Results 301 to 310 of about 241,631 (348)
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PERINATAL MORTALITY IN ICELAND

Acta Paediatrica, 1973
SummaryData concerning perinatal mortality in Iceland in 1970 are presented.The total number of newborn infants was 4 018. Perinatal mortality was 18.3/1 000.Information concerning perinatal mortality in Reykjavik 1961–1970 is also presented and comparisons made between Reykjavik and the country at large.
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Perinatal Mortality in Twins

Acta geneticae medicae et gemellologiae: twin research, 1979
A study of perinatal mortality in twins has been carried out concurrently in Ibadan, Nigeria, and Aberdeen, Scotland. In both areas perinatal mortality rates have been found to be four times higher in twins than in singletons, reaching up to 310 per 1000 in the monochorionic group in Ibadan. Moreover, rates have been found to increase considerably with
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Perinatal mortality 1988

Irish Journal of Medical Science, 1992
This is the 10th Annual Report of Perinatal Mortality in the Republic of Ireland, based on figures supplied to the Institute of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists by the Obstetrical staff of the Units listed on page 453. Details were available for 53,346 of the 54,815 babies born in 1988.
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Perinatal mortality 1989

Irish Journal of Medical Science, 1992
This report complements the 1988 figures reported earlier in this edition of the Journal. Data were available for 50931 of the 51659 babies born in 1989 weighing 500 grams or more. These were supplied by the Units listed in Table I.
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[Preventable perinatal mortality].

Minerva ginecologica, 2001
Using a critical systematic analysis of perinatal mortality, this study aims to examine, on the basis of current medical and scientific knowledge, whether there are still situations in which feto-neonatal death could be prevented and to define and evaluate the feasibility of realising this goal.The concept of preventable feto-neonatal death refers to ...
COLLA F., ALBA E., GRIO, Ruggero
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Perinatal mortality in the Netherlands

BMJ, 2009
Consistently poor performance indicates that it is time for change The Netherlands’ consistently poor performance in the European perinatal mortality league is a cause for concern. Neither the concern nor the performance are new. They culminated in the late 1970s and mid-1980s when home births were erroneously put forward as the explanation.1 A new ...
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Perinatal and infant mortality

Medical Journal of Australia, 1985
Australias infant mortality rate fell below 10/1000 live births for the 1st time in 1983 (9.6/1000). Internationally Australia ranks 12th in infant mortality among countries with populations over 2.5 million. Contributing to this relatively poor international standing has been the high incidence of low birthweight infants high postneonatal mortality ...
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Perinatal Mortality

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1959
Michael Kurilecz, James T. Downs
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