metadata
language:
- en
license: apache-2.0
tags:
- sentence-transformers
- sentence-similarity
- feature-extraction
- generated_from_trainer
- dataset_size:6116
- loss:MultipleNegativesRankingLoss
base_model: nomic-ai/modernbert-embed-base
widget:
- source_sentence: >-
What should you do if you experience any bleeding after 3 months of
starting HRT?
sentences:
- >-
So it is best used actually not alone but with the help of hair
reduction laser as an adjuvant therapy. Then talking about the cosmetic
treatments. So shaving, threading, waxing.
These methods are pretty good but they are temporary because they do not
cause a permanent damage to the hair follicle. Does shaving leads to
increased hair growth? So medically it has been proven with experiments,
control experiments that that is not the case. Medically we have done
shaving then after that we have checked the hair caliber, hair length,
rate of growth.
It is bound to be the same. Then we have hair removal creams. They
basically work by dissolving the shaft of the hair and once again these
creams may cause allergies in some people.
So make sure that you do a patch test before using them. Then we have
the bleaches. So this basically works by lightening the hair color and
making it less noticeable against the skin and most of these bleaching
agents contain a chemical called hydrogen peroxide.
So once again make sure that you do a patch test on the skin before
using them. Then talking about the permanent method of the hair removal.
So few years back people used to do electrolysis.
So it is difficult to target larger areas of skin with electrolysis and
it can be very time consuming also. But now we have lasers available
which are very effective. They can be used to target bigger areas of the
skin.
So we asked Dr. Sachin about what types of lasers, how to choose where
to go for laser, how many sitting and a lot more. Laser hair reduction
treatment essentially involves a single wavelength of light which gets
absorbed inside your hair follicle, the color inside it and partially
causes damage so that it doesn't either produce hair or produces hair
which is very thin and almost baby like or it delays the growth a lot.
So let's say if you shave and your hair comes back in five days or ten
days, once you do laser and you reach a certain point where you've done
a certain number of sessions, it may not come for three months or four
months and you only have to do maintenance sessions then.
But you have to realize the right candidate for doing laser hair
reduction is somebody who's got terminal hair, somebody who's got thick,
coarse hair.
- >-
(0:00 - 0:59)
Periods, Menses, Menstruation, Monthly, Maasik, Mahawari, so how can
something which is so very essential for the survival of species be so
dirty and impure? Something which is very normal, which happens to 50%
of the population every month. Something which is the sign of womanhood,
something which is the sign of motherhood. How can that be so impure?
How can that be so dirty? So why don't people talk about it? As far as I
know, even in schools, the sex education class or the e-production
chapter is in 7th or 8th class.
(0:59 - 1:33)
But these days, as a gynecologist, I see young girls as young as 8 or 9
years coming to me with the periods. We don't talk about it in school,
parents don't talk about it, so who will? I find it so strange when the
women in the family actually tell their daughters not to do this, not to
do this. I don't understand even till today, even in educated class,
women don't find it comfortable to talk to their fathers, their brothers
about the period.
(1:34 - 2:07)
From centuries till today, when you go to buy a pad, the shopkeeper
first wraps the pad in the newspaper, then puts it in black polythene,
and then gives it to you. And since we do not talk about this, we also
do not talk about our right to have the sex education, the right to have
the basic sanitation during periods, the right to have the access to
menstrual hygiene products. And we also lose our right to have the
opportunities in life.
(2:07 - 2:44)
How many opportunities will there be in life, which she may miss due to
periods. So what is a period? Period happens because the inner lining of
the uterus, which we call medically endometrium, every month, under the
influence of hormones, which are estrogen and progesterone, it
proliferates, and at the end of the month, it dies and it sheds off in
form of bleeding. So this interplay of hormones happens because the body
prepares the uterus every month for the pregnancy.
(2:45 - 3:00)
And when the pregnancy does not happen, all that preparation goes waste
and the bleeding happens. So let's today and onwards, talk about the
periods the way we should be talking about them. My name is Pooja Gupta,
I am from Uttar Pradesh.
(3:01 - 3:06)
My name is Shashi Yadav. My name is Hemanti. My name is Sejal Kumar and
I am from Delhi.
(3:06 - 3:13)
My name is Beena.
- >-
Your healthcare professional should discuss your individual risks based
on the research evidence at your consultation.
Can I still have HRT if I have had breast cancer or clots in my legs or
lungs?
HRT may still be an option for you and you should discuss this with your
healthcare professional, who may seek advice or refer you to a menopause
specialist.
Can I take HRT if I have diabetes or high blood pressure?
HRT should not affect your blood sugar control. If you are diabetic or
have very high blood pressure, your healthcare professional may consult
with a specialist before prescribing HRT.
Would taking HRT prevent dementia?
It is not known whether HRT affects the development of dementia.
Do I still need to use contraception when taking HRT?
HRT does not provide contraception. You need to continue using
contraception for 1 year after your last period if this happens after
the age of 50 years. If your last period happens before you are 50 years
of age then you need to continue using contraception for 2 years.
When should I seek advice after starting HRT?
You should have a review appointment with your healthcare professional
after 3 months of starting or changing HRT, and then yearly thereafter
if all remains well.
You may notice some vaginal bleeding in the first 3 months of starting
or changing HRT, but if you experience any bleeding after 3 months then
you should see your healthcare professional straight away.
How long can I take HRT for?
There are no set time limits for how long you can be on HRT. The
benefits and risks of taking HRT will depend on your individual
situation, and your healthcare professional should discuss these with
you.
How do I stop HRT?
You can stop your HRT suddenly or reduce gradually before stopping it.
