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1.
J Perinat Med ; 47(1): 16-21, 2018 Dec 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29813034

ABSTRACT

Hospital births, when compared to out-of-hospital births, have generally led to not only a significantly reduced maternal and perinatal mortality and morbidity but also an increase in certain interventions. A trend seems to be emerging, especially in the US where some women are requesting home births, which creates ethical challenges for obstetricians and the health care organizations and policy makers. In the developing world, a completely different reality exists. Home births constitute the majority of deliveries in the developing world. There are severe limitations in terms of facilities, health personnel and deeply entrenched cultural and socio-economic conditions militating against hospital births. As a consequence, maternal and perinatal mortality and morbidity remain the highest, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Midwife-assisted planned home birth therefore has a major role to play in increasing the safety of childbirth in SSA. The objective of this paper is to propose a model that can be used to improve the safety of childbirth in low resource countries and to outline why midwife assisted planned home birth with coordination of hospitals is the preferred alternative to unassisted or inadequately assisted planned home birth in SSA.


Subject(s)
Home Childbirth , Midwifery , Prenatal Care , Adult , Africa South of the Sahara/epidemiology , Female , Home Childbirth/adverse effects , Home Childbirth/methods , Home Childbirth/mortality , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Midwifery/methods , Midwifery/standards , Perinatal Mortality , Pregnancy , Prenatal Care/methods , Prenatal Care/standards , Quality Improvement
2.
PLoS One ; 11(5): e0155721, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27187582

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Over the last decade, planned home births in the United States (US) have increased, and have been associated with increased neonatal mortality and other morbidities. In a previous study we reported that neonatal mortality is increased in planned home births but we did not perform an analysis for the presence of professional certification status. PURPOSE: The objective of this study therefore was to undertake an analysis to determine whether the professional certification status of midwives or the home birth setting are more closely associated with the increased neonatal mortality of planned midwife-attended home births in the United States. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This study is a secondary analysis of our prior study. The 2006-2009 period linked birth/infant deaths data set was analyzed to examine total neonatal deaths (deaths less than 28 days of life) in term singleton births (37+ weeks and newborn weight ≥ 2,500 grams) without documented congenital malformations by certification status of the midwife: certified nurse midwives (CNM), nurse midwives certified by the American Midwifery Certification Board, and "other" or uncertified midwives who are not certified by the American Midwifery Certification Board. RESULTS: Neonatal mortality rates in hospital births attended by certified midwives were significantly lower (3.2/10,000, RR 0.33 95% CI 0.21-0.53) than home births attended by certified midwives (NNM: 10.0/10,000; RR 1) and uncertified midwives (13.7/10,000; RR 1.41 [95% CI, 0.83-2.38]). The difference in neonatal mortality between certified and uncertified midwives at home births did not reach statistical levels (10.0/10,000 births versus 13.7/10,000 births p = 0.2). CONCLUSIONS: This study confirms that when compared to midwife-attended hospital births, neonatal mortality rates at home births are significantly increased. While NNM was increased in planned homebirths attended by uncertified midwives when compared to certified midwives, this difference was not statistically significant. Neonatal mortality rates at home births were not significantly different in relationship to professional certification status of the birth attendant, whether the delivery was by a certified or an uncertified birth attendant.


Subject(s)
Certification , Home Childbirth/adverse effects , Infant Mortality , Midwifery , Female , Home Childbirth/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Infant , Pregnancy , United States
3.
Semin Perinatol ; 40(4): 222-6, 2016 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26804379

