The New York Times Agency May 2010

EN_00913897_2641
The New York Times Agency May 2010
(NYT4) NEW HAVEN, Conn. -- Aug. 5, 2002 -- SCI-PREMATURE-BIRTH-Q&A -- Researchers have made inroads into understanding why women deliver babies prematurely. But most clinical studies using interventions intended to prevent early deliveries -- like better prenatal care, drugs that prevent contractions and hospitalization -- have failed. Many of the interventions have in fact led to higher rates of preterm babies. Dr. Charles Lockwood, 47, is a leading researcher in the field and the chairman of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the New York University School of Medicine, says "Everything we've done so far has been a miserable failure.'' "And it isn't only that we haven't been helpful, we've been harmful up to this point,'' he adds. Lockwood in his office in New Haven, Conn. (George Ruhe/The New York Times)
CENA MINIMALNA - 100 USD
2002-08-05
EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
George Ruhe/The New York Times/Redux
17338913
0,35MB
9cm x 14cm by 300dpi
2002, 47, 5, A, ADDS, AND, AT, AUG, BABIES, BEEN, BETTER, BUT, CARE, CHAIRMAN, CHARLES, CLINICAL, CONN, CONTRACTIONS, DELIVER, DELIVERIES, DEPARTMENT, DONE, DR, DRUGS, EARLY, EVERYTHING, FACT, FAILED, FAILURE, FAR, FIELD, GEORGE, GYNECOLOGY, HARMFUL, HAS, HAVE, HAVEN, HE, HELPFUL, HIGHER, HIS, HOSPITALIZATION, IN, INROADS, INTENDED, INTERVENTIONS, INTO, IS, ISN, IT, LEADING, LED, LIKE, LOCKWOOD, MADE, MANY, MEDICINE, MISERABLE, MOST, NEW, NYT4, OBSTETRICS, OF, OFFICE, ONLY, POINT, PREMATURELY, PRENATAL, PRETERM, PREVENT, RATES, REDUX, RESEARCHER, RESEARCHERS, RUHE, SAYS, SCHOOL, SO, STUDIES, THAT, THE, THIS, TIMES, TO, UNDERSTANDING, UNIVERSITY, UP, USING, VE, WE, WHY, WOMEN, YORK,