The chances of your symptoms coming back is the same either way.
Do I need a referral to a menopause specialist?
- source_sentence: >-
What percentage of the foodborne disease burden is carried by children
under 5 years of age?
sentences:
- "Access to enough safe and nutritious food is key to sustaining life and promoting good health. Unsafe food containing harmful bacteria, viruses, parasites or chemical substances can cause more than 200 different diseases, ranging from diarrhoea to cancers.\n Around the world, an estimated 600\_million – almost 1 in 10 people – fall ill after eating contaminated food each year, resulting in 420\_000 deaths and the loss of 33\_million healthy life years (DALYs). Food safety, nutrition and food security are closely linked. Unsafe food creates a vicious cycle of disease and malnutrition, particularly affecting infants, young children, elderly and the sick. In addition to contributing to food and nutrition security,\n a safe food supply also supports national economies, trade and tourism, stimulating sustainable development. The globalization of food trade, a growing world population, climate change and rapidly changing food systems have an impact on the safety\n of food. WHO aims to enhance the capacity to prevent, detect and respond to public health threats associated with unsafe food at the global and country levels. Learn about Nutrition and Food Safety and COVID-19\nFoodborne diseases impede socioeconomic development by straining health care systems and harming national economies, tourism and trade. The burden of foodborne diseases to public health and to economies has often been underestimated due to underreporting\n and difficulty to establish causal relationships between food contamination and resulting illness or death. Children under 5 years of age carry 40% of the foodborne disease burden, with 125\_000 deaths every year. The consumption and production of safe food have immediate and long-term benefits for people, the planet and the economy. Safe food is essential to human health and well-being, only food that is safe can be traded. Safe food allows for the uptake of nutrients\n and promotes long-term human development. When food is not safe, humans cannot develop, and the Sustainable Development Goals cannot be achieved. The 2019 World Bank report on the economic burden of the foodborne diseases indicated that US$\_110 billion is lost each year in productivity and medical expenses resulting from unsafe food in low- and middle-income countries. Unsafe or contaminated food\n leads to trade rejections, economic losses and food loss and waste, while safe food production improves economic opportunities by enabling market access and productivity.\nWHO calls for the transformation of food systems to make food safe, healthy and sustainably produced for all the world population. WHO provides scientific advice and research to help develop international standards for food safety through the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)/WHO Codex Alimentarius. WHO provides global leadership in facilitating investment and coordinated evidence-based action across multiple sectors. This supports Member States in building strong, sustainable and resilient national food control systems with a balance of responsibilities between the different stakeholders, including consumers."
- "A volcano is a vent in the Earth’s crust from which eruptions occur. There are about 1500 potentially active volcanoes worldwide.\_When volcanoes erupt they can spew hot, dangerous gases, ash, lava and rock that can cause disastrous loss of life and property, especially in heavily populated areas. Volcanic activities and wildfires affected 6.2 million people and caused nearly 2400 deaths between 1998-2017. There are different types of volcanic eruptive events, including: pyroclastic explosions, with is fast-moving hot gas and volcanic matter hot ash releases lava flows gas emissions glowing avalanches, when gas and ashes release. Volcanic eruptions can also cause secondary events, such as floods, landslides and mudslides, if there are accompanying rain, snow or melting ice. Hot ashes can also start wildfires. Volcanic eruptions can impact climate change through emitting volcanic gases like sulfur dioxide, which causes global cooling, and volcanic carbon dioxide, which has the potential to promote global warming.\nVolcanic eruptions can pose multiple health threats depending on the proximity of the volcano to the community and whether there was any warning. Volcanic eruptions can cause: suffocation infectious diseases, such as conjunctivitis acute and chronic respiratory diseases from falling ash and breathing gases and fumes burns and traumatic injuries, such as lacerations from falling rock eye and skin irritations from acid rain. Ash and chemicals from the eruption can also generate risk of food and water contamination, and compromise basic services, like water, transportation, communications and health services. Likewise, the accumulation of ash on roofs can cause damage or collapse of buildings, both immediately and after the event.\nWHO works with Member States to build resilient and proactive health systems that can anticipate the needs and challenges during emergencies so that they are more likely to reduce risks and respond effectively when needed. The magnitude of the physical and human costs from volcanoes can be reduced if adequate emergency prevention, preparedness, response and recovery measures are implemented in a sustainable and timely manner. This includes, ensuring early warning systems are in place, evaluating the population, and raises awareness about the risks of volcanic activities. As the health cluster lead for global emergencies, WHO works with partners to respond to: ensure appropriate food supplementation; restore primary care services, like immunization, child and maternal health, and mental health; assemble mobile health teams and outreach; conduct epidemic surveillance, early warning and response; call for emergency funding to support health action."
- >-
Is it okay to take the vaccine before trying for pregnancy? Yes, it's a
very good idea. Please take both the doses of vaccine.
Wait for about six to eight weeks after the second dose of the vaccine
so that a good antibody response develops and then plan the pregnancy.
Which vaccine should I take? So in India we have two vaccines available
at present which is the Covaxin and Covashield. Both of them are equally
effective and equally safe.
So please take both the doses and please take the same vaccine for both
the doses. Can COVID-19 vaccine cause infertility? No, the vaccine is
absolutely safe. It does not contain the live virus and it is not known
to cause infertility in either men or women.
I'm having PCOD. I'm trying for pregnancy. Can I take the vaccine? Yes,
very much.
You can take the vaccine and you must take the vaccine. Are pregnant
women at a higher risk of getting COVID-19 infection? No, the risk of
getting the COVID-19 infection in pregnancy is same as that of a
non-pregnant woman. But the disease might become more severe in
pregnancy as pregnancy is an immunocompromised state.
