14 Week Pregnancy Ultrasound Baby Moving and Yawning











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An interdisciplinary Northwestern University team has developed a pair of soft, flexible wireless body sensors that replace the tangle of wire-based sensors that currently monitor premature babies in hospitals’ neonatal intensive care units (NICU) and pose a barrier to parent-baby cuddling and physical bonding. • The team recently completed a series of first human studies on premature babies at Prentice Women’s Hospital and Ann Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago. The researchers concluded that the wireless sensors provided data as precise and accurate as that from traditional monitoring systems. The wireless patches also are gentler on a newborn’s fragile skin and allow for more skin-to-skin contact with the parent. Existing sensors must be attached with adhesives that can scar and blister premature infants' skin. • If you're a journalist looking for b-roll or interview soundbites, visit: https://news.northwestern.edu/for-jou... ____ • ▶️ Subscribe: https://bit.ly/NorthwesternUYTSubscribe • Follow Northwestern on social media: • -Instagram:   / northwesternu   • -TikTok:   / northwestern.u   • -Twitter/X:   / northwesternu   • -LinkedIn:   / northwestern-university   • -Facebook:   / northwesternu   • Northwestern on the Web: • -Northwestern Homepage: https://northwestern.edu • -Northwestern Now News: https://news.northwestern.edu • -Northwestern Magazine: https://magazine.northwestern.edu

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