Asphyxia

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Asphyxia

The World Health Organization, mass media, political news and general information remain in a state of emergency. During this emergency we examine and compare definitions to various topics with the intention of strengthening, or rethinking and refining information in the public record. Today’s word is Asphyxia.

According to Merriam Webster’s Medical Dictionary. asphyxia is defined as

1 : a lack of oxygen or excess of carbon dioxide in the body that results in unconsciousness and often death and is usually caused by interruption of breathing or inadequate oxygen supply

2 : the state of being stifled or suppressed (usually of oxygen).

Harvard Medical Dictionary Defines asphyxia: as a life-threatening lack of oxygen due to drowning, choking, or an obstruction of the airways.

The World Health organization topics section does not include asphyxia as one of its general topics. However Birth Asphyxia is discussed by Jonathan M Spector and Subhash Daga in the 2008 article Preventing those so-called stillbirths. In their article Birth asphyxia, is defined as the failure to establish breathing at birth.

According their report Birth asphyxia accounts for an estimated 900, 000 deaths each year and is one of the primary causes of early neonatal mortality. This may be a statistical observation.

The Guidelines for neonatal resuscitation, such as those endorsed by WHO and the American Academy of Pediatrics, represent a standard practice set that improves outcomes in asphyxiated newborns. However, 900, 000 Birth asphyxia deaths per year is still an alarming number, especially with the problems that existed worldwide with child trafficking for the purpose of fulfilling the religious freedoms, rites and liberties of  Freemasons at the expense of newborn and young children

The Guidelines for neonatal resuscitation stress the importance of drying, stimulating and warming babies in distress, as well as clearing their airways to avoid death by asphyxia umbilical strangulation.  This naturally leads us to ask the question, “What percentage of babies have died from umbilical cord strangulation?

According to research from the Stillbirth Collaborative Research Network, umbilical cord deaths called accidents account for around 10% of stillbirths about 200,000 in 2019, another alarming number. Umbilical cord deaths are caused by strangulation when the umbilical cord raps around the baby’s neck  or through a disruption the baby’s umbilical cord.

The umbilical cord has three separate functions. Primarily, it delivers  oxygenated blood to the baby. The umbilical cord also serves as a feeding tube and is a source of protein, fat, as well as vitamins and nutrients. Finally, the umbilical cord also serves to transfer waste products and deoxygenated blood away from the fetus to the maternal circulation, where it can be processed and excreted.

According to UNICEF there around 2 million babies worldwide were in 2019. UNICEF writes that many of these might have been prevented with proper care. According to the latest UNICEF data, the global stillbirth rate last year was 13.9 stillbirths per 1,000 total births. This equates to 1 in 72 total births resulting in a stillborn baby, or one every 16 seconds. Still, this number may be an underestimate, as stillbirths are often underreported.    

The Guidelines for neonatal resuscitation states that in the face of persistent apnoea(apnea), asphyxia by a temporary cessation of breathing or bradycardia, resuscitation of the heart or lungs with the use of bag-and-mask or equivalent device is indicated, and is felt by many to constitute the critical step in managing asphyxiated infants. However, the infant mortality rates deaths per year is still an alarming number and may also be statistical to cover the [crimes] committed in conspiracy by same people who so ardently protect their coronavirus conspiracy and who are brought to justice for it.  If it is statistical and used to terrorize or to occult the real reason for the death’s of babies, the number should reduce dramatically after the mass media, political news, and general information emergency is over.    Lastly in their article Spector and Daga (2008) state that Newborns have a remarkable ability to withstand hypoxia.  

JM Spector, SDaga (2008) Preventing those so-called stillbirths  Bulletin of the World Health Organization Volume 86: Number 4, April 2008, 241-320. PDF asphyxia-who-preventing-those-so-called-stillbirths

UNICEF Data: Monitoring the situation of children and women 2020 “Stillbirth retrieved  February 21, 2020 Stillbirths – UNICEF DATA 

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