ADVERTISMENT
 
 
2 Dec 2008

March of Dimes seeks answers to preterm birth

- 10 Mar 2008
By March of Dimes Foundation   
Page 1 of 2

$11M committed to prematurity research initiatives since 2005

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. – The March of Dimes Foundation awarded $3.5 million to 10 scientists who are trying to stem the growing pace of preterm birth by studying the role genes and heredity play in premature births and how the rate of fetal lung development, infection and other factors may trigger labor.

Since 2005, the March of Dimes has committed more than $11 million to its four-year-old Prematurity Research Initiative grant program.

The March of Dimes unveiled the names and the projects of the 10 scientists who are the 2008 grant recipients, including two whose work was funded in the first round of grant awards in 2005.

More than half a million babies – one out of every eight – are born too soon each year, and the numbers have risen steadily.

“Most of the causes of preterm birth remain unknown. There is an urgent purpose for this research,” said Dr. Jennifer L. Howse, president of the March of Dimes. “We continue to work toward a future when every baby is born healthy.”

The 2008 PRI grantees include:

 
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