ABSTRACT

Planned home birth is a paradigmatic case study of the importance of ethics and professionalism in contemporary perinatology. In this article we provide a summary of recent analyses of the Centers for Disease Control database on attendants and birth outcomes in the United States. This summary documents the increased risks of neonatal mortality and morbidity of planned home birth as well as bias in Apgar scoring. We then describe the professional responsibility model of obstetric ethics, which is based on the professional medical ethics of two major figures in the history of medical ethics, Drs. John Gregory of Scotland and Thomas Percival of England. This model emphasizes the identification and careful balancing of the perinatologist's ethical obligations to pregnant, fetal, and neonatal patients. This model stands in sharp contrast to one-dimensional maternal-rights-based reductionist model of obstetric ethics, which is based solely on the pregnant woman's rights. We then identify the implications of the professional responsibility model for the perinatologist's role in directive counseling of women who express an interest in or ask about planned home birth. Perinatologists should explain the evidence of the increased, preventable perinatal risks of planned home birth, recommend against it, and recommend planned hospital birth. Perinatologists have the professional responsibility to create and sustain a strong culture of safety committed to a home-birth-like experience in the hospital. By routinely fulfilling these professional responsibilities perinatologists can help to prevent the documented, increased risks planned home birth.


Subject(s)
Delivery, Obstetric/ethics , Home Childbirth , Midwifery/ethics , Natural Childbirth , Patient Safety/standards , Pregnant Women , Apgar Score , Delivery, Obstetric/standards , Ethics, Medical , Evidence-Based Medicine , Female , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Home Childbirth/adverse effects , Home Childbirth/ethics , Home Childbirth/standards , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Midwifery/standards , Moral Obligations , Natural Childbirth/adverse effects , Natural Childbirth/ethics , Natural Childbirth/standards , Pregnancy , Pregnant Women/psychology , Professional Role , United States
5.
Am J Obstet Gynecol ; 212(3): 350.e1-6, 2015 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25446661

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: We analyzed the perinatal risks of midwife-attended planned home births in the United States from 2010 through 2012 and compared them with recommendations from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) for planned home births. STUDY DESIGN: Data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for Health Statistics birth certificate data files from 2010 through 2012 were utilized to analyze the frequency of certain perinatal risk factors that were associated with planned midwife-attended home births in the United States and compare them with deliveries performed in the hospital by certified nurse midwives. Home birth deliveries attended by others were excluded; only planned home births attended by midwives were included. Hospital deliveries attended by certified nurse midwives served as the reference. Perinatal risk factors were those established by ACOG and AAP. RESULTS: Midwife-attended planned home births in the United States had the following risk factors: breech presentation, 0.74% (odds ratio [OR], 3.19; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.87-3.56); prior cesarean delivery, 4.4% (OR, 2.08; 95% CI, 2.0-2.17); twins, 0.64% (OR, 2.06; 95% CI, 1.84-2.31); and gestational age 41 weeks or longer, 28.19% (OR, 1.71; 95% CI, 1.68-1.74). All 4 perinatal risk factors were significantly higher among midwife-attended planned home births when compared with certified nurse midwives-attended hospital births, and 3 of 4 perinatal risk factors were significantly higher in planned home births attended by non-American Midwifery Certification Board (AMCB)-certified midwives (other midwives) when compared with home births attended by certified nurse midwives. Among midwife-attended planned home births, 65.7% of midwives did not meet the ACOG and AAP recommendations for certification by the American Midwifery Certification Board. CONCLUSION: At least 30% of midwife-attended planned home births are not low risk and not within clinical criteria set by ACOG and AAP, and 65.7% of planned home births in the United States are attended by non-AMCB certified midwives, even though both AAP and ACOG state that only AMCB-certified midwives should attend home births.


Subject(s)
Home Childbirth/statistics & numerical data , Midwifery/statistics & numerical data , Pregnancy, High-Risk , Certification , Databases, Factual , Delivery, Obstetric , Female , Home Childbirth/standards , Humans , Midwifery/standards , Nurse Midwives/standards , Nurse Midwives/statistics & numerical data , Pregnancy , Risk Factors , United States
6.
J Perinat Med ; 43(4): 455-60, 2015 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24756040