Can COVID-19 infection in early pregnancy cause an abortion? No, we do
not have any scientific data supporting this. Can COVID-19 infection
cause premature labor in pregnancy? Yes, there have been some studies
where it was shown that COVID-19 infection is associated with higher
risk of a woman going into premature labor. Can COVID-19 infection cause
birth defects? No, there is no scientific data supporting this.
But COVID-19 infection in men has been associated with DNA fragmentation
in sperms, theoretically increasing the risk of birth defects. Can
COVID-19 infection be passed from the mother to the fetus? No scientific
studies till date have demonstrated a vertical transmission of COVID-19
virus from the mother to the baby. In fact, COVID-19 virus has also been
not found in the amniotic fluid.
How do I manage good medical care for my pregnancy in present times? I
know it's very difficult. It's very stressful. But as far as possible,
take online appointments with your doctor.
As far as possible, go for home collection of the blood test.
- source_sentence: What is the first step in calculating the due date using the first method?
sentences:
- >-
(0:00 - 1:53)
Ask any expectant mom. She is eagerly waiting for the day to hold her
newborn in her arms. She is waiting for her due date.
So, hello everyone. I am Dr. Anjali Kumar. I am a gynecologist and
obstetrician and I bring greetings to you from Maitri.
Maitri is a space where we talk anything and everything about women's
health. So, today let's understand the very basics of pregnancy which is
how to calculate your due date. A lot of us assume that a pregnancy is
exactly 9 months long but that's not the case.
A typical pregnancy lasts on an average 280 days or 40 weeks starting
from the first day of the last menstrual period as day one. By the way,
most of the doctors like to calculate the age of pregnancy in weeks. But
doctor, why do we count the duration of pregnancy from the first day of
L and D? I got conceived in the middle of the cycle.
I can even tell you my date. That's all right. In a 28 days cycle on day
one of the period the egg starts to form in one of the ovaries.
When it ovulates and gets fertilized it is already two weeks old and
when you miss your period your pregnancy is already four weeks old.
That's why when you miss your period now the second month has already
started and your pregnancy is already four weeks old. How can I
calculate my due date? So, the due date is nothing but when you complete
40 weeks.
(1:53 - 10:06)
It may not actually match with the exact date of delivery also. So,
there are two methods to calculate the due date. The first method, so
for this you first determine or remember the first day of your last
menstrual period.
Now count back three calendar months from that date and then add one
year and seven days to that date. For example, if your last menstrual
period began on September 9 2022. Now counting back three calendar
months would be June 9th 2022.
- >-
Now let's talk about what are the medical checkups which are done in the
second trimester. So typically in second trimester the doctor is going
to be calling you once in every four weeks and at each visit the doctor
is going to take a history examine you take your blood pressure weight
clinically examine the size of the pregnancy check for the baby's
heartbeat.
Roughly at about 18 to 20 weeks we do a detailed scan which is known as
anomaly scan or also known as TIFA. The screening for gestational
diabetes is typically done at about 24 to 26 weeks of pregnancy. It can
also be done earlier in case you fall into a high risk category for
developing gestational diabetes which means in case you are in a higher
weight side you have a positive family history or if you had a history
of gestational diabetes in the last pregnancy.
We also like to give certain vaccinations in the second trimester.
Typically at the beginning of second trimester we give a flu shot this
basically protects you against the swine flu and we like to give a plain
tetanus injection and then roughly by about 26 to 28 weeks of pregnancy
we give another shot which is known as Tdap. Basically this prevents you
against tetanus, diphtheria and pertussis and this is the time the usual
supplements like iron, calcium, vitamin D, folic acid and DHA are
usually prescribed to the woman.
So the second trimester of pregnancy is actually known as the fun time
of pregnancy where you can actually start celebrating the pregnancy. So
this is the time you should be really happy, eat well and do not worry
about these small small tiny problems which keep cropping here and
there.
- >-
Vault prolapse: when the top of the vagina (or vault) bulges down. This
can happen if you have had a hysterectomy and may develop in up to 1 in
10 women.
How common is pelvic organ prolapse?
It is difficult to know exactly how many women are affected by prolapse
since many do not see their doctor for it. However, it appears to be
very common, especially in the older age group. In women over the age of
50 years, 1 in 10 will have some symptoms of pelvic organ prolapse.
Why does pelvic organ prolapse happen?
Pelvic organ prolapse can happen when the pelvic floor weakens. A weak
pelvic floor can be due to the following:
pregnancy and childbirth
ageing – prolapse is more common as you get older, particularly after
your menopause
being overweight
persistent constipation, coughing or heavy lifting
a natural tendency to develop prolapse
Often it is a combination of these factors that result in you having a
prolapse.
What are the symptoms of pelvic organ prolapse?
Your symptoms will depend on the type and degree of your prolapse. The
following is a list of possible symptoms:
You may not have any symptoms at all.
You may feel a bulge or a dragging sensation in the vagina. You may also
have backache, heaviness or discomfort inside your vagina. These
symptoms are often worse if you have been standing for a long time and
may improve on lying down.
You may be able to feel or see a bulge in your vagina.
You may need to pass urine more frequently and urgently. Also, you may
have difficulty in passing urine or a sensation that your bladder is not
emptying properly.
You may leak urine when coughing, laughing; lifting heavy objects or you
may have frequent bladder infections (cystitis).
You may notice constipation or incomplete bowel emptying. You may
sometimes need to press on the bulge with your fingers to help open your
bowels.
