In sixteen pages this paper examines infant mortality as it exists today. Nineteen sources are cited in the bibliography.
Name of Research Paper File: LM1_TLCinfmr.doc
Unformatted Sample Text from the Research Paper:
this very technology that provides the opportunity to avert infant death that is being overlooked as a means by which to address the issue. Statistics indicate that infant mortality
is primarily a socio-cultural epidemic, in that appropriate medical attention is gravely lacking in low-income and minority communities. Genetic disturbance represents yet another population in which infant mortality is
experienced, no matter the individuals race or financial status. Genetically induced infant mortality is often not detected until well into the third trimester, a point at which termination of
pregnancy is both a health risk for the mother and a morally painful decision to make. II. BACKGROUND Research in both animals
and humans has proven that crack cocaine is instrumental in causing birth defects in pregnant females. Women who have been studied as pregnant users of crack cocaine overwhelmingly demonstrate
that premature delivery, low birth weight and retardation as three of the primary afflictions babies suffer. It is critically important for the student to consider the fact that when
used during pregnancy, crack cocaine also encourages the separation of the placenta from the womb, which is an essential life-giving force between mother and fetus; if this situation ultimately occurs,
it can cause "shock and death" (Petitti et al, 1990, p. 25) to both individuals. Beyond the socio-cultural implications of infant mortality is
that of genetic dysfunction. One infant in approximately every ten thousand live births will suffer from trisomy 13 chromosome defect, a genetic condition that is often not properly diagnosed
until after the child has died just months after birth. It is important for the student to realize that this circumstance stems from the fact that an additional -