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New training bundles aim to fix fragmented brain care for mothers and babies worldwide

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New training bundles aim to fix fragmented brain care for mothers and babies worldwide
Photo by National Cancer Institute / Unsplash

Brain health problems often get lost in gaps between different medical specialties. This narrative review looks at how to fix that broken system for pregnant women, newborns, and entire communities. The authors propose transdisciplinary training that brings together experts from many fields instead of keeping them in separate silos. They also suggest care bundles that treat the whole family unit rather than just one patient. These changes aim to bring equity and better coordination to healthcare everywhere. The review highlights artificial intelligence as a tool that might help monitor health more closely. However, this is a review of ideas and models, not a trial with patient data. The authors call for dismantling barriers that stop good care from happening. They want payment systems to reward teams that work together. Research priorities should shift toward integrated care models. Developing clear metrics is also needed to track progress in maternal and child brain health. The goal is a system where every person gets the support they need without waiting for a specialist appointment.

What this means for you:
New training and care models aim to connect brain health support for mothers and babies globally.
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