1. Stillbirth breakthrough
Melbourne researchers have developed a blood test that could help prevent stillbirth.
In a world first Mercy Health researchers have discovered a way to accurately measure a baby’s oxygen levels inside the womb.
This has long troubled clinicians who say it can be difficult to diagnose and measure the extent of oxygen and nutrition deprivation in foetuses, a condition that leads to about half of the 2000 stillbirths in Australia each year.
The breakthrough has taken three years of work. Clare Whitehead, a scientist and clinician who works with Professor Tong, has found that when oxygen levels are low, fragments of genetic material called RNA leak out of the placenta and into the mother’s blood. This is detectable with a simple blood test.
The finding will be published in the prestigious medical journal BMC Medicine today.
2. Mum’s video goes viral
A special needs teenager from Sydney who was not invited to her school formal has been making headlines around the world after her Mum made a video condemning the school that left her out. For more see this post here. “Josie Webster can do anything”
3. Childcare eating up our income
A new Productivity Commission issues paper says families are devoting about 9 per cent of their disposable incomes to childcare fees. The issues paper says many families have difficulty paying for childcare despite recent increases in direct subsidies to parents. The paper highlights concerns about excessive regulation of childcare.
However, childcare experts have warned that any push to reduce regulation, especially the level of staff training or educator-to-child ratios, could seriously compromise the quality of childcare services.
Top Comments
I don't understand the Enid Blyton story. Any more information? I had a massive Enid Blyton collection when I was a kid!
I still have mine, mainly hardbacks - have collected and kept them with pride.
Yes, mine are packed away in a (very heavy) crate, hopefully for my (as yet unborn) children to enjoy as much as I did one day.
2000 still births a year? That's worse than road deaths.
Isn't science wonderful?