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Showing posts with label preterm birth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label preterm birth. Show all posts

Monday, December 14, 2009

Mom in UK needs Breastmilk and support asap

I read this story yesterday and my heart just broke. This a mom who needs support and help for herself and her little baby- but it looks like the British health authorities are stalling and may actually withhold what her baby desperately needs: Breastmilk.
If you are in the UK and have any means to help, PLEASE do what you can! Because when the governments are asses, then it's up to us moms to step up to the plate and do what WE can to help a fellow mother in need.


Cancer Mum in Baby milk plea


A YOUNG mum who was diagnosed with breast cancer while pregnant is appealing against a decision to stop giving donated breast milk to her premature baby.

Dawn Hockey, 28, was 12 weeks pregnant with her second child when she received the devastating news in June this year.

Defying the odds and surviving two bouts of chemotherapy, baby Alex was born on 1 November – seven weeks early – weighing 4lbs 10oz....

..."I had to stop breastfeeding William (her 15 month old son) which was heartbreaking enough and the agreement was that Alex could be on donated breast milk until I could take over when I finish my treatment in April.

"I can’t feed him, not while I’m on chemotherapy.

"He has been exposed to two doses of chemotherapy in the womb, we don’t know what damage that has done to him, and there are things in breast milk that strengthen your immune system, not in formula.

"This is our argument, this is what he needs."


HERE to read the whole news story

Monday, November 30, 2009

"Several states did receive stars for taking steps to reduce smoking among women of childbearing age or providing health insurance coverage for pregnant women, which may help reduce preterm birth rates, the report card noted. Multiple births and elective Caesarean sections also push up preterm birth rates, said Dr. Jennifer L. Howse, president of the March of Dimes."



No argument that reducing smoking in pregnant women is a step forward, and obviously providing health insurance is pretty much a no brainer when it comes to saving lives of mothers & babies.... But what are they doing about the Elective Caesarean section rates? Or more importantly, what are they doing to recognize that the USA has one of the highest C/Section rates in the world? The US spends more money on Maternity care, yet has a horrifyingly high infant and maternal mortality rate that hasn't dropped in 20 years. When is the American OB driven medical machine going to wake up and realize that these problems are not going to go away by driving the Caesarean section rates up, nor are they going to go away until they look at the real problem: THEMSELVES.





Childhood: U.S. Draws Low Marks on Premature Births


Published: November 19, 2009

More than half a million babies, one out of eight, are born prematurely each year in the United States, prompting the March of Dimes to give the nation a D on its premature births report card.

The report card did not give an A to a single state. Vermont, which has a preterm birth rate of 9 percent, got a B, while 17 states got F’s, including Mississippi, with a preterm birth rate of 18.3 percent. The prematurity rate in Puerto Rico, at 19.4 percent, was the highest in the country.

The nationwide rate has barely budged in the most recent three years reported — to 12.7 percent in 2007, according to preliminary figures, from 12.8 percent in 2006 and 12.7 percent in 2005. It was 11.4 percent in 1997.

Several states did receive stars for taking steps to reduce smoking among women of childbearing age or providing health insurance coverage for pregnant women, which may help reduce preterm birth rates, the report card noted. Multiple births and elective Caesarean sections also push up preterm birth rates, said Dr. Jennifer L. Howse, president of the March of Dimes.

All babies born before 37 weeks of gestation are considered premature. They are at higher risk for death and for complications that include cerebral palsy and mental retardation.


http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/24/health/research/24child.html?_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rss