Academic literature on the topic 'Charles Ora Card'

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Journal articles on the topic "Charles Ora Card"

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Godfrey, Donald G. "“CANADA'S BRIGHAM YOUNG”: CHARLES ORA CARD, SOUTHERN ALBERTA PIONEER." American Review of Canadian Studies 18, no. 2 (August 1988): 223–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02722018809480927.

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Pires, Márcia Eliza. "Charles Baudelaire e Cecília Meireles: ressonâncias poéticas sob o domínio da noite." Revista Texto Poético 15, no. 28 (October 15, 2019): 322. http://dx.doi.org/10.25094/rtp.2019n28a617.

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Segundo a perspectiva simbolista, a noite evoca a representação de seres e objetos a partir de relações sinestésicas, de correspondências ora consonantes ora contraditórias, mas, sempre complementares. Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867) é considerado o precursor da corrente simbolista, tanto que os traços prementes à sua obra anteciparam a apreensão da exterioridade por meio da faculdade imaginativa. Semelhante a Baudelaire, uma aura noturna, evocativa e enigmática é expressa na escrita de Cecília Meireles (1901-1964). Nosso trabalho consiste em aproximar a poesia desses dois artistas por meio da observação de como a noite, noção tão cara ao Simbolismo, se configura em “A música” e “Noturno”. Para tanto, propomos uma leitura interpretativa acerca dos poemas de Baudelaire e de Cecília Meireles.
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Natha, I. Putu Adi. "ANALISIS DESAIN ILUSTRASI KEMASAN BERAS ECOKO GREEN PROJECT MELALUI KAJIAN SEMIOTIKA." DESKOVI : Art and Design Journal 3, no. 2 (December 3, 2020): 99. http://dx.doi.org/10.51804/deskovi.v3i2.720.

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Tulisan ini dibuat guna memahami tanda makna komunikasi visual yang terdapat pada ilustrasi kemasanberas dari Ecoko Green Project,serta pesan komunikasi visual yang terkandung pada ilustrasi pada kemasan beras tersebut.Pengumpulan data dalam penelitian ini dilakukan dengan cara observasi dengan datang ke studio Oka Astawa dan mendapatkan foto-foto mengenai kemasan beras yang berisi karya dari Oka Astawa. Data yang terkumpul kemudian dianalisis dengan menggunakan analisis kualitatif dari teori semiotika Charles Sanders Pierce ikon, indeks, dan simbol. Hasil penelitian tersebut menunjukkan bahwa 1.) Ikon pada ilustrasi kemasan beras Ecoko Green Projectadalah penggambaran petani itu sendiri karena memiliki kemiripan dengan bentuk aslinya yaitu penggambaran seorang petani. 2.) Indeks pada ilustrasi kemasan beras tersebut adalah penggambaran gedung dan jalan pada tubuh petani pertama, serta dolar dan padi yang tidak seimbang pada ilustrasi kedua merupakan penggambaran sebab akibat. 3.) Simbol pada ilustrasi kemasan beras tersebut adalah caping(topi petani) serta padi pada ilustrasi kemasan beras yang pertama dan kedua merupakan simbol dari pertanian itu sendiri, dan pada ilustrasi kemasan kedua ada dua simbol tambahan yaitu dolar dan dasi berbentuk ular, dimana kedua simbol tersebut menggabarkan petani ditindas oleh uang dan penguasa.This paper is made to learn the meaning sign of the visual communication that contained in the illustration of rice packaging from the Ecoko Green Project, as well as the visual communication message in that illustration on the rice packaging. The collected data in this study was carried out with observation by coming to the Oka Astawa studio and getting photos of rice packaging containing the works of Oka Astawa. The collected data is then analyzed using qualitative analysis and Charles Sanders Pierce's semiotic theory of icons, indexes, and symbols. The results of these studies indicate that 1.) The icon in the Ecoko Green Project rice packaging illustration is a description of the farmer itself because it has a similarity to the original form, which is the description of a farmer. 2.) The index in the illustration of rice packaging is the depiction of buildings and roads in the body of the first farmer, then the dollar and rice that is not balanced in the second illustration are depictions of cause and effect. 3.) The symbol in the illustration of the rice packaging is the caping (farmers' hat) and the rice in the first and second illustration of the rice packaging is a symbol of the agriculture itself, and in the second packaging illustration there are two additional symbols, the dollar and a snake-shaped tie, where both of the symbols described that the farmers being oppressed by money and the authority.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Charles Ora Card"

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Etienne, Leslie K. "A Historical Narrative of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee's Freedom Schools and their Legacy for Contemporary Youth Leadership Development Programming." Antioch University / OhioLINK, 2012. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=antioch1332873568.

