by Bonnie Auyeung, Reader and Chancellor’s Fellow in Psychology at the University of Edinburgh and a member of the Royal Society of Edinburgh’s Education Committee.
Interesting. The collaboration between developmental psychology, data science, and public health certainly provides dynamics and a holistic perspective, particularly concerning the development of a baby in the mother's womb.
While the study is confined to Scotland, I am curious about how the study might be relatable to a context where pregnancy (child conceiving) and childbirth occur entirely at home, with no access to antenatal care in public hospitals?
Interesting. The collaboration between developmental psychology, data science, and public health certainly provides dynamics and a holistic perspective, particularly concerning the development of a baby in the mother's womb.
While the study is confined to Scotland, I am curious about how the study might be relatable to a context where pregnancy (child conceiving) and childbirth occur entirely at home, with no access to antenatal care in public hospitals?