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8961294 tn?1404176667

New definitions for full term

What does everyone think about the new definition for full ten and late term? 39 to 41 weeks is now full term. http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/10/22/full-term-pregnancy-definition/3145107/
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Avatar universal
If thats really true and legit only bc I have no data to get online to check it out atm im totally ok with it :-)
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8961294 tn?1404176667
I had a friend who shared it on Facebook. I read it, and it looks legit. It makes sense to me. When I first heard people saying that 37 weeks was full term, it sounded funny to me. The article confirms that babies scheduled that early tend to have more problems than babies born naturally on their own. So, if the baby comes on his own early, then the due date might have been wrong, but it said that many doctors and women think that they should be having their baby that early, when normally, that is not the case.
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8961294 tn?1404176667
A pregnancy is "full term" only in the narrower two-week window that starts at 39 weeks, under new definitions published in the journal Obstetrics & Gynecology and endorsed by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine. The groups say babies born within those two weeks do best. Babies born two weeks before or one week after that window, at "early term" or "late term," face a few more risks, they say.
The biggest reason the terminology needs to change is to discourage doctors and patients from scheduling medically unnecessary deliveries — by induction or C-section — before 39 weeks, says Jeffrey Ecker, a specialist in maternal-fetal medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. He chairs the college's committee on obstetric practice.
The new definitions are based on recent research. The old terminology "was based on the general observation that babies born after 37 weeks tended to do quite well," Ecker says. That's still true, he says, but doctors know now that babies born at 39 and 40 weeks do better and that risks rise again after 41 weeks.
"Language and labels matter," he says, and the changes will help doctors better communicate the latest science to patients.
Here's how expectant mothers should now expect doctors to describe the last possible weeks of pregnancy (counted from the first day of a woman's last menstrual period, but sometimes adjusted after an ultrasound):
• Early term: Between 37 weeks 0 days and 38 weeks, six days
• Full term: Between 39 weeks and 40 weeks, six days
• Late term: Between 41 weeks and 41 weeks, six days
• Post term: 42 weeks and beyond
The definitions were developed at a workshop in 2012 that included representatives from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and other medical groups. Details from the workshop were published in the journal JAMA earlier this year.
Still, the official endorsement by doctors who deliver babies is "incredibly important," says Edward McCabe, medical director of the March of Dimes. "In the past, when a woman made it past the 37-week goal line, she was home … This moves the goal line."
A 2009 survey of 650 women who had recently given birth, also published in Obstetrics & Gynecology, found plenty of confusion about where that goal line was. When asked when a pregnancy reached "full term," 24% said 34-36 weeks, 51% said 37-38 weeks and just 25% said 39-40 weeks.
Those attitudes helped explain why early elective deliveries were continuing to rise even after studies revealed risks for babies, including more breathing and feeding problems and a small, but increased, risk of death.
Groups including the March of Dimes have been working for several years to educate women about those risks. Many hospitals now have programs in place to stop elective early deliveries.
Those efforts have had a "significant effect," but the new terminology will help too, says Elliott Main, medical director of the California Maternal Quality Care Collaborative. "It's really nice for doctors to be able to say this is a national effort and we are trying to improve outcomes. Mothers want better outcomes for their kids."
Still, the cautions on early deliveries "should not panic women who go into labor spontaneously at 37 weeks," or who need to deliver early because they or their babies have medical problems, Ecker says. Early delivery can be justified by conditions from dangerously high blood pressure in a mother to poor growth in a baby, he says. "We are not saying deliveries before 39 weeks should be a 'never' event, but we are saying there should be a conversation."
Main says one reason planned early deliveries have higher risks is that doctors and patients sometimes miscalculate due dates. Babies themselves are better judges, he says, as evidenced by the fact that women who go into spontaneous labor at 37 or 38 weeks tend to have healthier babies than those who choose such early deliveries.
"Spontaneous labor set off by the baby is sign that the baby is really ready to be born," he says.
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