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Books on the topic "Charles Ora Card"

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Card, Charles Ora. The diaries of Charles Ora Card: The Utah years, 1871-1886. Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 2007.

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Card, Charles Ora. The diaries of Charles Ora Card: The Canadian years, 1886-1903. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1993.

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(Editor), Donald G. Godfrey, and Kenneth W. Godfrey (Editor), eds. The Diaries of Charles Ora Card: The Utah Years 1871-1886. RSC, BYU, 2006.

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Watson, Max, Caroline Lucas, Andrew Hoy, and Jo Wells. Paediatric palliative care. Oxford University Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199234356.003.0025.

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This chapter on paediatric palliative care covers who needs paediatric palliative care, the differences between paediatric and adult palliative care, ethical issues, psychosocial needs in paediatric palliative care, supporting the sick child, supporting parents, parents’ needs and the role of the health professional, sibling needs, community-based care, bereavement, strategies for self-care, and the Association for Children with Life Threatening or Terminal Conditions and their Families (ACT) Charter. The second half of the chapter is divided into the common symptoms experienced by very ill children and outlines a management system for each. There is also an emergency drugs summary.
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Bugyis, Katie Ann-Marie. The Care of Nuns. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190851286.001.0001.

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This book recovers the liturgical and pastoral ministries performed by Benedictine nuns in England from 900 to 1225. Three ministries are examined in detail—liturgically reading the gospel, hearing confessions, and offering intercessory prayers for others—but they are prefaced by profiles of the monastic officers most often charged with their performances—cantors, sacristans, prioresses, and abbesses. This book challenges past scholarly accounts of these ministries that either locate them exclusively in the so-called Golden Age of double monasteries headed by abbesses in the seventh and eighth centuries, or read the monastic and ecclesiastical reforms of the tenth, eleventh, and twelfth centuries as effectively relegating nuns to complete dependency on priests’ sacramental care. This book shows instead that, throughout the central Middle Ages, many nuns in England continued to exercise primary control over the cura animarum of their consorors and others who sought their aid. Most innovative and essential to this study are the close paleographical, codicological, and textual analyses of the surviving liturgical books from women’s communities. When identified and then excavated to unearth the liturgical scripts and scribal productions they preserve, these books hold a treasure trove of unexamined evidence for understanding the lives of nuns in England during the central Middle Ages. These books serve as the foundational documents of practice for this study because they offer witnesses not only to the liturgical and pastoral ministries that nuns performed, but also to the productions of female scribes as copyists, correctors, and even creators of liturgical texts.
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McLeod, Carolyn. Conscience in Reproductive Health Care. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198732723.001.0001.

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There is a growing trend worldwide of health care professionals conscientiously refusing to provide abortions and similar reproductive health services in countries where these services are legal and professionally accepted. Carolyn McLeod responds to this problem by arguing that conscientious objectors in health care should have to prioritize the interests of patients in receiving care over their own interest in acting on their conscience. She defends this “prioritizing approach” to conscientious objection over the more popular “compromise approach” in bioethics. All the while, she is careful not to downplay the importance of health care professionals having a conscience or the moral complexity of their conscientious refusals. McLeod first describes what is at stake for the main parties to the conflicts generated by conscientious refusals in reproductive health care: the objector and the patient. She then defends the prioritizing approach to these refusals. Her central argument is that health care professionals who are charged with gatekeeping access to services like abortions are normatively fiduciaries for both their patients and the public they are licensed to serve. As such, they have a duty of loyalty to these beneficiaries and must give primacy to their interests in gaining access to care. The insights contained in the book extend beyond the ethics of conscientious refusals to other topics in ethics including the value of conscience and the fundamental moral nature of the relationships health care professionals have with current and prospective patients.
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Farrall, Stephen, and Susanne Karstedt. Respectable Citizens - Shady Practices. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199595037.001.0001.

