Archive for April, 2007

Pregnancy News - Teen pregnancy in Jackson County (MainStreet Newspapers)

Friday, April 6th, 2007

According to numbers from the Northeast Health District — an arm of the Georgia Division of Public Health — between 2000 and 2004, 73 of every 1,000 girls age 15 to 19 in Jackson County were pregnant or had already delivered a child. In 2004, his Northeast Health District surveyed 2,054 students from grades seven through 12 at East Jackson Middle, West Jackson Middle and Jackson County Comprehensive High Schools, some 87 percent of the enrolled population in those schools. Those numbers can be compared to additional surveys — in 1999, 84 percent of 542 randomly-sampled adults in Jackson County said they believe it is wrong for unmarried teenagers to be sexually active, but 86 percent said that if teens are sexually active, they should use birth control. Taken together, the surveys — overlooking the five-year divide between both — mean that although most parents believe sexually-active teens should use birth control, some 33 percent of students are using either no method, or they are using withdrawal, the least reliable and most dangerous method. April Howard, director of curriculum and accountability for Jackson County School System, says the school system is doing everything it can — and everything the state curriculum mandates — to educate students about sexual activity and the inherent risks of disease and pregnancy therein. Beth Heath, Jackson County nurse manager, says county clinics, in Jefferson and Commerce, allow both teenagers and parents to learn more about the risks of sexual activity before marriage. read more

Recommended weight gains in pregnancy (AP via Yahoo! News)- Topic: Pregnancy News

Wednesday, April 4th, 2007

For a “high” BMI of 26 to 29, a gain of 15 pounds to 25 pounds. For a BMI greater than 29, a gain of at least 15 pounds. CDC ” /> CDC ’s normal weight is a BMI of 18. The recommended amount of “at least 15 pounds” for obese women was set at a time when doctors were focusing on low-birthweight babies. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. read more

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Topic: Pregnancy News - Cord blood donation needs better PR (Savannah Morning News)

Monday, April 2nd, 2007

Columnist Anne Hart says donating your baby’s cord blood isn’t as easy as it should be and suffers from guilt by association to stem cells. Ads on pregnancy Web sites and magazines urge you to shell out big bucks to privately bank your newborn’s umbilical cord blood and possibly save his or her life. Even if the American Academy of Pediatrics emphasizes the low probability of most families ever needing the cord blood and discourages private cord blood banking. Because you know you’re better off donating - not privately storing - your baby’s cord blood to a public bank, which will, in turn, donate them to strangers in need. People either confuse public cord blood donations with pricey cord blood banking. At such hospitals, patients can still donate on their own, using firms like Cryobanks, which will send a courier to collect cord blood from hospitals nationwide 365 days a year. read more