1. Roentgenographic analysis of meconium aspiration of the newborn;Gooding, C.A.; Gregory, G.A.;Radiology,1971
2. Meconium aspiration in infants: a prospective study;Gregory, G.A.; Gooding, C.A.; Phibbs, R.H.; Tooley, W.H.;Journal of Pediatrics,1974
3. Les pigments biliaires du meconium humain;Rodriguez Garay, E.; Lozzio, B.; O'Donnell, J.C.; Toccalino, H.; Emiliani, R.;Revue Internationale d'Hepatologie,1964
4. Establishing demand feeding in hospital It has been suggested that infants should be fed when they wake up and cry for a feed, 'demand feeding', rather than according to any rigid schedule, 'clock feeding',1971
5. Demand feeding instructions were sent out to all the midwifery staff in the last week of July 1975, to be introduced on August 1, and was defined as follows. The mother was to be encouraged to pick up her baby whenever she felt that he was hungry and to offer him a feed. She was also to be encouraged to have her baby at her bedside at night. If a mother chose to have her baby looked after in the ward nursery (each 4-bedded maternity ward has a nursery for 4 cots adjacent), instructions were given for the baby to be brought to the mother if he awoke. In addition, the practice of giving formula milk feeds to breast-fed babies, either as complements or supplements, was to be generally discouraged. Where additional feeds were thought to be indicated, water was to be offered, except in the case of small-fordates infants considered to be at risk of developing hypoglycaemia, who were to be allowed formula feeds in the early neonatal period