You may be anxious about sex, find it uncomfortable or notice a lack of
sensation during intercourse.
Some of the above symptoms may not be directly related to your prolapse.
How is prolapse diagnosed?
Prolapse is diagnosed by performing an internal examination. Your
healthcare professional will examine your vagina using a speculum to see
exactly which organ(s) is bulging.
- source_sentence: What type of seat is recommended to book on a plane?
sentences:
- >-
You will be recommended to take those drugs considered best for you. You
will also be advised when you should start and stop taking them. You may
be in one of the following circumstances:
- You are already taking anti-retrovirals: Your doctors will recommend
that you take HAART during pregnancy and after you have had your baby.
If you were taking this before pregnancy, you should not stop your
medication.
- You are not taking anti-retrovirals: You should be offered treatment
to stop you passing on the virus to your baby. The usual treatment is
HAART, as described above. Treatment with a single anti-retroviral drug
(zidovudine) may be considered if your viral load is less than 10 000,
your CD4 count is more than 350 and you are prepared to have a caesarean
section. Your doctor will usually recommend that you start the treatment
between 14 and 24 weeks of your pregnancy and continue until your baby
is born.
What is the best way to give birth to my baby?
Your team will discuss with you the best way to give birth. The
treatment you are taking, your viral load and CD4 count at 36 weeks and
previous pregnancies will be taken into account.
- You should be able to have a vaginal delivery, even if you have had a
caesarean section before, if you are taking HAART, have a viral load
less than 50 and a CD4 count more than 350.
- If you are taking HAART and your viral load is between 50 and 399,
your doctors may recommend a caesarean section, usually at 38 weeks.
This will depend on the pattern of your viral load, how long you have
been on treatment and your wishes.
- >-
If the growth slows down or the measurement suggests that your baby may
be small, you will be advised to have an additional ultrasound scan.
- If you have a higher chance of having a small baby, you will be
offered a referral for either:
- Additional ultrasound scans to measure your baby’s growth– how often
you have these growth scans will depend on your individual
circumstances.
- A uterine artery Doppler scan – this is an ultrasound scan of the
blood flow to your placenta. This is usually done at around 20 weeks
when you have your routine anomaly scan. Depending on the results, you
will be advised how often you need further growth scans to measure the
size of your baby.
If my baby is thought to be small or not growing, what will happen?
What happens will depend on how small your baby is and how early in the
pregnancy your baby has been found to be small. You may be offered the
following tests to check your baby’s wellbeing:
- An umbilical artery Doppler scan – this is an ultrasound scan which
measures the flow of blood through the umbilical cord. It can help to
tell whether your baby is at risk of becoming unwell and whether they
may need to be born early
- More frequent growth scans
- Additional Doppler scans checking the blood flow in the baby’s brain
and abdomen
- A computerised cardiotocograph (cCTG) – this is a tracing of your
baby’s heart rate.
You may be referred to a specialist doctor (a fetal medicine specialist)
for more frequent and detailed scans if:
- your baby is very small,
- they have been found to be small early in the pregnancy, or,
- the umbilical artery Doppler scan is not normal.
Depending on your individual circumstances you may be offered additional
investigations. For example, you may be offered a test to check whether
your baby has any genetic or chromosomal conditions (an amniocentesis),
or blood tests to check for infections.
Your blood pressure and urine will be checked regularly to see if you
are developing pre-eclampsia.
You will be advised to go straight to hospital to be checked if you are
ever concerned that your baby is not moving normally.
When is the best time for my baby to be born?
This will depend on your individual circumstances.
- >-
Number one, book an aisle seat so that you don't have to climb over
other passengers when you need to get up to go to the restroom or maybe
walk around. Take a seat towards the front of the plane where the ride
feels a little more smoother.
(5:18 - 5:26)
Drink plenty of water. Do not drink carbonated drinks such as soda. Do
not eat foods such as beans.
(5:26 - 5:38)
They can cause gas. In fact the gas in your belly can expand at high
altitudes and make you feel uncomfortable. Make sure that you fasten
your seat belt whenever it is announced.
(5:39 - 5:57)
This can help you you know getting hurt in case of turbulences and
turbulences actually happen when the air around the flying plane causes
a bumpy ride. Obviously wear loose comfortable clothing. Move regularly
every 30 minutes.
(5:57 - 6:12)
Make sure while you're sitting also that you are flexing your ankles
like this. You're moving your ankles maybe like this moving your toes
like that. So make sure that there is movement in your legs and feet.
(6:13 - 6:30)
Take a walk whenever it is safe to leave your seat. Now all these things
lower your risk of DVT which is the blood clot inside the vein. In case
you know you're feeling sick or uncomfortable please do tell the flight
attendant during the flight.
(6:30 - 6:47)
It's also a good idea to buy a pair of graduated compression or support
stockings from the pharmacy. Now coming to the car travel in pregnancy.
Can I drive a car? Yes very much.
(6:47 - 6:57)
In case you're a good driver you can definitely drive a car. Can I
travel in a car? Yes very much. If you're pregnant and traveling by car
follow these tips.
(6:57 - 7:20)
Wear your seat belt even when you are in a co-driver's seat.
