E
Ellen Hodnett
Researcher at University of Toronto
Publications - 146
Citations - 16388
Ellen Hodnett is an academic researcher from University of Toronto. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Childbirth. The author has an hindex of 52, co-authored 146 publications receiving 15518 citations. Previous affiliations of Ellen Hodnett include McGill University & Mount Sinai Hospital.
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Planned caesarean section versus planned vaginal birth for breech presentation at term: a randomised multicentre trial
Mary E. Hannah,Walter J. Hannah,Sheila A. Hewson,Ellen Hodnett,Saroj Saigal,Andrew R. Willan,Andrew R. Willan +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors did a randomised trial to compare a policy of planned caesarean section with a plan of planned vaginal birth for selected breech-presentation pregnancies.
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Promotion of Breastfeeding Intervention Trial (PROBIT): a randomized trial in the Republic of Belarus.
Michael S. Kramer,Beverley Chalmers,Ellen Hodnett,Zinaida Sevkovskaya,Irina Dzikovich,Stanley H. Shapiro,Jean-Paul Collet,Irina Vanilovich,I Mezen,Thierry Ducruet,George Shishko,Vyacheslav Zubovich,Dimitri Mknuik,Elena Gluchanina,Viktor Y. Dombrovskiy,Anatoly Ustinovitch,Tamara Kot,Natalia Bogdanovich,Lydia Ovchinikova,Elisabet Helsing +19 more
TL;DR: The authors' experimental intervention increased the duration and degree (exclusivity) of breastfeeding and decreased the risk of gastrointestinal tract infection and atopic eczema in the first year of life.
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Continuous Support for Women During Childbirth
TL;DR: In general, continuous intrapartum support was associated with greater benefits when the provider was not a member of the hospital staff, when it began early in labour, and in settings in which epidural analgesia was not routinely available.
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Pain and women's satisfaction with the experience of childbirth: a systematic review.
TL;DR: The influences of pain, pain relief, and intrapartum medical interventions on subsequent satisfaction are neither as obvious, as direct, nor as powerful as the influences of the attitudes and behaviors of the caregivers.
Journal ArticleDOI
Breastfeeding and Child Cognitive Development: New Evidence From a Large Randomized Trial
Michael S. Kramer,Frances E. Aboud,Elena Mironova,Irina Vanilovich,Robert W. Platt,Lidia Matush,Sergei Igumnov,Eric Fombonne,Natalia Bogdanovich,Thierry Ducruet,Jean Paul Collet,Beverley Chalmers,Ellen Hodnett,Sergei Davidovsky,Oleg Skugarevsky,Oleg Trofimovich,Ludmila Kozlova,Stanley H. Shapiro +17 more
TL;DR: These results, based on the largest randomized trial ever conducted in the area of human lactation, provide strong evidence that prolonged and exclusive breastfeeding improves children's cognitive development.