prebirth

prebirth

(priːˈbɜːθ)
n
(Biology) the period of life before birth
adj
(Gynaecology & Obstetrics) occurring, existing or carried out prior to birth
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
The review found no indication of prebirth or risk assessments.
at 1694 ("Unlike the paternal-acknowledgment requirement at issue in Nguyen and Miller, the physical-presence requirements now before us relate solely to the duration of the parent's prebirth residency in the United States, not to the parent's filial tie to the child.").
maternal titer > mother's maternal titer Darkfield N/A test or PCR Positive Maternal N/A None documented, treatment status non-penicillin G regimen, or given <4 weeks prebirth Evaluation needed Complete Complete * CSF VDRL, WBC, protein VDRL, WBC, protein Blood testing CBC with differential CBC with differential and platelet count and platelet count Other tests as indicated Chest, long bones Long bones Radiographs Liver function tests None Other blood testing Brain imaging, None Neurologic hearing test, eye examination Congenital syphilis Less likely Unlikely Defining factors Both defining Both defining factors below factors below Physical examination Normal examination Nontreponemal RPR/ [less than or equal to] to fourfold VDRL infant titer above maternal titer vs.
A mother's education doesn't begin at birth, here, but with guided journal entries for prebirth, from imagining the baby and providing a space to glue in an envelope for a mother's first gray hairs to Jennika Ingram's own reflections on what she envisioned motherhood to be, tips on how to prepare for it, and spaces for a new mother's notes about her baby's birth.
The council has developed a new Baby in Mind service that focuses on support for parents during the prebirth period and the first six months of a baby's life while the Reflect Service is another new service which works with mothers who have had children removed from their care.
Cells obtained from prebirth tissues, such as the umbilical cord blood, amniotic fluid, and chorionic villi, have great potential in cardiovascular tissue engineering for the fabrication of heart valves, prevascularization of in vitro engineered tissue constructs, or in vitro endothelialization of synthetic blood vessel replacements [99, 100].
We aimed to investigate these questions by performing an epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) of low-level maternal lead exposure [<5 pg/dL in red blood cells (RBC)] and DNA methylation profiles in umbilical cord blood samples from 268 mother-infant pairs enrolled in Project Viva, a U.S.-based prebirth cohort, overall and separately among boys and girls.
Last year, the inaugural award for Midwife of the Year was won by Sharon Coggins, of NHS Forth Valley, for her work within the Prebirth Planning Service - preparing parents for their roles in their child's life.
Persons or families with disabled children have claimed that a policy that encourages prebirth genetic deselection of persons with disabilities is a public statement that the lives of the disabled are worth less than those of the able-bodied.
Ms Reis' findings from the meeting, whereby she noted Shanice's suicidal thoughts and anxieties over the thought of having her baby taken off her, were never relayed to the midwife and health visitor who later carried out a prebirth assessment.
(52.) This is contrasted with a prebirth tort claim, where the