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Drawing on survey data from a comparative study of England and Wales and the former East and West Germany, this book examines economic crimes of ‘everyday life’, such as overestimating losses in insurance claims, cheating on taxes, misusing store or credit cards, and defrauding medical and social services. The book delves into the extent of both feelings of ‘victimization’ at the hands of insurers, restaurants who add additional charges, banks who make excessive charges, or other citizens during second-hand sales, and of offending, such as deliberately engaging in crimes of everyday life. The study explores the motivations for such offences and how citizens act to defend themselves against victimization and exploit weaknesses in the system to make illegal gains and ‘make good’ on losses. The comparative dimension allows for in-depth insights into the ways in which different national histories of economic transitions affect levels of engagement in crimes in the market place.
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Wagner, Tamara S. The Victorian Baby in Print. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198858010.001.0001.

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The Victorian Baby in Print: Infancy, Infant Care, and Nineteenth-Century Popular Culture explores the representation of babyhood in Victorian Britain. The first study to focus exclusively on the baby in nineteenth-century literature and culture, this critical analysis discusses the changing roles of an iconic figure. A close look at the wide-ranging portrayal of infants and infant care not only reveals how divergent and often contradictory Victorian attitudes to infancy really were, but also prompts us to revise persistent clichés surrounding the literary baby that emerged or were consolidated at the time, and which are largely still with us. Drawing on a variety of texts, including novels by Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Mrs Henry Wood, and Charlotte Yonge, as well as parenting magazines of the time, childrearing manuals, and advertisements, this study analyses how their representations of infancy and infant care utilised and shaped an iconography that has become definitional of the Victorian age itself. The familiar clichés surrounding the Victorian baby have had a lasting impact on the way we see both the Victorians and babies, and a close analysis might also prompt a self-critical reconsideration of the still burgeoning market for infant care advice today.
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Mercado, Pilar, Jamey E. Eklund, and Jennifer L. Anderson. Charge Syndrome. Edited by Kirk Lalwani, Ira Todd Cohen, Ellen Y. Choi, and Vidya T. Raman. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190685157.003.0003.

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The major diagnostic features of CHARGE syndrome include coloboma of the eyes, choanal atresia or stenosis, distinctive external ears, cranial nerve abnormalities, and absent or small semicircular canals. The mnemonic refers to coloboma of the eye, heart defects, atresia of choanae, retardation of growth and development, cenitalia hypoplasia, and ear abnormalities and deafness. There is no defined etiology, though a de novo mutation on the CHD 7 gene located on Chromosome 8 is responsible for more than 50% of CHARGE cases. The incidence of CHARGE is about 1:10,000 live births with an equal distribution between males and females. The anesthetic implications of this syndrome are many and vary with the patient’s phenotype. A potential difficult airway, congenital heart defects, choanal atresia, and cranial nerve abnormalities present the most significant issues for the anesthesiologist. A multidisciplinary team must be established early to properly care for these complex patients.
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Burns, Tom, and Mike Firn. The evolution of community outreach. Edited by Tom Burns and Mike Firn. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198754237.003.0001.

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This chapter traces the origin of the multidisciplinary team as a response to the wide range of needs of deinstitutionalized and ‘never institutionalized’ patients as care has become established in the community. It charts the early pragmatic and local evolution of CMHTs and case management and care management. It outlines how this was followed by a radical change around 1980 with the first published studies of assertive community treatment (ACT) in the US. A more rigorous, theoretically informed, and international research driven approach has become the norm. This has explored the relevance or otherwise of several of the underlying principles such as the team approach and 24-hour availability.
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Book chapters on the topic "Charles Ora Card"

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BEETHE, IRENE. "Hymns and the Care of the Soul:." In Charles W. Ore, 108–32. 1517 Media, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvzcz4r2.14.

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Davis, Joseph E. "Conclusion Limits in the Interest of Healing." In To Fix or to Heal. NYU Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479878246.003.0013.

