Lifestyle questions and answers

Ask a question on any topic and get answers from real people on Yahoo! Canada Answers

  • Wisdom tooth erupting and hurting as heck. Is that normal?

    Dental - 14 hours ago

    Additional Details

    One of my lower wisdom teeth, which have started erupting a while ago is suddenly hurting a lot. The gum around that tooth is sore and swollen. I don't think it is impacted because I had a dental x-ray done a couple years ago and was told that all 4 of my wisdom teeth are growing straight so it isn't necessary to remove them. I also had 4 of my normal back teeth pulled out for braces when I was young so the wisdom teeth have got space to grow. I'm not sure what is causing the pain but I've been told that the pain may be normal during the eruption of wisdom teeth. Will the pain go away after a while? What other reasons apart from impacted teeth can cause such pain? I have my finals coming up in less than a week so I won't be able to go to the dentist and end up with sore cheeks unless it's something persistent and serious. Thanks! That really helped. At least I don't have to worry about getting my tooth removed for the time being. As for taking ibuprofen, is there a recommended dose for this infection in particular?
  • Hi. So I have been going to the gym 4x a week and have been eating excellent.Soup,salad,lean meats etc.?

    Diet & Fitness - 15 hours ago

    Additional Details

    I also do 2 classes for 40 Min's each. Usually spinning,core or step and core. I am 5'9 and weighed 186lbs when I began 4 weeks ago. I now weigh 179 which is good yet I have completely changed my lifestyle. How can I kick it up a notch. Getting frustrated but not going to quit. My second daughter is 2 1/2 and this weight is coming off dammit! P.S. Getting married in May in Mexico so need to be bikini ready! Thanks ahead for all positive and encouraging answers :)
  • WTF?! im worried...............?

    Skin Conditions - 18 hours ago

    Additional Details

    Ok, so my best girlfriend has this huge ass lump on he pinky finger, and we don't know what it is !!?.. it's looks like it has pus in it, but it's not a pimple.. and it's big.. and it's under the skin, i have the same thing on my wrist.. maybe a calcium build up? idk! what is it?
  • What are the chances? Masturbation question.?

    Women's Health - 19 hours ago

    Additional Details

    Hey everyone! I've started to masturbate, though I've never actually reached climax. However, I heard that some women faint because they've climaxed! How often is this the case? Should I stop, and possibly avoid a very embarrassing encounter?
  • Can vitamin D-3 make you hyper.....?

    Other - Health - 22 hours ago

    Additional Details

    I've been taking vitamin D-3 for 2 weeks now. I take 2000 UI a day. I find that I am hyper and I have trouble sleeping. Can this be caused by the vitamin intake or is it just a coincidence?
  • Please help! sign of bacteremia in older people?

    Infectious Diseases - 1 day ago

    Additional Details

    what is the only sign of bacteremia in the elderly?
  • YIKES!! MY PERMANENT REATAINER FELL OUT!?

    Dental - 1 day ago

    Additional Details

    So...my lower permanent retainer fell out tonight when I was flossing! I've only had it for a year, but I noticed my teeth have deposits on them. They have started to calcify, and I brush twice a day and floss the lower retainer once a day, along with the rest of my teeth! When I go back to the orthodontist this week, should I just get a removable one, rather than get this one glued back in? I'm thinking I'd get the Hawley or Essix. Which one is better? Keep in mind I have a Hawley upper, no probs with it, except that I take it out for work since people complain about everything (you say coffee weird....take that thing out of your mouth, it's bugging me!). The Hawley isn't that bad, I just don't know whether or not I should get it on the bottom, cause then I will not be able to speak well AT ALL!! LOLz..
  • Im confused about why im feeling yucky.?

    Women's Health - 1 day ago

    Additional Details

    I started an antidepressant and a progesterone only pill on friday and im sick, light headed, weak and sleep all the time....which on is making me feel like this??
  • Do I need to lose weight?

    Diet & Fitness - 1 day ago

    Additional Details

    I just made this video, and I am wondering do you agree with me that I have to lose weight? I have a medium frame by the way. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SinvDPuBqeo
  • What happens to an infection after tooth extraction?

