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Association of regularity in prenatal care visits to perinatal outcomes among high-risk pregnancies / Angelie E. Ang ; David Christian J. Arroyo ; Dante Bacay Jr. ; Vhen Gerson C. Balandra ; Lorenzo Miguel B. Baltazar ; Adrian Joseph M. Borromeo : Jaycee G. Dela Chica ; Lea A. Dela Dingco ; Alexander Gian Y. Diaz ; Karol Paula D. Dimanarig ; Michael John Dumagdag ; Alyssa Jane C. Egana ; Sheena L. Eslabra ; Miko B. Galutera ; Diana Gatmaytan ; Rod Andrew B. Gumatay ; Alvin B. Lacasandile ; Sheena Marie V. Lim ; Christine Joyce R. Lopez and Lylah D. Reyes.

By: Contributor(s): Publication details: Fairview, Quezon City Department of Community and Family Medicine, FEU-NRMF, 2019Description: 23 pages: 28 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
LOC classification:
  • MCFM20190015
Summary: ABSTRACT: Prenatal care is important to ensure a normal pregnancy with delivery of a healthy baby from a healthy mother. Researchers have made known that sufficient, regular and intermediate prenatal care and its adequacy is linked to good perinatal outcomes and reduced mortality and morbidity in non-high risk cases; yet, its regularity and effects on high risk women remains largely unstudied and unproven. Thus, this study will determine whether the regularity of prenatal care visits of pregnant women whose pregnancy is classified as high-risk have the capacity to produce desired perinatal outcomes.
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Theses Far Eastern University - Nicanor Reyes Medical Foundation Theses MCFM20190015 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available T002095

Includes appendices and bibliographical references.

ABSTRACT: Prenatal care is important to ensure a normal pregnancy with delivery of a healthy baby from a healthy mother. Researchers have made known that sufficient, regular and intermediate prenatal care and its adequacy is linked to good perinatal outcomes and reduced mortality and morbidity in non-high risk cases; yet, its regularity and effects on high risk women remains largely unstudied and unproven. Thus, this study will determine whether the regularity of prenatal care visits of pregnant women whose pregnancy is classified as high-risk have the capacity to produce desired perinatal outcomes.

Thesis - Department of Community & Family Medicine

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