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2,437 to 2,448 of 2,438 stories (336 over past year)
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Child Psychology
Mental Health Research
Mental Health
Child Development
Depression
Pregnancy and Childbirth
Emergency Department Visits May Signal Depression In New Mothers
June 6, 1997 Mothers who brought their infants to the emergency department within three weeks of childbirth were three times as likely to develop symptoms of ... > full story -
Functional Significance Of Iron Deficiency In Children
June 6, 1997 Children who suffered from severe, chronic iron deficiency as infants have learning and behavior deficits into ... > full story -
Children's Mercy Research At Center Of Infant Formula Debate
June 4, 1997 Researchers have found no advantage to including long-chain fatty acids in infant formula, despite their role as essential components of brain and retinal ... > full story -
Early Marrow Transplant May Cure SIDS
June 4, 1997 A 15-year study at Duke University has shown that babies born with Severe Combined Immunodeficiency (SCID) have a greater than 90 percent chance of being cured if they are given a bone marrow ... > full story -
Vaccine For Cytomegalovirus Has Promise
June 4, 1997 A vaccine for cytomegalovirus was found to be well tolerated and highly immunogenic in toddlers, according to research at Eastern Virginia Medical School. CMV can cause mononucleosis-type ... > full story -
Texas Researcher Finds Increased SIDS Risk In Twins
June 4, 1997 Twins die of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome at more than double the rate of single births, according to research at the University of Texas-Galveston. If one twin died of SIDS, the other had a six- ... > full story -
Study Provides Baseline Measurements of Viral Load in Pediatric AIDS
May 8, 1997 The amount of HIV in the blood of perinatally infected infants peaks at 1 to 2 months of age and then declines slowly to level off at 24 months at relatively high concentrations compared to those ... > full story -
Today's Healthcare
Pregnancy and Childbirth
Gynecology
Wounds and Healing
Diseases and Conditions
Menopause
Women With Low-Risk Pregnancies Receive Fewer Obstetrical Interventions When Cared For By Midwives, Compared To Women Attended By Physicians
April 18, 1997 Low-risk patients who choose nurse midwives for their obstetrical care have fewer Caesarean sections, receive less anesthesia, have a much lower rate of episiotomy and incur less expense, compared to ... > full story -
Premature Babies Benefit From Inhaling Nitric Oxide At Shands At The University Of Florida
March 28, 1997 A gas commonly found in smog and cigarette smoke actually helps premature babies by opening blood vessels in their underdeveloped lungs, causing blood oxygen levels to ... > full story -
Sugar, Suckling Trigger Natural Pain Control
February 17, 1997 Neuroscientists at the University of Maryland at Baltimore have found that sugar and suckling activate natural pain-modulating systems in infants. Their findings could lead to new ways to stimulate ... > full story -
Today's Healthcare
Diseases and Conditions
Infant's Health
Personalized Medicine
Medical Imaging
Down Syndrome
Pioneering Surgery At UIC Medical Center Saves Twins
February 14, 1997 A condition once considered hopeless for 6,000 identical twin babies each year in the United States is now being treated with a new, pioneering laser surgical ... > full story
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