UNC Collaborative for Maternal & Infant Health

UNC Collaborative for Maternal & Infant Health

Improving the health of North Carolina's women and infants

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What is the 4th Trimester Project?

December 31, 2015 by Kristin Tully

In the 12 weeks following delivery, a woman must recover from childbirth, adapt to changing hormones, and learn to feed and care for her newborn. During this “4th Trimester,” many women experience considerable challenges, including fatigue, pain, breastfeeding difficulties, depression, lack of sexual desire and incontinence. Amid these concerns, postpartum care is often fragmented among… Read More →

Filed Under: 4th Trimester Project, Uncategorized Tagged With: About, Childbirth, Engagement, Infant feeding, Maternal mood, Mothers, News, PCORI

The 4th Trimester

December 18, 2015 by Kristin Tully

The term “4th Trimester” reflects the concept that during the first months of life, newborns continue to function like a fetus in many ways; they require months of intense, ‘womb-like’ nurturing. A 4th Trimester perspective views the mother and infant as a mutually dependent unit, behaviorally and physiologically intertwined via breastfeeding and other interactions such… Read More →

Filed Under: 4th Trimester Project, Uncategorized Tagged With: About, Childbirth, Mothers

Physical Recovery from Childbirth

December 18, 2015 by Kristin Tully

Physical Recovery from Childbirth Key questions Patients: What aspects of recovery were most challenging for you? What do you wish you’d been told before birth? What questions did you have that your health providers unable to answer? What did your maternity provider say about weight gain during pregnancy & weight loss postpartum? What advice was… Read More →

Filed Under: 4th Trimester Project, Uncategorized Tagged With: Childbirth, Engagement, Mothers, Physical Recovery, Providers, Questions, Themes

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ERASE Maternal Mortality (“I Gave Birth” Initiative)

https://www.mombaby.org/2023/erase-maternal-mortality/

UNC Collaborative for Maternal and Infant Health aims to improve the health and well-being of women and families across North Carolina through community partnerships, research and clinical care innovations, and developing new approaches to complex problems.

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Room 216 MacNider
Campus Box 7181
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7181

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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