    Dental - 1 day ago

    Additional Details

    Does the infection clear up if it was deep in the gums? or do you need antibiotics?

Amid rising elective deliveries, hospitals curtail labour induced too soon

By Lauran Neergaard, The Associated Press
1 | 2

WASHINGTON - Hoping to schedule your baby's birth while your mother's in town, or before the doctor goes on vacation? Labour is becoming less of a late-night surprise, but some U.S. hospitals are starting to tighten the rules for elective deliveries - because some babies are being delivered too early.

More hospitals are expected to crack down as regulators begin new quality measurements next spring that aim to reduce too-early elective inductions and first-time caesareans.

Induced labour is on the rise for lots of reasons, some medical and some not. But recent research shows a troubling link between elective inductions and these so-called "late preemies." These aren't the dire too-small babies that the word premature conjures, but near-term babies who nonetheless are at higher risk of breathing disorders and other problems than babies who finish their very last weeks in the womb.

"It was an 'aha' moment for me," recalls Dr. Bryan Oshiro of his visit to a Utah intensive care nursery several years ago, where neonatologists pointed to babies there simply because they'd been induced too soon.

National guidelines from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists have long discouraged elective deliveries before the 39th week of pregnancy. But some hospitals that took a close look were surprised. At Utah's Intermountain Healthcare, for example, 28 per cent of elective deliveries were breaking ACOG's rule in 2001, Oshiro told a March of Dimes meeting on preventable prematurity this month.

Most were being induced in week 37, such a small difference that local obstetricians argued it wasn't a problem. So Oshiro pulled the medical charts and found those near-term babies had more than double the risk of ending up in neonatal ICU, suffering respiratory distress, even needing a ventilator.

It took several years of policing: Inductions now are allowed only after meeting a checklist of requirements. But today, only about three per cent of Intermountain's elective deliveries occur before 39 weeks - and infant hospitalizations have dropped, saving money, too, says Oshiro, now a maternal-fetal medicine specialist at Loma Linda University in California. He's about to pilot a similar program at hospitals in that area.

"If there's no need to intervene, please don't intervene," is Oshiro's message.

Labour is induced in more than one in five births, double the rate in 1990, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Many cases are for clear health reasons, such as a problem with the fetus or a sick mom or a pregnancy that has dragged well beyond the woman's due date.

There's little data on how many are elective. But a Hospital Corporation of America study of nearly 18,000 births at 27 of its hospitals around the country suggests 10 per cent of all births are performed electively before the 39-week mark. (That date is considered the point at which doctors can be sure a pregnancy has reached full-term, typically defined as 40 weeks give or take about a week.)

There are many reasons to perform an elective induction, such as if mom lives two hours from a hospital, notes Dr. John Fisch of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center's Magee-Women's Hospital.

Patient and doctor preference helped drive the rise in inductions, such as women timing grandma's arrival to take care of the siblings, or minimizing 3 a.m. deliveries. Then there's defensive medicine, where doctors worried about litigation induce for minor reasons like a slight uptick of the mother's blood pressure.

1 | 2

Not Yet Rated

0 Comments

LEAVE YOUR COMMENT
character(s) remaining

You must sign in to leave a comment

TODAY ON YAHOO!

Top stories

Adam Lambert (C) and dancers perform 'For Your Entertainment' at the 2009 American Music Awards in Los Angeles, California, November 22, 2009. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni


Adam Lambert's sexually-charged act draws complaints
Reuters - LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - ABC television said on Monday it had received about 1,500...

Business

Employees work to assemble business aircraft at EADS Socata's Tarbes factory in France in 2008. Factories in the 16-nation eurozone reported a rise of new orders in September, although more recent data has suggested economic recovery in Europe may be peaking.  Photo:Lionel Bonaventure/AFP


Eurozone factory orders rise in September
AFP - BRUSSELS (AFP) - Factories in the 16-nation eurozone reported a rise of new orders in...

Odd News

Cops on trail of "gingerbread town" vandals
Reuters - OSLO (Reuters) - The people of Bergen rolled out the cookie dough Monday as local police...