Gravida-para
`Gravida/para` status is medical shorthand for a woman's obstetric history. Gravida indicates the total number of pregnancies a woman has had, regardless of whether they were carried to term. Para indicates the number of viable(>20 wks)births. Note: pregnancies consisting of multiples, such as twins or triplets, count as ONE birth Therefore, a woman who has had two pregnancies (both of which resulted in live births) would be noted as G2P2.
So the answer to that question is grav. 5, para 2.
grav 5, para 2
There is no specific medical term for a woman who has had 3 miscarriages and 2 live births. However, she may be considered as someone who has experienced recurrent pregnancy loss or recurrent miscarriages. It is essential for her to consult with a healthcare professional or a fertility specialist to determine any underlying causes or potential treatment options
Vermont has the lowest birth rate in the U.S. as of 2002, at 47.93 live births per 1000 women. Maine and New Hampshire follow, at 49.08 and 51.49 live births per 1000 women respectively.
In 2008, 2.7 infants die out of 1000 live births.
mammals always have live births and a wolverine is a land mammal so they have live births
Gravida-para `Gravida/para` status is medical shorthand for a woman's obstetric history. Gravida indicates the total number of pregnancies a woman has had, regardless of whether they were carried to term. Para indicates the number of viable(>20 wks)births. Note: pregnancies consisting of multiples, such as twins or triplets, count as ONE birth Therefore, a woman who has had two pregnancies (both of which resulted in live births) would be noted as G2P2.So the answer to that question is grav. 5, para 2.
Chickens lay eggs, also turtles, birds and fish.Humans (women) give live birth to babies as do; dogs, cats, horses, cows.
I can't speak for the U.S. specifically but according to the National Institutes of Health, Turner Syndrome effects 1 out of every 2,500 female live births worldwide. For more information about it, you can peruse NIH's site at:http://turners.nichd.nih.gov The site has a wide variety of publications you can access, information about current studies, and even the contact information for a NIH doctor if you have questions about the syndrome.
In 2008, 80 infants died per 1000 live births.
The overall ratio of live births worldwide is about 1.01 births for boys to 1.0 for girls. That has been the ratio since records have been kept.
In 2008, 43 infants died per 1000 live births.
Yes.