Child death review
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Part 1 book "Review of forensic medicine and toxicology" includes content: Medical jurisprudence and ethics; acts related to medical practice, legal procedure, identification, identification ii, medico legal autopsy, autopsy room hazards, thanatology, signs of death, asphyxia, injuries, firearm injuries, regional injuries, thermal injuries, transportation injuries, explosion injuries and fall from height, medico legal aspects of injuries, decompression, radiation and altitude sickness, starvation deaths, infanticide and child abuse, anesthetic deaths.
324p muasambanhan10 06-04-2024 3 1 Download
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Reducing neonatal mortality is an essential part of the third Sustainable Development Goal, to end preventable child deaths. Neonatal danger signs are the most common cause of neonatal mortality and morbidity.
13p viorochimaru2711 29-05-2020 8 2 Download
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The death of a child is a devastating event for parents. In many high income countries, following an unexpected death, there are formal investigations to find the cause of death as part of wider integrated child death review processes.
17p vichengshin2711 29-02-2020 13 1 Download
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Despite improvements in child survival in the past four decades, an estimated 6.3 million children under the age of five die each year, and more than 40% of these deaths occur in the neonatal period. Interventions to reduce neonatal mortality are needed.
16p videshiki2711 21-02-2020 14 0 Download
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In many countries there are now detailed Child Death Review (CDR) processes following unexpected child deaths. CDR can lead to a fuller understanding of the causes for each child’s death but this potentially intrusive process may increase the distress of bereaved families.
10p videshiki2711 19-02-2020 15 1 Download
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Sudden breath-holding episodes during sleep in young children are potentially related to sudden infant death syndrome and other life-threatening events. Additionally, these episodes can negatively affect child’s growth and development.
6p vidr2711 19-02-2020 8 1 Download
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(BQ) Part 2 of the document Palliative care in pediatric has contents: Risk and resilience factors related to parental bereavement following the death of a child with a life-limiting condition, trending longitudinal agreement between parent and child perceptions of quality of life for pediatric palliative care patients,… and other contents.
129p thuongdanguyetan10 09-03-2019 22 2 Download
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The Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS) estimated that between 1985 and 1996 463 children 14 and younger were killed in alcohol-related car crashes. Sixty-four percent of these children were killed in the hands of their guardians; they were passengers in the impaired driver’s vehicle. More than 16,000 other children were injured. Unfortunately, the situation is worsening.
47p nhacchovina 23-03-2013 46 3 Download
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The guidance assumes the presence of a trained health worker to administer the uterotonic, the medicine is used after childbirth for postpartum hemorrhage, and that 600 micrograms of misoprostol is administered. In low-resource settings, these conditions are not often met, which poses a disadvantage to the selection and use of misoprostol.
36p nhamnhiqa 01-03-2013 30 1 Download
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Dental caries is a common childhood problem. It is five times more prevalent than asthma. Although dental caries is preventable, almost 28 percent of children aged two to five years experience the disease (21). A virulent form of dental caries in children younger than six is generally defined as early childhood caries (ECC). Because management of these children in dental offices is difficult, treatment is often rendered in operating rooms, increasing the cost of care. Furthermore, there is a high rate of relapse of caries in these children.
191p can_thai 11-12-2012 53 3 Download