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The Apgar score is used worldwide to assess the newborn infant shortly after birth. Apgar scores, including mean scores and those with high cut-off scores, have been used to support claims that planned home birth is as safe as hospital birth. The purpose of this study was to determine the distribution of 5 min Apgar scores among different birth settings and providers in the USA. METHODS: We obtained data from the National Center for Health Statistics of the US Centers for Disease Control birth certificate data for 2007-2010 for all singleton, term births of infants weighing ≥2500 g (n=13,830,531). Patients were then grouped into six categories by birth setting and birth attendant: hospital-based physician, hospital-based midwife, freestanding birth center with either certified nurse midwife and/or other midwife, and home-based delivery with either certified nurse midwife or other midwife. The distribution of each Apgar score from 0 to 10 was assessed for each group. RESULTS: Newborns delivered by other midwives or certified nurse midwives (CNMs) in a birthing center or at home had a significantly higher likelihood of a 5 min maximum Apgar score of 10 than those delivered in a hospital [52.63% in birthing centers, odds ratio (OR) 29.19, 95% confidence interval (CI): 28.29-30.06, and 52.44% at home, OR 28.95, 95% CI: 28.40-29.50; CNMs: 16.43% in birthing centers, OR 5.16, 95% CI: 4.99-5.34, and 36.9% at home births, OR 15.29, 95% CI: 14.85-15.73]. CONCLUSIONS: Our study shows an inexplicable bias of high 5 min Apgar scores of 10 in home or birthing center deliveries. Midwives delivering at home or in birthing centers assigned a significantly higher proportion of Apgar scores of 10 when compared to midwives or physicians delivering in the hospital. Studies that have claimed the safety of out-of-hospital deliveries by using higher mean or high cut-off 5 min Apgar scores and reviews based on these studies should be treated with skepticism by obstetricians and midwives, by pregnant women, and by policy makers. The continued use of studies using higher mean or high cut-off 5 min Apgar scores, and a bias of high Apgar score, to advocate the safety of home births is inappropriate.


Subject(s)
Apgar Score , Birthing Centers/statistics & numerical data , Home Childbirth/statistics & numerical data , Infant, Newborn , Midwifery/statistics & numerical data , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , United States
7.
N Engl J Med ; 371(2): 140-9, 2014 Jul 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25006720

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In the Total Body Hypothermia for Neonatal Encephalopathy Trial (TOBY), newborns with asphyxial encephalopathy who received hypothermic therapy had improved neurologic outcomes at 18 months of age, but it is uncertain whether such therapy results in longer-term neurocognitive benefits. METHODS: We randomly assigned 325 newborns with asphyxial encephalopathy who were born at a gestational age of 36 weeks or more to receive standard care alone (control) or standard care with hypothermia to a rectal temperature of 33 to 34°C for 72 hours within 6 hours after birth. We evaluated the neurocognitive function of these children at 6 to 7 years of age. The primary outcome of this analysis was the frequency of survival with an IQ score of 85 or higher. RESULTS: A total of 75 of 145 children (52%) in the hypothermia group versus 52 of 132 (39%) in the control group survived with an IQ score of 85 or more (relative risk, 1.31; P=0.04). The proportions of children who died were similar in the hypothermia group and the control group (29% and 30%, respectively). More children in the hypothermia group than in the control group survived without neurologic abnormalities (65 of 145 [45%] vs. 37 of 132 [28%]; relative risk, 1.60; 95% confidence interval, 1.15 to 2.22). Among survivors, children in the hypothermia group, as compared with those in the control group, had significant reductions in the risk of cerebral palsy (21% vs. 36%, P=0.03) and the risk of moderate or severe disability (22% vs. 37%, P=0.03); they also had significantly better motor-function scores. There was no significant between-group difference in parental assessments of children's health status and in results on 10 of 11 psychometric tests. CONCLUSIONS: Moderate hypothermia after perinatal asphyxia resulted in improved neurocognitive outcomes in middle childhood. (Funded by the United Kingdom Medical Research Council and others; TOBY ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01092637.).


