Home ·  Classifieds ·  MyVLT2.com ·  VolTV2Go.com ·  Volzeye.com ·  Desktop Alert
Gender, other factors guide preemies' survival Save Email Print
Posted: 9:11 AM Apr 17, 2008
Last Updated: 9:11 AM Apr 17, 2008

A | A | A

ATLANTA (AP) -- A study says doctors now have a better way of helping parents make an agonizing decision: Whether to take heroic steps to save a very premature baby.

The number of weeks in the womb has generally been the chief factor. But the study shows others are important, too -- including whether the infant is a girl, and whether the child gets steroids for the lungs shortly before birth.

Those factors can be just like an extra week of pregnancy.

A co-author of the study says the new information could change how doctors and parents decide what kind of care to provide to tiny, fragile premature infants.

The research focused on extremely premature babies, those born after 22 to 25 weeks in the womb. A full term is about 40 weeks.

The study is being published this week in the New England Journal of Medicine.

(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

Email  del.icio.us   Google   Yahoo  digg

Related Links
More Stories
Child health care lacking for many, group says

Wal-Mart expands low-price drug program

Morristown's Heritage Center nursing director wins Life Care’s Mary Denton service award

Toys "R" Us to phase out baby bottles with chemical BPA

Gender, other factors guide preemies' survival

Estrogen linked to benign breast lumps

Early migraine symptoms may mean other health risks

Reunion recalls how organ donation saves lives

Post Your Comments
First Name:
Location:
Enter Comments: characters left
Email (optional):
Email will not be displayed on site. For station contact purpose only.
East Tennessee Children's Hospital