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Infant Sleep Positioning by Nursery Staff and Mothers in Newborn Hospital Nurseries
Nursing Research, 2004Although advice from healthcare professionals may influence parental infant placement choice to reduce sudden infant death syndrome risk, literature on nursery staff infant placement behaviors and the degree to which they influence maternal infant sleep positioning is limited.To assess newborn placement practices of the mother and nursery staff and ...
Penny F, Stastny +4 more
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Facilitating infant adaptation: the nursery environment
Seminars in Neonatology, 2002The physical and social environment of the nursery is a direct and indirect influence on the development of premature infants. Qualities in the environment affect physiological stability and provide sensory experience that is relevant to brain development.
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Nursery Rearing of Infant Baboons
1979The infant baboon (Papio cynocephalus) has proven to be a useful biomedical research model and has been used in a variety of studies. These areas of investigation include nutrition, infectious diseases, toxicology of infant formula preservatives, and diet as it affects the development of atherosclerosis.
G. T. Moore, L. B. Cummins
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Cytomegaloviruria in older infants in intensive care nurseries
The Journal of Pediatrics, 1979Over a four-month period, urine specimens for viral isolation were obtained weekly from all infants older than three weeks in two intensive care nurseries. These babies comprised 43% of the patients in the nurseries surveyed. Cytomegalovirus was cultured from 13 of 93 (14%) of these infants.
S A, Spector +3 more
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Nursery-acquired cytomegalovirus infection in two premature infants
The Journal of Pediatrics, 1972Summary Two premature infants who had been delivered at gestational ages of 27 and 33 weeks, respectively, acquired cytomegalovirus infections while still in the premature nursery. Following discharge one infant transmitted cytomegalovirus infection to her susceptible mother.
A S, Yeager, H, Jacobs, J, Clark
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Britain's First Nursery-Infant School
The Elementary School Journal, 1966dred and fiftieth anniversary of the school's inception, this may be an opportune moment for a fresh assessment of Owen's educational theory and practice. Why did Owen, a wealthy cottonmill owner, open a school for young children? Did he think that by providing a nursery he could persuade more women to become cotton operatives?
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