Subject(s)
Asphyxia Neonatorum/therapy , Hypothermia, Induced , Intelligence , Asphyxia Neonatorum/complications , Asphyxia Neonatorum/mortality , Cerebral Palsy/epidemiology , Cerebral Palsy/etiology , Child , Developmental Disabilities/epidemiology , Developmental Disabilities/etiology , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Gestational Age , Health Status , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Male , Psychological Tests , Survivors
8.
Acta Paediatr ; 103(7): 701-8, 2014 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24635758

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Premature infants at the limits of viability raise difficult ethical, legal, social and economic questions. Neonatologists attending an international Collegium were surveyed about delivery room behaviour, and the approach taken by selected countries practicing 'modern' medicine was explored. CONCLUSION: There were strong preferences for comfort care at 22 weeks and full resuscitation at 24 weeks. Resuscitation was a grey area at 23 weeks. Cultural, social and legal factors also had a considerable impact on decision-making.


Subject(s)
Infant, Extremely Premature , Intensive Care, Neonatal/standards , Neonatology/standards , Resuscitation/standards , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Intensive Care, Neonatal/ethics , Internationality , Neonatology/ethics , Resuscitation/ethics
9.
Am J Obstet Gynecol ; 211(4): 390.e1-7, 2014 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24662716

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: We examined neonatal mortality in relation to birth settings and birth attendants in the United States from 2006 through 2009. STUDY DESIGN: Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-linked birth and infant death dataset in the United States from 2006 through 2009 were used to assess early and total neonatal mortality for singleton, vertex, and term births without congenital malformations delivered by midwives and physicians in the hospital and midwives and others out of the hospital. Deliveries by hospital midwives served as the reference. RESULTS: Midwife home births had a significantly higher total neonatal mortality risk than deliveries by hospital midwives (1.26 per 1000 births; relative risk [RR], 3.87 vs 0.32 per 1000; P < .001). Midwife home births of 41 weeks or longer (1.84 per 1000; RR, 6.76 vs 0.27 per 1000; P < .001) and midwife home births of women with a first birth (2.19 per 1000; RR, 6.74 vs 0.33 per 1000; P < .001) had significantly higher risks of total neonatal mortality than deliveries by hospital midwives. In midwife home births, neonatal mortality for first births was twice that of subsequent births (2.19 vs 0.96 per 1000; P < .001). Similar results were observed for early neonatal mortality. The excess total neonatal mortality for midwife home births compared with midwife hospital births was 9.32 per 10,000 births, and the excess early neonatal mortality was 7.89 per 10,000 births. CONCLUSION: Our study shows a significantly increased total and early neonatal mortality for home births and even higher risks for women of 41 weeks or longer and women having a first birth. These significantly increased risks of neonatal mortality in home births must be disclosed by all obstetric practitioners to all pregnant women who express an interest in such births.


Subject(s)
Delivery, Obstetric/mortality , Home Childbirth/mortality , Infant Mortality , Midwifery , Nurse Midwives , Physicians , Adult , Delivery Rooms , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Pregnancy , Term Birth , United States/epidemiology
10.
J Clin Ethics ; 24(3): 184-91, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24282845

ABSTRACT

Planned home birth has been considered by some to be consistent with professional responsibility in patient care. This article critically assesses the ethical and scientific justification for this view and shows it to be unjustified. We critically assess recent statements by professional associations of obstetricians, one that sanctions and one that endorses planned home birth. We base our critical appraisal on the professional responsibility model of obstetric ethics, which is based on the ethical concept of medicine from the Scottish and English Enlightenments of the 18th century. Our critical assessment supports the following conclusions. Because of its significantly increased, preventable perinatal risks, planned home birth in the United States is not clinically or ethically benign. Attending planned home birth, no matter one's training or experience, is not acting in a professional capacity, because this role preventably results in clinically unnecessary and therefore clinically unacceptable perinatal risk. It is therefore not consistent with the ethical concept of medicine as a profession for any attendant to planned home birth to represent himself or herself as a "professional." Obstetric healthcare associations should neither sanction nor endorse planned home birth. Instead, these associations should recommend against planned home birth. Obstetric healthcare professionals should respond to expressions of interest in planned home birth by pregnant women by informing them that it incurs significantly increased, preventable perinatal risks, by recommending strongly against planned home birth, and by recommending strongly for planned hospital birth. Obstetric healthcare professionals should routinely provide excellent obstetric care to all women transferred to the hospital from a planned home birth.The professional responsibility model of obstetric ethics requires obstetricians to address and remedy legitimate dissatisfaction with some hospital settings and address patients' concerns about excessive interventions. Creating a sustained culture of comprehensive safety, which cannot be achieved in planned home birth, informed by compassionate and respectful treatment of pregnant women, should be a primary focus of professional obstetric responsibility.


