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Evidence based neonatal surgery

Evidence based neonatal surgery
Evidence based neonatal surgery
Surgical intervention has, quite rightly, a well-established role in the management of a number of congenital and acquired neonatal conditions. Surgical approaches have been developed over a period of time, from the initial endeavours of pioneering neonatal surgeons, to the procedures commonly in everyday use today. Such development has been predominantly a result of necessity, learning from past experience and translation of techniques in use in other surgical fields into neonatal surgery. As neonatal surgical experience has grown, surgeons have begun to develop alternatives to what were once thought to be traditional techniques such that for a number of conditions we now have the luxury of choice in the treatment of these often fragile infants. With choice, there comes a dilemma. Which approach should be used? How should we make the decision?
1281-1293
Springer London
Hall, Nigel
6919e8af-3890-42c1-98a7-c110791957cf
Eaton, Simon
77a21196-4388-442f-9306-3a013b8b1259
Pierro, Agostino
74bd6b37-4305-47fd-847d-c19a08718997
Losty, Paul D.
Flake, Alan W.
Rintala, Risto J.
Hutson, John M.
Iwai, Naomi
Hall, Nigel
6919e8af-3890-42c1-98a7-c110791957cf
Eaton, Simon
77a21196-4388-442f-9306-3a013b8b1259
Pierro, Agostino
74bd6b37-4305-47fd-847d-c19a08718997
Losty, Paul D.
Flake, Alan W.
Rintala, Risto J.
Hutson, John M.
Iwai, Naomi

Hall, Nigel, Eaton, Simon and Pierro, Agostino (2018) Evidence based neonatal surgery. In, Losty, Paul D., Flake, Alan W., Rintala, Risto J., Hutson, John M. and Iwai, Naomi (eds.) Rickham's Neonatal Surgery. 1st ed. Springer London, pp. 1281-1293. (doi:10.1007/978-1-4471-4721-3_72).

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

Surgical intervention has, quite rightly, a well-established role in the management of a number of congenital and acquired neonatal conditions. Surgical approaches have been developed over a period of time, from the initial endeavours of pioneering neonatal surgeons, to the procedures commonly in everyday use today. Such development has been predominantly a result of necessity, learning from past experience and translation of techniques in use in other surgical fields into neonatal surgery. As neonatal surgical experience has grown, surgeons have begun to develop alternatives to what were once thought to be traditional techniques such that for a number of conditions we now have the luxury of choice in the treatment of these often fragile infants. With choice, there comes a dilemma. Which approach should be used? How should we make the decision?

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 7 May 2018
Published date: 24 May 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 476533
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/476533
PURE UUID: 57080e67-17e2-4b11-b986-40fc752e90d7
ORCID for Nigel Hall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8570-9374

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 05 May 2023 16:33
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:24

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Contributors

Author: Nigel Hall ORCID iD
Author: Simon Eaton
Author: Agostino Pierro
Editor: Paul D. Losty
Editor: Alan W. Flake
Editor: Risto J. Rintala
Editor: John M. Hutson
Editor: Naomi Iwai

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