What is it about?
I, Dr. Saumya Pandey Ph.D., feel highly enthusiastic in highlighting the key points of my recently published article in the globally reputed international journal BJOG reporting the best in women's health research! With my academic accomplishments in medical research at New York, Texas, Nebraska and Lucknow/Udaipur, India, I would like to specify that reproductive disorders and pregnancy-related metabolic aberrations in the female physiology demand urgent attention so as to significantly reduce the increasing trends of stillbirths and birth asphyxia at referral hospitals/medical centers of both high as well as low resource settings. The PartoMa study designed in a hospital-based setting of Zanzibar has tremendous clinical significance and warrants future design of replicative studies with ethnically disparate patient population subsets. Experimental medicine, reproductive immunology, physiology and pharmacology should ensure ethical research with good practice including written informed consent of patients. Healthcare resources should be stringently allocated with tailor-made cost-effective patient-friendly treatment modalities for an eventual higher patient satisfaction rates!
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Why is it important?
This particular study authored by Dr. Saumya Pandey Ph.D., efficiently bridges the existing clinical research lacuna in women's health research; my article provides critical research insights in public-health oriented women-centric research and advocates adherence to scientific integrity, good practice research and justified allocation of financial resources in healthcare so as to diminish the perceived pyschosocial distress associated with still-birth and post-partum depression and/or birth asphyxia trends in women of child-bearing age!
Perspectives
I, Dr. Saumya Pandey Ph.D., am actively engaged in clinically meaningful women's health research and strongly advocate the utilization of healthcare finances both in high as well as resource settings for cost-effective, tailor-made, patient-friendly, treatment modalities; counseling sessions with a face to face one to one interview should be organized to increasing the awareness levels of women seeking treatment at referral hospitals; pregnancy-related advice including risk factors for susceptibility to miscarriages, spontaneous abortions, stillbirths and/or birth asphyxia should be provided so as to have an eventual higher success trends in live births with significant reduction in stillbirths and/or related adverse effects. Dietary regimens, HPV/Chlamydia positivity, tobacco usage history/cigarette tobacco smokers: active or passive or tobacco chewers, should be incorporated in structured, well-designed questionnaires for eliciting true response rates and accordingly streamlining clinical reserach efforts for successful, strategic, cost-effective management of stillbirth trends amongst women of varying genetic landscapes, lifestyles and socioeconomic strata. Dissecting the intricacies in women's health research and reproductive medicine has been my major areas of biomedical research in recent years and I personally think that the future holds tremendous potential and promise for cost-effective collaborative public health research with eventual design of predictive biomarkers in stillbirth management in women of diverse ethnicities. DR. SAUMYA PANDEY PH.D. drsaumyapandey11@gmail.com Lucknow, India (author's hometown), December 28, 2018
DR. SAUMYA PANDEY
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Re: Effect of locally-tailored labour management guidelines on intrahospital stillbirths and birth asphyxia at the referral hospital of Zanzibar: a quasi-experimental pre-post-study (The PartoMa study), BJOG An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, December 2017, Wiley,
DOI: 10.1111/1471-0528.14961.
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