Subject(s)
Delivery, Obstetric/ethics , Home Childbirth/ethics , Midwifery/ethics , Natural Childbirth/ethics , Obstetrics/ethics , Pregnant Women , Beneficence , Delivery, Obstetric/methods , Delivery, Obstetric/standards , Delivery, Obstetric/trends , Ethics, Medical , Ethics, Nursing , Female , Guilt , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Home Childbirth/adverse effects , Home Childbirth/standards , Home Childbirth/trends , Humans , Midwifery/standards , Midwifery/trends , Moral Obligations , Natural Childbirth/adverse effects , Natural Childbirth/standards , Natural Childbirth/trends , Obstetrics/standards , Obstetrics/trends , Patient Safety/standards , Pregnancy , Pregnant Women/psychology , United States
12.
Am J Obstet Gynecol ; 209(4): 323.e1-6, 2013 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23791692

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To examine the occurrence of 5-minute Apgar scores of 0 and seizures or serious neurologic dysfunction for 4 groups by birth setting and birth attendant (hospital physician, hospital midwife, free-standing birth center midwife, and home midwife) in the United States from 2007-2010. METHODS: Data from the United States Centers for Disease Control's National Center for Health Statistics birth certificate data files were used to assess deliveries by physicians and midwives in and out of the hospital for the 4-year period from 2007-2010 for singleton term births (≥37 weeks' gestation) and ≥2500 g. Five-minute Apgar scores of 0 and neonatal seizures or serious neurologic dysfunction were analyzed for 4 groups by birth setting and birth attendant (hospital physician, hospital midwife, freestanding birth center midwife, and home midwife). RESULTS: Home births (relative risk [RR], 10.55) and births in free-standing birth centers (RR, 3.56) attended by midwives had a significantly higher risk of a 5-minute Apgar score of 0 (P < .0001) than hospital births attended by physicians or midwives. Home births (RR, 3.80) and births in freestanding birth centers attended by midwives (RR, 1.88) had a significantly higher risk of neonatal seizures or serious neurologic dysfunction (P < .0001) than hospital births attended by physicians or midwives. CONCLUSION: The increased risk of 5-minute Apgar score of 0 and seizures or serious neurologic dysfunction of out-of-hospital births should be disclosed by obstetric practitioners to women who express an interest in out-of-hospital birth. Physicians should address patients' motivations for out-of-hospital delivery by continuously improving safe and compassionate care of pregnant, fetal, and neonatal patients in the hospital setting.


Subject(s)
Apgar Score , Birthing Centers/statistics & numerical data , Delivery Rooms/statistics & numerical data , Delivery, Obstetric/statistics & numerical data , Home Childbirth/statistics & numerical data , Midwifery/statistics & numerical data , Nervous System Diseases/epidemiology , Obstetrics/statistics & numerical data , Seizures/epidemiology , Adult , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Pregnancy , Risk , United States/epidemiology , Young Adult
13.
Semin Fetal Neonatal Med ; 18(4): 185-91, 2013 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23746578

ABSTRACT

Neonatal seizures constitute the most frequent and distinctive neurological symptom in the neonatal period. Seizures in the neonatal period differ considerably from those observed later in life with respect to their aetiological profile and clinical presentation. In addition, the aetiological profile in preterm infants is different from that seen in term infants. Hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy is the most frequent cause of neonatal seizures in term babies followed by focal ischaemia (stroke), cerebral malformations and metabolic disturbances. In preterm neonates, intraventricular haemorrhage and infections cause most of the seizures reported in this group. Better neuroimaging techniques have reduced the number of undiagnosed cases, and the institution of newer neuroprotective strategies has influenced the outcome.


