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  2. Race and maternal health in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Race_and_maternal_health...

    Late entry to prenatal care and inadequate prenatal care are associated with increased likelihood of preterm birth, increased risk of low birthweight infants, and increased infant mortality. [37] Many of the quality measures included in indices of prenatal care lack established correlations to improved maternal health outcomes.

  3. Prenatal care in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prenatal_care_in_the...

    Prenatal care in the United States is a health care preventive care protocol recommended to women with the goal to provide regular check-ups that allow obstetricians-gynecologists, family medicine physicians, or midwives to detect, treat and prevent potential health problems throughout the course of pregnancy while promoting healthy lifestyles that benefit both mother and child. [1]

  4. Prenatal care - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prenatal_care

    Prenatal care, also known as antenatal care, is a type of preventive healthcare.It is provided in the form of medical checkups, consisting of recommendations on managing a healthy lifestyle and the provision of medical information such as maternal physiological changes in pregnancy, biological changes, and prenatal nutrition including prenatal vitamins, which prevents potential health problems ...

  5. Perinatal mortality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perinatal_mortality

    Preterm birth is the most common cause of perinatal mortality, causing almost 30 percent of neonatal deaths. [7] Infant respiratory distress syndrome, in turn, is the leading cause of death in preterm infants, affecting about 1% of newborn infants. [8] Birth defects cause about 21 percent of neonatal death. [7]

  6. Maternal health - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maternal_health

    The model CenteringPregnancy (group prenatal care) is a relatively new addition to prenatal healthcare, and has shown to improve both birth outcomes and patient & provider satisfaction. [63] Specifically, a randomized controlled trial indicated a 33 percent reduction in preterm birth (n=995), and the decrease was even more pronounced for Black ...

  7. Fetal origins hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fetal_Origins_Hypothesis

    The fetal origins hypothesis (differentiated from the Developmental Origins of Health and Disease hypothesis, which emphasizes environmental conditions both before and immediately after birth) proposes that the period of gestation has significant impacts on the developmental health and wellbeing outcomes for an individual ranging from infancy to adulthood.

  8. Paternal age effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paternal_age_effect

    Despite recent increases in average paternal age, however, the oldest father documented in the medical literature was born in 1840: George Isaac Hughes was 94 years old at the time of the birth of his son by his second wife, a 1935 article in the Journal of the American Medical Association stated that his fertility "has been definitely and ...

  9. Preterm birth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preterm_birth

    The absence of prenatal care has been associated with higher rates of preterm births. Analysis of 15,627,407 live births in the United States in 1995–1998 concluded that the absence of prenatal care carried a 2.9 (95%CI 2.8, 3.0) times higher risk of preterm births. [30]

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