- source_sentence: What is the recommendation for a water birth if a woman has COVID-19?
sentences:
- >-
All people, everywhere, have the right to achieve the highest attainable
level of health. This is the fundamental premise of primary health care
(PHC). Primary health care is a whole-of-society approach to effectively
organize and strengthen national health systems to bring services for
health and wellbeing closer to communities. It has 3 components:
integrated health services to meet people’s health needs throughout
their lives addressing the broader determinants of health through
multisectoral policy and action empowering individuals, families and
communities to take charge of their own health. Primary health care
enables health systems to support a person’s health needs – from health
promotion to disease prevention, treatment, rehabilitation, palliative
care and more. This strategy also ensures that health care is delivered
in a way that is centred on people’s needs and respects their
preferences. Primary health care is widely regarded as the most
inclusive, equitable and cost-effective way to achieve universal health
coverage. It is also key to strengthening the resilience of health
systems to prepare for, respond to and recover from shocks and crises.
Universal health coverage will only be possible when everyone,
everywhere can access the health services they need. Communities should
be empowered to identify their health priorities and contribute to
finding responsive solutions. Heath care and other sectors need to work
together to ensure all decisions affecting health are addressed in an
integrated way. This includes promoting policies to protect and improve
people’s health and well-being; providing information, services and
infrastructure for improved water and sanitation and other environmental
determinants of health; prevention of noncommunicable diseases;
preparing for and responding to health emergencies; providing services
for pregnant women, routine vaccination for children and sexual and
reproductive health services; mental health support; platforms for
community consultation and many others. Primary health care brings these
factors together to ensure the highest possible level of health and
well-being and their equitable distribution. The impact is seen in
health systems that focus on people’s needs and are as close as feasible
to their everyday environment. Primary health care-oriented health
systems consistently produce better outcomes, enhanced equity and
improved efficiency. Scaling up primary health care interventions across
low- and middle-income countries could save 60 million lives and
increase average life expectancy by 3.7 years by 2030.
WHO supports Member States in taking a primary health care approach to
accelerate progress in achieving universal health coverage. Countries
are demonstrating how this strategy has been effective in strengthening
their health systems to address people’s needs, both in times of crisis
as in normal times. The principles of primary health care were first
outlined in the Declaration of Alma-Ata in 1978, a seminal milestone in
global health. Forty years later, global leaders ratified the
Declaration of Astana at the Global Conference on Primary Health Care
which took place in Astana, Kazakhstan in October 2018.
- >-
- Specific medications and antibody treatment.
If you are very unwell, your healthcare team may advise that your baby
needs to be born early to help with your own treatment and recovery. How
and when this may happen will depend on your individual situation.
If I have COVID-19, will this affect where I give birth and my choice of
pain relief in labour?
If you have symptoms and have tested positive for COVID-19 at the time
of birth:
It is recommended that you give birth in a consultant led maternity unit
where you and your baby can be monitored more closely during labour.
It is safe for you to have a vaginal birth, and if you and your baby are
both well you do not need to have a planned caesarean birth. Your birth
choices should be respected and followed as closely as possible.
A caesarean birth may be recommended if you or your baby are unwell or
there are other complications. However, your chance of needing an
emergency caesarean birth may be higher than usual.
All the usual options for pain relief for labour and birth are available
to you, however a water birth is not recommended. This is because it is
harder to monitor and give you any treatments needed.
If I have COVID-19, will this affect care of my baby after birth?
If your baby is well and does not require care in the neonatal unit, you
will stay together after you have given birth. Skin-to-skin contact is
encouraged.
How you feed your baby is dependent on your own circumstances and
preferences, and your choices will be supported. Breastfeeding may help
pass protection from infections (including COVID-19) to your baby. There
is no strong evidence to show that COVID-19 can be passed on in breast
milk.
- >-
(0:00 - 4:09)
So what is the color of the cake? Pink or blue? What is the color of the
nursery? Pink or blue? And what about the baby's clothes? Are they
frilly skirts or the soccer shirts? Have you ever wondered what is it
which decides the sex of the baby inside? How that little pea-shaped
embryo grows into that little baby girl or a baby boy? Since ages it was
the mother who was held responsible for the sex of the baby. But now we
know it is the father who decides whether it is going to be a pretty
little daughter or a handsome baby boy. So hello everyone, this is Dr.
Anjali Kumar once again bringing you greetings from Maitri.
Maitri is a space where we talk anything and everything about women's
health. So today we are starting our pregnancy series season 2 with this
very question which every parent wants to know. So the baby inherits its
genes from both the parents.
The genes are present in the DNA and the DNA is present in the
chromosomes and the chromosomes are present in the nucleus of the cell.
Every human cell has 23 pairs of chromosomes. So total 46 chromosomes.
Each pair inherited from one parent. 22 of these pairs are called
autosomes. They look the same in both males and females.
The 23rd pair, the sex chromosomes, that's the special one. It differs
between males and females. Females have two copies of X chromosomes
which makes it XX, while males have one X and one Y which makes it XY.
So at the time of fertilization, the father's sperm and the mother's egg
each contributes one sex chromosomes to the baby. The mother can
contribute only X since it has two copies of X chromosomes only, while
the father can contribute either X or Y chromosomes. So the baby's
biological or the genetic sex which is male or female is determined by
the chromosome which the father contributes.
So if the father contributes his Y chromosome, it will be a male baby
which is XY, while if he contributes the X chromosome, it will be a
female baby XX. Baby's sex is determined at the time of fertilization or
the conception when the sperm fertilizes the egg. Now this typically
happens around day 14 to maybe day 17 in women who have regular cycles.
Now this is the time when you don't even know that you are pregnant. You
might not be even expecting a pregnancy. This is the time when the
baby's sex is decided.
