Breastfeeding, use of pasteurised donor human milk when mother's own milk is unavailable and kangaroo mother care have independently proven benefits in improving survival of vulnerable sick babies. A triangulated approach called the Mother Baby Friendly Initiative Plus (MBFI+) model, bringing together the combined benefits of these proven interventions, was used to improve exclusive human milk feeding at health facilities through quality improvement and system strengthening approach. This quality improvement before-and-after uncontrolled study enrolled 5343 term and 278 very low birth weight (VLBW) mother-infant dyads.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe objectives of this manuscript are (1) to evaluate the effectiveness of on-street bicycle lane in reducing crashes involving bicyclists on urban roads, (2) to quantify and compare risk to bicyclists on road segments with and without on-street bicycle lane, (3) to evaluate the effect of on-street bicycle lane on other road network users (all crashes), and, (4) to assess the role of on-network characteristics (speed limit, the number of lanes, the width of on-street bicycle lane, the width of the right-most travel lane, and, the numbers of driveways, unsignalized approaches and signalized intersections per unit distance) on risk to bicyclists. Data for thirty-six segments with on-street bicycle lane and twenty-six segments without on-street bicycle lane in the city of Charlotte, North Carolina were extracted to compute and compare measures such as the number of bicycle crashes per center-lane mile, the number of bicycle crashes per annual million vehicle miles traveled (MVMT), the number of all crashes per center-lane mile, and the number of all crashes per MVMT. The results obtained from analysis indicate that bicyclists are three to four times at higher risk (based on traffic conditions) on segments without on-street bicycle lane than when compared to segments with on-street bicycle lane.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol
November 2004
Objective: To evaluate the pregnancy outcome in patients with abnormal uterine artery Doppler flow velocity waveforms (FVW's) at 19-21 weeks, which were subsequently normal by 24-26 weeks, and to study the effect of low-dose aspirin on these waveforms.
Design: The study group consisted of 49 patients who had abnormal uterine artery flow velocity waveforms (FVW's) at 19-21 weeks. These women were initially commenced on 100 mg slow-release aspirin at 20 weeks, which was discontinued at the follow-up visit, after confirming normal uterine artery Doppler FVW.