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Editorial
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Volume 346:1574-1575 May 16, 2002 Number 20
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Specialists, Technology, and Newborns — Too Much of a Good Thing

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 by Goodman, D. C.
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A joyous event at a hospital is a reunion of the "graduates" of the neonatal intensive care unit. The 1000-g preemie who spent the first two months of her life breathing with the help of a ventilator is now captain of her third-grade soccer team. The boy born with cyanotic congenital heart disease has survived a series of operations and is now playing piano in recitals. These stories have a powerful symbolic role in the culture of American medicine, celebrating the accomplishments of advanced forms of technology in the hands of specialized members of the hospital staff and physicians.

If . . . [Full Text of this Article]

References


Related Letters:

Availability of Neonatal Intensive Care and Neonatal Mortality
Cooper R. A., Goldstein M. R., Hand I., Noble L., Milley J. R., Goodman D. C., Fisher E. S., Little G. A., Grumbach K.
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N Engl J Med 2002; 347:1893-1895, Dec 5, 2002. Correspondence

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