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Professor Peter Dunn, paediatrician who improved the care of newborn babies – obituary
He developed standards of care which improved survival rates and was one of the first to use CPAP for babies in respiratory distress
Peter Dunn
Credit: Wellcome Library, London
Professor Peter Dunn, who has died at the age of 92, was a paediatrician whose work contributed greatly to survival rates of newborn babies and was a driving force in establishing regional networks of care; in 1950, 40 of every 1000 babies born alive died within seven days. Today it is eight.
Peter Dunn was born on June 23 1929 in Birmingham. His father, an orthopaedic surgeon, died when he was 10; his mother was an ex- VAD nurse. After Marlborough and undergraduate studies in St John’s College, Cambridge, Peter took the unusual step of moving to Birmingham for his clinical studies.
Why listening to your partner’s snoring could save their life
It keeps bed fellows awake, but noisy nighttime nostrils can mask something more sinister
21 December 2020 • 6:00am
‘Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house, not a creature was stirring – apart from my wife, sat bolt upright and fuming as my snoring hit new decibel levels. Silent night? Fat chance.
We joke about my snoring, as most couples do, but it’s not really a laughing matter – especially not for my long-suffering bed mate. That’s why I’ve bought her a sleep mask for Christmas that not only blocks out all light but, crucially, covers her ears too. The festive season will just compound matters, after all – even if you can t see anyone else, you still eat and drink more than usual, your regular sleeping patterns are disturbed and you’re more sedentary than ever: the perfect conditions to guarantee a bad night’s snoring. A study of more than 166,000 users conducted by the S