARE
Social Work in Health Care, 1982The birth of a sick newborn provides great stress for the family. During the illness, the family must face charged issues, including the loss of the perfect child they had anticipated and a fear that their baby may die. Issues related to helping these vulnerable families are examined, including response to the birth of a sick baby, communication with ...
C K, Mahan, J C, Krueger, R L, Schreiner
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Access to Neonatal Intensive Care
The Future of Children, 1995The birth of a high-risk infant is still a relatively rare, not totally predictable event; and the management of high-risk newborns requires highly skilled personnel and sophisticated technology. In the early days of neonatal intensive care, scarce resources led to regionalized systems of neonatal and, later, perinatal services, generally based on ...
M C, McCormick, D K, Richardson
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Neonatal intensive care neurology
Seminars in Pediatric Neurology, 2004The pediatric neurologist's role in the neonatal intensive care unit is described in four clinical settings: (1) assessment of outcome in neonatal encephalopathy, (2) treatment of seizures in full-term infants, (3) assessment and treatment of intraventricular hemorrhage with posthemorrhagic hydrocephalus, and (4) assessment of outcome in preterm ...
Walter C, Allan, Daniel B, Sobel
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The Neonatal Intensive Care Unit
Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 1982Child psychiatrists have recently been asked to provide consultation and liaison to neonatal intensive care units in order to assist in providing humane care for all those who are distressed by the events that commonly unfold in intensive care units and to help deal with the special neurologic and emotional problems of the high-risk infant and his ...
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American Journal of Diseases of Children, 1989
The March 24/31, 1989, issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association is dedicated to timely and important topics relating to newborn medicine. These include articles dealing with perinatal infections 1-3 and prenatal dilemmas. 4,5 The contents of this issue of JAMA are important and relevant to health care professionals who render care to ...
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The March 24/31, 1989, issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association is dedicated to timely and important topics relating to newborn medicine. These include articles dealing with perinatal infections 1-3 and prenatal dilemmas. 4,5 The contents of this issue of JAMA are important and relevant to health care professionals who render care to ...
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Journal of Early Intervention, 1994
Although there are numerous anecdotal reports of parental stress following preterm birth, there are few empirical studies that document parents' perceptions concerning what is stressful. Of the extant research literature, there are even fewer studies targeting fathers as well as mothers.
MARY-ALAYNE HUGHES, JEANETTE McCOLLUM
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Although there are numerous anecdotal reports of parental stress following preterm birth, there are few empirical studies that document parents' perceptions concerning what is stressful. Of the extant research literature, there are even fewer studies targeting fathers as well as mothers.
MARY-ALAYNE HUGHES, JEANETTE McCOLLUM
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Journal of Clinical Engineering, 1995
Abstract In many ways, neonatal intensive care represents the epitome of modern medicine. It practices at the leading edge of technology and medical knowledge and challenges the limits of viability of life itself. Through the regionalization of perinatal care, it revolutionized the health service delivery system and incorporated concepts
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Abstract In many ways, neonatal intensive care represents the epitome of modern medicine. It practices at the leading edge of technology and medical knowledge and challenges the limits of viability of life itself. Through the regionalization of perinatal care, it revolutionized the health service delivery system and incorporated concepts
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Transparency in Neonatal Intensive Care
The Hastings Center Report, 1992Medical teams care for severely premature infants under conditions of emergency and uncertainty that make parental involvement very difficult. Parents can be invited into a decisional relationship with the team that enables them to assess more fully the meaning of their child's illness.
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Neonatal intensive care in the home
Home Care Provider, 1998As the trend toward early discharge and home care of medically fragile neonates continues, parents find themselves thrust into a lifestyle for which they are unprepared. They must quickly adjust to a new daily routine and new home environment. They watch as part of their home is transformed into a mini intensive care unit with the kind of high-tech ...
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