After that, nobody and nothing can ever change the genetic sex of the
baby. No medicine, no food, no kada, no jariputi, no exercise can change
the sex of the baby afterwards.
pipeline_tag: sentence-similarity
library_name: sentence-transformers
metrics:
- cosine_accuracy@1
- cosine_accuracy@3
- cosine_accuracy@5
- cosine_accuracy@10
- cosine_precision@1
- cosine_precision@3
- cosine_precision@5
- cosine_precision@10
- cosine_recall@1
- cosine_recall@3
- cosine_recall@5
- cosine_recall@10
- cosine_ndcg@10
- cosine_mrr@10
- cosine_map@100
model-index:
- name: Fine-tuned with Transcripts + Documents v1
results:
- task:
type: information-retrieval
name: Information Retrieval
dataset:
name: Unknown
type: unknown
metrics:
- type: cosine_accuracy@1
value: 0.5191176470588236
name: Cosine Accuracy@1
- type: cosine_accuracy@3
value: 0.7441176470588236
name: Cosine Accuracy@3
- type: cosine_accuracy@5
value: 0.8
name: Cosine Accuracy@5
- type: cosine_accuracy@10
value: 0.8911764705882353
name: Cosine Accuracy@10
- type: cosine_precision@1
value: 0.5191176470588236
name: Cosine Precision@1
- type: cosine_precision@3
value: 0.24803921568627454
name: Cosine Precision@3
- type: cosine_precision@5
value: 0.15999999999999998
name: Cosine Precision@5
- type: cosine_precision@10
value: 0.08911764705882352
name: Cosine Precision@10
- type: cosine_recall@1
value: 0.5191176470588236
name: Cosine Recall@1
- type: cosine_recall@3
value: 0.7441176470588236
name: Cosine Recall@3
- type: cosine_recall@5
value: 0.8
name: Cosine Recall@5
- type: cosine_recall@10
value: 0.8911764705882353
name: Cosine Recall@10
- type: cosine_ndcg@10
value: 0.7050782073291749
name: Cosine Ndcg@10
- type: cosine_mrr@10
value: 0.6456746031746027
name: Cosine Mrr@10
- type: cosine_map@100
value: 0.6502703066787651
name: Cosine Map@100
Fine-tuned with Transcripts + Documents v1
This is a sentence-transformers model finetuned from nomic-ai/modernbert-embed-base. It maps sentences & paragraphs to a 768-dimensional dense vector space and can be used for semantic textual similarity, semantic search, paraphrase mining, text classification, clustering, and more.
Model Details
Model Description
- Model Type: Sentence Transformer
- Base model: nomic-ai/modernbert-embed-base
- Maximum Sequence Length: 1024 tokens
- Output Dimensionality: 768 dimensions
- Similarity Function: Cosine Similarity
- Language: en
- License: apache-2.0
Model Sources
- Documentation: Sentence Transformers Documentation
- Repository: Sentence Transformers on GitHub
- Hugging Face: Sentence Transformers on Hugging Face
Full Model Architecture
SentenceTransformer(
(0): Transformer({'max_seq_length': 1024, 'do_lower_case': False}) with Transformer model: ModernBertModel
(1): Pooling({'word_embedding_dimension': 768, 'pooling_mode_cls_token': False, 'pooling_mode_mean_tokens': True, 'pooling_mode_max_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_mean_sqrt_len_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_weightedmean_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_lasttoken': False, 'include_prompt': True})
(2): Normalize()
)
Usage
Direct Usage (Sentence Transformers)
First install the Sentence Transformers library:
pip install -U sentence-transformers
Then you can load this model and run inference.
from sentence_transformers import SentenceTransformer
# Download from the 🤗 Hub
model = SentenceTransformer("schaitanya/modernbert-embed-base-transcript-documents-v1")
# Run inference
sentences = [
'What is the recommendation for a water birth if a woman has COVID-19?',
'- Specific medications and antibody treatment.\nIf you are very unwell, your healthcare team may advise that your baby needs to be born early to help with your own treatment and recovery. How and when this may happen will depend on your individual situation.\nIf I have COVID-19, will this affect where I give birth and my choice of pain relief in labour?\nIf you have symptoms and have tested positive for COVID-19 at the time of birth:\nIt is recommended that you give birth in a consultant led maternity unit where you and your baby can be monitored more closely during labour.\nIt is safe for you to have a vaginal birth, and if you and your baby are both well you do not need to have a planned caesarean birth. Your birth choices should be respected and followed as closely as possible.\nA caesarean birth may be recommended if you or your baby are unwell or there are other complications. However, your chance of needing an emergency caesarean birth may be higher than usual.\nAll the usual options for pain relief for labour and birth are available to you, however a water birth is not recommended. This is because it is harder to monitor and give you any treatments needed.\nIf I have COVID-19, will this affect care of my baby after birth?\nIf your baby is well and does not require care in the neonatal unit, you will stay together after you have given birth. Skin-to-skin contact is encouraged.\nHow you feed your baby is dependent on your own circumstances and preferences, and your choices will be supported. Breastfeeding may help pass protection from infections (including COVID-19) to your baby. There is no strong evidence to show that COVID-19 can be passed on in breast milk.',
