
Male babies are more likely to be stillborn than female babies, found in a large-scale study led by the University of Exeter. Published in the journal emBMC Medicine/em, the study reviewed more than 30 million births globally, and found that the risk of stillbirth is about ten percent higher in boys. This equates to a loss of around 100 000 additional male babies per year. The results could help to explain why some pregnancies go wrong. Around a quarter of stillbirths ...
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Friday, November 28, 2014
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