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Living Miracles: Stories of Hope from Parents of Premature Babies
by Kimberly Powell &
Kim Wilson

Life on the Reflux Roller Coaster
Life on the Reflux Roller Coaster
by Roni Maclean
  

The Pregnancy Bed Rest Book       
The Pregnancy Bed Rest Book by Amy E Tracy, Richard H Schwarz                    

Preemie Parents Companion  

The Preemie Parents Companion: The Essential Guide to Caring for Your Premature Baby in the Hospital, at Home, and Through the First Years by Susan L Madden M.S, William Sears MD, Jane E Stewart MD
              

 

Bacterial Vaginosis and Prematurity

There are about 4,000,000 babies being born each year in the United States. Close to 10 percent of these newborns (400,000 of them) come into this world prematurely, which means they are born before 37 weeks of pregnancy.

This is a situation known as "a preterm birth" and is quite important, as a baby born preterm is much more likely than a full-term child to suffer a serious disabling medical complication.

Since these medical complications referred to include cerebral palsy, visual and hearing disabilities, mental retardation, and even death, efforts to reduce the risk for preterm delivery are receiving a lot of attention.

Once achievement was to increase the rate of survival for preterm babies. But there is not a similar reduction in the rate of preterm births.

There are numerous factors that may result in a premature baby; these include vaginal infection, smoking, race, age of the mother, and whether the mother had previously had a stillborn or premature baby. Recent studies have shown that a common vaginal infection, Bacterial Vaginosis (BV), is linked to 40 percent of preterm births. Very important to this link is that BV can be successfully treated with oral antibiotics.

Researchers believe that the risk of acquiring BV is associated with routine douching and having multiple sex partners. The recommend that patients who are at high risk for BV should be screened and if necessary, treated.

Three new articles were published in the December 18, 1995 issue of the New England journal that added to the growing amount of evidence showing BV as being associated with preterm delivery of low-birth-weight babies.

One of the studies demonstrated that treatment of the disease during the second trimester would reduce the incidence of preterm deliver.

(Bacterial Vaginosis, Three articles, New England Journal of Medicine, 1995;333)
(Bacterial Vaginosis and its link to Preterm Birth, Fact Sheet, Health Mothers, Health Babies)

Copyright 2000, The Prevention News.
Used with permission.


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