PATRON: Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu
tutu.jpg
premature_e1.jpg
 
   

mother and baby clinic

the mother and baby clinic

The Mother and Baby Clinic opened in Well Street, Hackney in 1993 through a substantial donation by late Dr Anne Gibson and The Mother & Child Foundation to apply the research findings to the community. Hackney is an ethnically diverse inner city area in the East-end of London with the highest rate of low birth weight.

The primary concern of The Clinic is to improve the nutritional status of women at risk of low birth weight. The Clinic offers mothers nutritional assessment and counselling on diet and lifestyle aiming to reduce the incidence low birth weight and associated problems. Various teaching aids is being used such as group discussion, cookery demonstration for ethnic groups, visit to local markets/supermarkets to teach mother how to shop on budget, nutrient rich foods, introducing unfamiliar foods and encourage them to widen the variety of foods they eat. This approach led to a paralle programme in Moscow set up by Professor Alexander Baturin and Dr Igor Kon (shown below) from the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences.

[From the left: Michael Pirkis, Dorothy Pirkis, Prof. Alexander Baturin, Cheryl Louzado, Dr Anne Gibson , Wendy Doyle, Dr Igor Kon, Prof. Michael Crawford, Somi Guha, Margaret Wynn, Roy Ridgeway, Arthur Wynn]

contact details

Professor Michael A. Crawford

address: 189 Well Street, Hackney, London E9 6QU, UK

tel/fax: (+44) 020-8533-6922

 
Next >

   
 
Newsflash

Mental Ill Health Now The Highest Cost To Ill Health

The June issue of the European Journal of Neurology (vol12:1-27), Patrik Andin-Soboki et al, report the total cost for the 25 member states of the EU as a staggering €386 billion at 2004 costs that is €829 per head. A large part of the cause has its origins in early development. In a letter to the Lancet at the end of August, the Foundation blames the elite advisory system supposedly giving Government advice on health, nutrition and education for ignoring mental ill health and low birthweight which is the single most important determinant of mental impairment. (Crawford M et al Lancet. 2005; 366:714-5).


 

New Evidence on the Cause of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome: Adverse prenatal conditions predispose to Cot Death.

A study reported in the Lancet of more than a quarter of a million women in Scotland found that stunted prenatal growth and pre-term delivery were at the highest risk. And a previous cot death increased the risk, destroying the often used accusation of child abuse as the cause.

To read the full story, visit www.nature.com/news