The Role of Environmental Hazards in Premature Birth: Workshop Summary
- PMID: 25009846
- Bookshelf ID: NBK216224
- DOI: 10.17226/10842
The Role of Environmental Hazards in Premature Birth: Workshop Summary
Excerpt
Each year in the United States approximately 440,000 babies are born premature. These infants are at greater risk of death, and are more likely to suffer lifelong medical complications than full-term infants. Clinicians and researchers have made vast improvements in treating preterm birth; however, little success has been attained in understanding and preventing preterm birth. Understanding the complexity of interactions underlying preterm birth will be needed if further gains in outcomes are expected.
The Institute of Medicine’s Roundtable on Environmental Health Sciences, Research, and Medicine sponsored a workshop to understand the biological mechanism of normal labor and delivery, and how environmental influences, as broadly defined, can interact with the processes of normal pregnancy to result in preterm birth. This report is a summary of the main themes presented by the speakers and participants.
Copyright 2003 by the National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Sections
- THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES
- ROUNDTABLE ON ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SCIENCES, RESEARCH, AND MEDICINE (until March 31, 2002)
- ROUNDTABLE ON ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SCIENCES, RESEARCH, AND MEDICINE (Membership April 1, 2002 to present)
- Reviewers
- Preface
- Summary
- Charge to Participants and Workshop Scope
- Problem Statement
- 1. Preterm Birth and Its Consequences
- 2. Labor and Delivery
- 3. Preterm Birth—Brief Summary of Biological Pathways
- 4. Preterm Birth—Gene–Environment Interactions
- 5. Preterm Birth—Social Implications
- 6. Future Directions
- Abstracts
- References
- Appendix A Workshop Agenda
- Appendix B Speakers and Panelists
- Appendix C Workshop Participants
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