Babies
in sentence
606 examples of Babies in a sentence
We can't make the grape plant produce
babies.
It was a big thing for us, and now all my sisters are off having
babies
and the boys are all getting married, so we're staying close to home for, I guess, another couple of weeks.
During pregnancy, it includes high-quality prenatal and delivery care so we can produce healthy moms and
babies.
But the truth is, we've had decades of unacceptably high rates of maternal death and life-threatening complications during delivery and decades of devastating consequences for moms,
babies
and families, and we have not been moved to action.
These are my
babies.
I know some of you are still
babies.
One of the people I interviewed was the midwife who delivered all of the
babies
born in my village, including myself.
I asked her, "Do you remember how many
babies
you delivered throughout your career?"
She said she was full of guilt for carrying out the one-child policy, and she hoped that by helping families have babies, she could counteract what she did in the past.
Well, if my husband were up here right now, he would tell you that I interview babies, because he would rather not say that his wife experiments on children.
Besides the fact that
babies
are actually really, really sneaky.
These days, when people ask me why young mothers with four-month-old
babies
will travel thousands of miles, knowing they will likely be imprisoned in the United States, I remember Jerica, and I think of her and of her pain and of her father who saved his son's life with his own body, and I understand the truly human need to migrate in search of a better life.
That changed my life quite dramatically, and as of today, I have almost 1,000
babies
in my two centers.
That's the moment where Oedipus has his moment, where he suddenly realizes that hot chick he's been sleeping with and having
babies
with is his mother.
We adore
babies
because they’re so cute.
It’s important that we love babies, and that we not be put off by, say, messy diapers.
So
babies
have to attract our affection and our nurturing, and they do.
Pregnant women who don't get enough folate are at much higher risk of having
babies
with birth defects.
But at the same time it was also impossible not to see the human vitality, the aspiration and the ambition of the people who live there: women washing their babies, washing their clothes, hanging them out to dry.
I know now her life was hard; she lost three children as babies, then her husband died too, leaving young sons, and no money.
Babies
born by C-section and
babies
born vaginally aren't the same when it comes to microbial start to life, and after birth there are countless different early life events and circumstances that further modulate the way the gut microbiota is developing, such as the medications that might be prescribed for the infant or the mother, number of pets and siblings in the family, as well as level of hygiene at home, and, in this case, it's actually better if it's not that perfectly clean all the time.
That is why we have to learn how to protect the health of these
babies
after the occurrence of such early life events that might disrupt their gut microbiota development.
I work as a researcher and as a technical lead of an infant health platform, and the question I'm trying to find a solution to every day at work, and the same question I'm aiming to answer in this talk, is how can we make sure that all
babies
get the same shot at lifelong health, no matter how they're born or what early life events they encounter.
Now, if
babies
are born via C-section, that early phase of colonization is greatly altered, because instead of vaginal, fecal and skin bacteria of the mother, mainly only skin bacteria enter the infant gut.
And that sets that colonization march to a totally different tone, and simply because that's different to what we've adapted to during evolution, that might cause some health disadvantages for C-section-born
babies
later on.
It has also been shown that those same microbes might be missing from
babies
who are born by C-section or who are predisposed to heavy loads of antibiotics in early life.
And to kind of close this loop, it has also been shown in some research that
babies
born by C-section or are prescribed with many, many antibiotics early in life are more likely to be obese or overweight, even by 50 percent, which is a lot.
That's great for a breastfed baby, but we all know that all
babies
are not breastfed.
So what could we do to ensure that also those
babies
who are not breastfed could restore their microbiota development after encountering those disruptive early life events that might disrupt their gut microbiota development?
Such things in the early history of
babies
occur in real
babies.
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