"(0:00 - 4:09)\nSo what is the color of the cake? Pink or blue? What is the color of the nursery? Pink or blue? And what about the baby's clothes? Are they frilly skirts or the soccer shirts? Have you ever wondered what is it which decides the sex of the baby inside? How that little pea-shaped embryo grows into that little baby girl or a baby boy? Since ages it was the mother who was held responsible for the sex of the baby. But now we know it is the father who decides whether it is going to be a pretty little daughter or a handsome baby boy. So hello everyone, this is Dr. Anjali Kumar once again bringing you greetings from Maitri.\n\nMaitri is a space where we talk anything and everything about women's health. So today we are starting our pregnancy series season 2 with this very question which every parent wants to know. So the baby inherits its genes from both the parents.\n\nThe genes are present in the DNA and the DNA is present in the chromosomes and the chromosomes are present in the nucleus of the cell. Every human cell has 23 pairs of chromosomes. So total 46 chromosomes.\n\nEach pair inherited from one parent. 22 of these pairs are called autosomes. They look the same in both males and females.\n\nThe 23rd pair, the sex chromosomes, that's the special one. It differs between males and females. Females have two copies of X chromosomes which makes it XX, while males have one X and one Y which makes it XY.\n\nSo at the time of fertilization, the father's sperm and the mother's egg each contributes one sex chromosomes to the baby. The mother can contribute only X since it has two copies of X chromosomes only, while the father can contribute either X or Y chromosomes. So the baby's biological or the genetic sex which is male or female is determined by the chromosome which the father contributes.\n\nSo if the father contributes his Y chromosome, it will be a male baby which is XY, while if he contributes the X chromosome, it will be a female baby XX. Baby's sex is determined at the time of fertilization or the conception when the sperm fertilizes the egg. Now this typically happens around day 14 to maybe day 17 in women who have regular cycles.\n\nNow this is the time when you don't even know that you are pregnant. You might not be even expecting a pregnancy. This is the time when the baby's sex is decided.\n\nAfter that, nobody and nothing can ever change the genetic sex of the baby. No medicine, no food, no kada, no jariputi, no exercise can change the sex of the baby afterwards.",
]
embeddings = model.encode(sentences)
print(embeddings.shape)
# [3, 768]
# Get the similarity scores for the embeddings
similarities = model.similarity(embeddings, embeddings)
print(similarities.shape)
# [3, 3]
Evaluation
Metrics
Information Retrieval
- Evaluated with
InformationRetrievalEvaluator
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| cosine_accuracy@1 | 0.5191 |
| cosine_accuracy@3 | 0.7441 |
| cosine_accuracy@5 | 0.8 |
| cosine_accuracy@10 | 0.8912 |
| cosine_precision@1 | 0.5191 |
| cosine_precision@3 | 0.248 |
| cosine_precision@5 | 0.16 |
| cosine_precision@10 | 0.0891 |
| cosine_recall@1 | 0.5191 |
| cosine_recall@3 | 0.7441 |
| cosine_recall@5 | 0.8 |
| cosine_recall@10 | 0.8912 |
| cosine_ndcg@10 | 0.7051 |
| cosine_mrr@10 | 0.6457 |
| cosine_map@100 | 0.6503 |
Training Details
Training Dataset
Unnamed Dataset
- Size: 6,116 training samples
- Columns:
anchorandpositive - Approximate statistics based on the first 1000 samples:
anchor positive type string string details - min: 7 tokens
- mean: 15.08 tokens
- max: 33 tokens
- min: 38 tokens
- mean: 389.33 tokens
- max: 683 tokens
- Samples:
anchor positive What lifestyle changes are recommended before pregnancy?(0:02 - 0:50)
Are you excited to be a father? How do you think you can help your wife or partner in this journey? Would you want to help your wife or partner during labour? Do you know how does the delivery occurs? Have you read something about the delivery in the baby care? So a lot has been written about women and pregnancy, but we do not talk much about the fathers. Is their role only up to providing the sperm to fertilize the egg? Is it all about the moms? So hello everyone, this is Dr. Anjali Kumar, once again bringing greetings from Maitri. Maitri is a space where we talk anything and everything about women's health.
(0:50 - 1:06)
But this time in this episode, we will talk about the fathers. We were not sure when to plan our family. She wanted a baby early and I wanted to wait for a few years.
(1:07 - 1:28)
Plan and talk when you want to plan the pregnancy. Plan well the career, the finances, visit a doctor together for the pre-conceptional checks, tests and the contraceptive ...Does the absence of symptoms indicate an absence of infection?(0:00 - 0:21)
Very important point. Some people with STDs may not actually have any symptoms. Now this means that the person is a carrier of infection but she is absolutely capable of transmitting the infection to the other person.
So remember absence of symptoms does not mean absence of infection.When does pre-eclampsia usually occur during pregnancy?What is pre-eclampsia?
Pre-eclampsia is a condition that usually happens after 20 weeks of pregnancy. The exact cause of pre-eclampsia is not understood. It is usually a combination of:
raised blood pressure (hypertension)
protein in your urine (proteinuria).
Sometimes pre-eclampsia can affect your liver, kidneys and blood clotting without protein in your urine.
Pre-eclampsia is common, affecting between 1–5 in 100 women during pregnancy. It is usually mild but in a small number of cases, it can develop into a more serious illness. Around one in 200 women develop severe pre-eclampsia, which can be life-threatening for both you and your baby.
How will I know if I have pre-eclampsia?
Often you will have no symptoms and pre-eclampsia may be diagnosed for the first time at your routine antenatal appointments or during labour when you have your blood pressure checked
and your urine tested.