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In the Conclusion, Davis summarizes the essays’ explorations of problematic reductionism. He then suggests practices that could have some countervailing holistic force in the three spheres of medicine, bioethics, and public health. In medicine, these might include distinguishing between “health” and professional health care, and mobilizing health professionals to defend their practice against the claims of consumerism. In bioethics, we must make medicine’s ethical values more transparent; rather than accepting a default set of stealth goods, we must deliberate in open recognition that the goods at stake are inescapably common and ethically charged. Finally, public health should reconnect with its social medicine roots, regaining a complementary (not subservient) relationship with medicine. This public health would again focus on life conditions and social inequities, not just on individual behaviors.
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Daly, Blánaid, Paul Batchelor, Elizabeth Treasure, and Richard Watt. "Planning dental services." In Essential Dental Public Health. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199679379.003.0028.

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Planning is an integral part of dental care provision that can operate at many different levels. At a national level, government NHS policy impacts upon dental services in different ways. For example, in the General Dental Service, patient charge bands in England are currently set by the government. In the future, at the national level, the National Health Service Commissioning Board (NHSCB) will determine national policy and national delivery requirements. The NHSCB will be responsible for commissioning primary dental services and contractual arrangements with dentists. At the Health and Wellbeing Board (HWB) level in England, planners (in conjunction with general medical practioner (GMP) consortia/clinical care commissioning groups (CCGs)) will make decisions over the priorities for local services, and the types and range of services offered locally. Within a dental practice, dental practitioners and their team members may develop a range of practice policies aimed at improving the services provided. Finally, every day clinicians develop treatment plans for individual patient care based upon their oral health needs. All these activities are planning in action. This chapter will examine the basic principles of planning, and review the different steps in the planning process. At the most basic level, planning aims to guide choices so that decisions are made in the best manner to reach the desired outcomes. Planning provides a guide and structure to the process of decision-making to maximize results within the limited resources available. Is planning really necessary when there are so many other demands on practitioners’ time? Planning can be justified for the following reasons: . . . ● It provides an opportunity to be proactive in decision-making rather than constantly reacting to pressures and demands. . . . . . . ● It enables priorities to be set. . . . . . . ● It identifies where resources can be directed to have the greatest impact. . . . Various planning models have been proposed to act as a guide to the different steps in the planning process. The rational planning model provides a basic guide to the process (McCarthy 1982), and involves the following steps: . . . 1 Assessment of need: e.g. identification of the oral health problems and concerns of the population. . . . . . . 2 Identifying priorities: agreeing the target areas for action. . . .
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Fox, Michael H. "The Quest for Uranium." In Why We Need Nuclear Power. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199344574.003.0018.

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The name rises as a phantom from the heart of the Congo. The dawn of the nuclear age began there, though no one knew it at the time. King Leopold II of Belgium claimed the Congo as his colony during the surge of European colonization in the 1870s, promising to run the country for the benefit of the native population. Instead, he turned it into a giant slave camp as he raped the country of its riches. Leopold didn’t care much about mineral wealth, preferring the easy riches of rubber, but aft er he died in 1909, the Belgium mining company Union Minière discovered ample resources of copper, bismuth, cobalt, tin, and zinc in southern Congo. The history-changing find, though, was high-grade uranium ore at Shinkolobwe in 1915. The real interest at the time was not in uranium—it had no particular use—but in radium, the element the Curies discovered and made famous. It was being used as a miracle treatment for cancer and was the most valuable substance on earth—30,000 times the price of gold. Radium is produced from the decay of uranium aft er several intermediates (see Figure 8.3 in Chapter 8), so it is inevitable that radium and uranium will be located together. The true value of the uranium would not be apparent until the advent of the Manhattan Project to build the atomic bomb during World War II. Edgar Sangier, the director of Union Miniere, which owned the mine at Shinkolobwe, hated the Nazis and was afraid—correctly, as it turned out—that they would invade Belgium. In 1939, as Europe was sliding into war, Sangier learned that uranium could possibly be used to build a bomb. He secretly arranged to transfer 1,250 tons of the uranium ore out of the Congo to a warehouse in New York City. There it sat until 1942, when General Leslie Groves, the man whom President Roosevelt put in charge of the Manhattan Project, found out about it and arranged to purchase it.
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Conference papers on the topic "Charles Ora Card"

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Maizeray, S., H. Herry, G. Valette, and S. Boisramé. "Innovation dans la communication et la gestion du stress en chirurgie orale : méthode d’analyse ProcessCom®." In 66ème Congrès de la SFCO. Les Ulis, France: EDP Sciences, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/sfco/20206602003.

