Minority Health Month: Key Factors for Safe, Healthy Pregnancy Experiences for Minority Women
High-quality health care, patient trust and education are key factors in helping to ensure more minority women have healthier pregnancies.
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High-quality health care, patient trust and education are key factors in helping to ensure more minority women have healthier pregnancies.
UF Health Jacksonville and UF Health North celebrate Midwifery week October 1-7. This national observance was created by the American College of Nurse-Midwives…
It’s important for women to understand how uterine fibroids can affect them. Health education empowers women to act positively on behalf of their health and…
Breastfeeding requires patience and persistence. As mother and baby become more efficient, breastfeeding will become a wonderful experience and may be one of…
We spent some time with gynecologic oncologist Daniel Benrubi, MD, to find out what led him to follow in the footsteps of his father, Guy Benrubi, MD, emeritus…
While ovarian cancer is not nearly as prevalent as breast cancer, it is just as concerning.
Birth defects affect one in every 33 babies (about 3% of all babies) born in the United States each year.