If you do develop symptoms they usually happen towards the end of your pregnancy but can also happen f... - Loss:
MultipleNegativesRankingLosswith these parameters:{ "scale": 20.0, "similarity_fct": "cos_sim" }
Training Hyperparameters
Non-Default Hyperparameters
eval_strategy: epochper_device_train_batch_size: 16gradient_accumulation_steps: 16learning_rate: 2e-05num_train_epochs: 4lr_scheduler_type: cosinewarmup_ratio: 0.1log_level: debugbf16: Truetf32: Trueload_best_model_at_end: Trueoptim: adamw_torch_fusedbatch_sampler: no_duplicates
All Hyperparameters
Click to expand
overwrite_output_dir: Falsedo_predict: Falseeval_strategy: epochprediction_loss_only: Trueper_device_train_batch_size: 16per_device_eval_batch_size: 8per_gpu_train_batch_size: Noneper_gpu_eval_batch_size: Nonegradient_accumulation_steps: 16eval_accumulation_steps: Nonetorch_empty_cache_steps: Nonelearning_rate: 2e-05weight_decay: 0.0adam_beta1: 0.9adam_beta2: 0.999adam_epsilon: 1e-08max_grad_norm: 1.0num_train_epochs: 4max_steps: -1lr_scheduler_type: cosinelr_scheduler_kwargs: {}warmup_ratio: 0.1warmup_steps: 0log_level: debuglog_level_replica: warninglog_on_each_node: Truelogging_nan_inf_filter: Truesave_safetensors: Truesave_on_each_node: Falsesave_only_model: Falserestore_callback_states_from_checkpoint: Falseno_cuda: Falseuse_cpu: Falseuse_mps_device: Falseseed: 42data_seed: Nonejit_mode_eval: Falseuse_ipex: Falsebf16: Truefp16: Falsefp16_opt_level: O1half_precision_backend: autobf16_full_eval: Falsefp16_full_eval: Falsetf32: Truelocal_rank: 0ddp_backend: Nonetpu_num_cores: Nonetpu_metrics_debug: Falsedebug: []dataloader_drop_last: Falsedataloader_num_workers: 0dataloader_prefetch_factor: Nonepast_index: -1disable_tqdm: Falseremove_unused_columns: Truelabel_names: Noneload_best_model_at_end: Trueignore_data_skip: Falsefsdp: []fsdp_min_num_params: 0fsdp_config: {'min_num_params': 0, 'xla': False, 'xla_fsdp_v2': False, 'xla_fsdp_grad_ckpt': False}fsdp_transformer_layer_cls_to_wrap: Noneaccelerator_config: {'split_batches': False, 'dispatch_batches': None, 'even_batches': True, 'use_seedable_sampler': True, 'non_blocking': False, 'gradient_accumulation_kwargs': None}deepspeed: Nonelabel_smoothing_factor: 0.0optim: adamw_torch_fusedoptim_args: Noneadafactor: Falsegroup_by_length: Falselength_column_name: lengthddp_find_unused_parameters: Noneddp_bucket_cap_mb: Noneddp_broadcast_buffers: Falsedataloader_pin_memory: Truedataloader_persistent_workers: Falseskip_memory_metrics: Trueuse_legacy_prediction_loop: Falsepush_to_hub: Falseresume_from_checkpoint: Nonehub_model_id: Nonehub_strategy: every_savehub_private_repo: Nonehub_always_push: Falsegradient_checkpointing: Falsegradient_checkpointing_kwargs: Noneinclude_inputs_for_metrics: Falseinclude_for_metrics: []eval_do_concat_batches: Truefp16_backend: autopush_to_hub_model_id: Nonepush_to_hub_organization: Nonemp_parameters:auto_find_batch_size: Falsefull_determinism: Falsetorchdynamo: Noneray_scope: lastddp_timeout: 1800torch_compile: Falsetorch_compile_backend: Nonetorch_compile_mode: Nonedispatch_batches: Nonesplit_batches: Noneinclude_tokens_per_second: Falseinclude_num_input_tokens_seen: Falseneftune_noise_alpha: Noneoptim_target_modules: Nonebatch_eval_metrics: Falseeval_on_start: Falseuse_liger_kernel: Falseeval_use_gather_object: Falseaverage_tokens_across_devices: Falseprompts: Nonebatch_sampler: no_duplicatesmulti_dataset_batch_sampler: proportional
Training Logs
| Epoch | Step | Training Loss | cosine_ndcg@10 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.4178 | 10 | 5.9152 | - |
| 0.8355 | 20 | 2.7824 | - |
| 0.9608 | 23 | - | 0.6781 |
| 1.2924 | 30 | 1.9575 | - |
| 1.7102 | 40 | 1.5202 | - |
| 1.9608 | 46 | - | 0.6943 |
| 2.1671 | 50 | 1.4008 | - |
| 2.5849 | 60 | 1.1741 | - |
| 2.9608 | 69 | - | 0.7031 |
| 3.0418 | 70 | 1.0995 | - |
| 3.4595 | 80 | 1.0416 | - |
| 3.8773 | 90 | 1.1648 | - |
| 3.9608 | 92 | - | 0.7051 |
- The bold row denotes the saved checkpoint.
Framework Versions
- Python: 3.11.11
- Sentence Transformers: 3.4.1
- Transformers: 4.49.0
- PyTorch: 2.6.0+cu124
- Accelerate: 1.3.0
- Datasets: 3.4.1
- Tokenizers: 0.21.1
Citation
BibTeX
Sentence Transformers
@inproceedings{reimers-2019-sentence-bert,
title = "Sentence-BERT: Sentence Embeddings using Siamese BERT-Networks",
author = "Reimers, Nils and Gurevych, Iryna",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 2019 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing",
month = "11",
year = "2019",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://arxiv.org/abs/1908.10084",
}
MultipleNegativesRankingLoss
@misc{henderson2017efficient,
title={Efficient Natural Language Response Suggestion for Smart Reply},
author={Matthew Henderson and Rami Al-Rfou and Brian Strope and Yun-hsuan Sung and Laszlo Lukacs and Ruiqi Guo and Sanjiv Kumar and Balint Miklos and Ray Kurzweil},
year={2017},
eprint={1705.00652},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.CL}
}