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Pas facile de savoir communiquer efficacement en tant que chirurgien oral ! C’est probablement la raison pour laquelle nous parlons d’art pour un acte aussi banal que celui de communiquer avec son patient. L’Art de communiquer, c’est l’art de « tester »son interlocuteur pour se positionner rapidement dans sa personnalité et mettre en place le bon canal de communication. Les situations de stress simposent quotidiennement pour le patient et pour le chirurgien. Et la résolution de ces situations dépend de la qualité de communication car c’est la qualité de l’entente interpersonnelle qui va influencer celle du traitement, de la santé buccale du patient et du bien être du praticien. De nombreuses thérapeutiques sont actuellement utilisées pour faciliter la gestion du stress : la prémédication sédative (antihistaminiques, benzodiazépines, ), la sédation consciente, la psychothérapie (thérapies cognitives comportementales), l’hypnose, la musicothérapie Créée au début des années 1980 par T. Kahler, la Process Communication (PC) est un outil de compréhension du fonctionnement des différentes parties de la personnalité présentes à des degrés variables chez une personne. Cette méthode danalyse a démontré un intérêt majeur en tant quoutil positif de communication lors de séminaires de formation et pour les étudiants et enseignants (Hranicky, 2015) (Drouin 2015) (Collignon, 2013). La manière de dire les choses dans la PC a plus dimportance que le contenu du message. Dans une situation dite « stressante », le problème vient rarement de ce qui est dit mais surtout de la façon dont cela a été dit. La PC apporte une carte rapidement lisible des caractéristiques d’un type de personnalité : ses points forts, ses motivations, ses modes de communication, les environnements dans lesquels il sera à laise ou pas, les types de personnalité avec lesquels il interagira facilement ou difficilement. Il existe donc des stratégies individuelles face à chaque personnalité pour éviter les situations de «mécommunication» et pour retrouver la disponibilité intellectuelle et émotionnelle. Le premier intérêt de ce modèle est de soccuper de soi ; c’est à dire identifier nos points forts et nos motivations qui permettent d’accroître notre flexibilité et efficacité à communiquer, agir sur nos comportements de stress et utiliser au mieux nos talents personnels. Le second intérêt est de soccuper de lautre; C’est-à-dire savoir de quoi il a besoin dans sa relation. Ce modèle de communication présente un grand intérêt dans la prise en charge du patient stressé et transmetteur de stress en chirurgie orale. Il nous amène à réaliser que les difficultés de la communication ne sont pas à imputer au type de personnalité de lautre mais à la relation dysfonctionnelle existante entre deux types de personnalité. Ce changement de croyance ou dattitude mentale, vis-à-vis de lautre constitue un pré-requis indispensable à lamélioration de la flexibilité relationnelle et du professionnalisme du chirurgien oral. De futures recherches en santé seront à mener afin de diversifier les applications de cette méthode, notamment en chirurgie orale.
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Reports on the topic "Charles Ora Card"

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W, Nedra, Laura B. Strange, Sara M. Kennedy, Katrina D. Burson, and Gina L. Kilpatrick. Completeness of Prenatal Records in Community Hospital Charts. RTI Press, February 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3768/rtipress.2018.rr.0032.1802.

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We describe the completeness of prenatal data in maternal delivery records and the prevalence of selected medical conditions and complications among patients delivering at community hospitals around Atlanta, Georgia. Medical charts for 199 maternal-infant dyads (99 infants in normal newborn nurseries and 104 infants in newborn intensive care nurseries) were identified by medical records staff at 9 hospitals and abstracted on site. Ninety-eight percent of hospital charts included prenatal records, but over 20 percent were missing results for common laboratory tests and prenatal procedures. Forty-nine percent of women had a pre-existing medical condition, 64 percent had a prenatal complication, and 63 percent had a labor or delivery complication. Missing prenatal information limits the usefulness of these records for research and may result in unnecessary tests or procedures or inappropriate medical care.
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