« Previous
Next »
Women's Health Issues
Volume 17, Issue 6
, Pages 383-384
, November 2007
Re: Case studies of power and control related to tobacco use during pregnancy
References
- Behrman, R. E. (1995). Low birth weight. Cigarette smoking is unequivocally the largest and most important known modifiable risk factor for low birth weight and infant death. Future Child, 5, 124. In K. Van Meurs. (1999). Cigarette smoking, pregnancy, and the developing fetus. Stanford Medical Review, 1, 14–16. Available: http://med.stanford.edu. Accessed October 31, 2007.
- The effect of maternal smoking and drinking during pregnancy upon 3H-nicotine receptor brainstem binding in infants dying of the sudden infant death syndrome: Initial observations in a high risk population. Brain Pathology. 2007;OnlineEarly Articles. Available: http://www.blackwell-synergy.com. Accessed October 31, 2007
- . Case studies of power and control related to tobacco use during pregnancy. Women’s Health Issues. 2007;17:316–332
- . Effects of smoking and fetal hypokinesia in early pregnancy. Archives of Medical Research. 2007;38:864–867
- . Environmental factors implicated in the causation of adverse pregnancy outcome. Seminars in Perinatology. 2007;31:240–242
Letters to the Editor commenting on a journal article or on an issue about women’s health care or policy will be considered for publication, space permitting. Please note that Letters to the Editor cannot exceed 1,000 words. The editor reserves the right to shorten letters and to make minor editorial revisions. For Letters to the Editor regarding a journal article published in Women’s Health Issues, the editor will invite the author(s) of the article to submit a response to the letter; if provided, the response will be published along with the Letter to the Editor if it is selected for publication. Only a selection of letters submitted will be published, solely at the discretion of the editor.
PII: S1049-3867(07)00146-6
doi: 10.1016/j.whi.2007.09.002
© 2007 Jacobs Institute of Women’s Health. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
« Previous
Next »
Women's Health Issues
Volume 17, Issue 6
, Pages 383-384
, November 2007
