CONTACT US   SUBSCRIBE   PREMIUM   ADVERTISING

70F Hi 79F
Lo 68F

Recent Blog Posts

Hospitals Launch $3M Plan for Simulated Wombs

By Associated Press | April 24, 2008

New York City's public hospitals are launching a $3 million effort to simulate high-tech wombs for premature babies.

The initiative includes low lights and special sound monitors that flash when a neonatal unit gets too noisy for its tiny patients. City Health and Hospitals Corp.

President Alan Aviles says the improvements are designed to let the infants "eat, sleep, and develop as though they never left their mother's womb prematurely."

The project is being formally announced yesterday. The agency aims to make the changes in all 11 of its neonatal centers by the end of 2009.

Officials hope the initiative will help premature infants develop more quickly. About 5,500 infants were born prematurely or critically ill in city-run hospitals last year. They represented almost one-fourth of all the hospitals' births.


Berkshire Lifestyle
A New York Sun Advertorial Section

NEW YORK ›

Paterson's Tax Cap Plan May End Up Costing City

Lawmakers Line Up Against Idea of MTA Fare Hike

Paterson Signs Legislation Permitting Natural Gas Drilling

New Yorkers On Food Stamps Grow by 500,000

Bloomberg Critic Becoming a Champion for Mayoral Run

Expansion Sought of Upper East Side Landmark Area

NATIONAL ›

Schumer Scolded Over Politics At Economic Hearing

Hurricane Dolly Downgraded to Category 1 Storm

No Survivors in B-52 Crash Off Guam

Boehner Rejects 'Contract With America'

Bitter Holocaust Battle Plays Out on Capitol Hill

Test Offers Hope in Combatting Cholesterol Drug Side Effects

ARTS+ ›

Before, During & After the Fall: Dürer at MOBIA

Nameless, Homeless, Borderline Soulless: Ralph Fiennes Does Beckett

Up for Bid at Scope Hamptons: Collector Mentorship

The Country of Quixote: Henry Kamen's 'Imagining Spain'

Hugh Trevor-Roper's 'The Invention of Scotland'

Frontier Exegesis: Walter Nugent's 'Habits of Empire'