Subject(s)
Seizures/epidemiology , Seizures/etiology , Epilepsy/diagnosis , Epilepsy/epidemiology , Epilepsy/etiology , Humans , Hypoxia-Ischemia, Brain/physiopathology , Incidence , Infant, Newborn , Infant, Premature , Malformations of Cortical Development/physiopathology , Metabolism, Inborn Errors/physiopathology , Premature Birth/physiopathology , Prognosis , Risk Factors , Seizures/diagnosis
17.
Am J Obstet Gynecol ; 208(1): 31-8, 2013 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23151491

ABSTRACT

This article addresses the recrudescence of and new support for midwife-supervised planned home birth in the United States and the other developed countries in the context of professional responsibility. Advocates of planned home birth have emphasized patient safety, patient satisfaction, cost effectiveness, and respect for women's rights. We provide a critical evaluation of each of these claims and identify professionally appropriate responses of obstetricians and other concerned physicians to planned home birth. We start with patient safety and show that planned home birth has unnecessary, preventable, irremediable increased risk of harm for pregnant, fetal, and neonatal patients. We document that the persistently high rates of emergency transport undermines patient safety and satisfaction, the raison d'etre of planned home birth, and that a comprehensive analysis undermines claims about the cost-effectiveness of planned home birth. We then argue that obstetricians and other concerned physicians should understand, identify, and correct the root causes of the recrudescence of planned home birth; respond to expressions of interest in planned home birth by women with evidence-based recommendations against it; refuse to participate in planned home birth; but still provide excellent and compassionate emergency obstetric care to women transported from planned home birth. We explain why obstetricians should not participate in or refer to randomized clinical trials of planned home vs planned hospital birth. We call on obstetricians, other concerned physicians, midwives and other obstetric providers, and their professional associations not to support planned home birth when there are safe and compassionate hospital-based alternatives and to advocate for a safe home-birth-like experience in the hospital.


Subject(s)
Home Childbirth/standards , Midwifery/standards , Patient Safety , Patient Satisfaction , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Female , Home Childbirth/economics , Humans , Midwifery/economics , Pregnancy , Professional Competence , United States
18.
Semin Fetal Neonatal Med ; 17(5): 301-7, 2012 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22819382

ABSTRACT

Enlargement of the cerebral ventricles (ventriculomegaly) occurs in 1-2 per 1000 live births. Ventriculomegaly is frequently diagnosed antenatally and hence the perinatologist is faced with counselling the prospective parents. This review considers the diagnosis, management and prognosis of this condition. A particular emphasis is placed on the outcome of isolated ventriculomegaly as these are commonly the most difficult to counsel antenatally.


Subject(s)
Hydrocephalus/congenital , Hydrocephalus/embryology , Ultrasonography, Prenatal/methods , Cerebral Ventricles/diagnostic imaging , Cerebral Ventricles/embryology , Female , Fetus , Humans , Hydrocephalus/diagnostic imaging , Hydrocephalus/physiopathology , Infant, Newborn , Pregnancy , Prognosis
19.
J Perinat Med ; 38(6): 579-83, 2010 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20807009

ABSTRACT

The birth of neonates at the limits of viability, or periviability, poses numerous challenges to health care providers and to systems of care, and the care of these pregnancies and neonates is fraught with ethical controversies. This statement summarizes the ethical principles involved in the care of periviable pregnancies and neonates, and provides expert clinical opinion about the numerous challenges posed by this problem around the world. Topics addressed include a summary of the published experience, an ethical framework, translating neonatal outcome data to the obstetric arena, management as a trial of intervention, referral to tertiary centers, neonatal resuscitation, cesarean delivery for fetal indication, and limits on life-sustaining neonatal treatment.


Subject(s)
Decision Making/ethics , Ethics, Medical , Fetal Viability , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Infant, Premature , Pregnancy
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