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Alicia Keys blesses unborn baby in Zulu ceremony

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Alicia Keys performs at the FIFA World Cup Kick-off Celebration Concert

US singer Alicia Key’s unborn child has received a traditional Zulu blessing in South Africa complete with tribal beads and a “healing tree”, the UK’s Daily Mail reported.

The usually glamorous 29-year-old US singer toned it down for the event, wearing a blue sash and a beaded headband and sang traditional Zulu songs while dancing to the beat of a drum.

The singer, who was in South Africa to lead the FIFA World Cup Kick-off Celebration Concert, is currently five months pregnant and attended the ceremony with her music producer fiancé Swizz Beatz.

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Accompanied by her mother Terri Augello and her younger brother, Cole Cook, Keys and her family were welcomed with open arms by the locals.

Keys had organised the ceremony through non-governmental organisation Bobbi Bear, a group opposed to child abuse.

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Babies whose fathers are around during pregnancy are less likely to die young

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Fathers can significantly improve their babies’ chances of survival by being involved during pregnancy, a new study has found.

Babies whose fathers aren’t present are nearly four times as likely to die in their first year, according to researchers from the University of South Florida.

These children were also found to be more likely to be born early, have low birth weights and be small for their age, the UK’s Daily Mail reported.

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The research, published in the Journal of Community Health, follows previous studies in which a father’s involvement in his child’s early development was shown to benefit later academic achievement. The Florida study points to a link between paternal influence and development pre-birth.

“Our study suggests that lack of paternal involvement during pregnancy is an important and potentially modifiable risk factor for infant mortality,” study author Professor Amina Alio said.

The researchers looked at the records of all births in Florida between 1998 and 2005 (more than 1.39 million live births) and identified a father’s involvement by whether he was named on the birth certificate. Although this is not an accurate guide to levels of engagement during pregnancy, previous studies have shown that being named on a birth certificate usually indicates a certain level of involvement.

The researchers also found:

  • Paternal support could decrease the mother’s emotional stress.

  • A father’s involvement reduced the risk of complications.

  • The mothers of fatherless babies were more at risk of suffering from anaemia, chronic high blood pressure and eclampsia.

  • Women with absent fathers were more likely to smoke during pregnancy.

  • And a father’s involvement could reduce the need for costly medical treatments and reduce the risk of infant mortality.

“When fathers are involved, children thrive in school and in their development. So, it should be no surprise that when fathers are present in the lives of pregnant mothers, babies fare much better,” Professor Alio said.

Australia has an infant mortality rate of 4.75 per 1000 live births, which is low in world terms, according to the CIA World Factbook. By contrast, the south-central African country of Angola has a rate of 180.20 per 1000.

Your say: How important do you think a father’s involvement is during pregnancy? Share your thoughts below.

Related video Stay fit and healthy while your pregnant with these exercise techniques

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Keith Urban to celebrate Father’s Day the Aussie way

Keith Urban to celebrate Father's Day the Aussie way

Keith Urban meets wife Nicole Kidman and daughter Sunday Rose at the airport in LA.

Kind-hearted hubby Keith Urban gave up celebrating Father’s Day in the US on Sunday, June 20, because it fell on the same day as wife Nicole Kidman’s birthday this year.

The country music star, who has a two-year-old daughter, Sunday Rose, with Nicole, said that rather than sharing the day with his wife, who turned 43, he would celebrate Father’s Day in Australia on September 5.

“So I decided instead of us trying to share the day, which I would rather it be her birthday, we are going to celebrate the Australian Father’s Day, which I think is in September and then next year we will go back to the US one.”

Nicole and Keith were reunited in Los Angeles just before Nicoles birthday after she spent a week visiting her parents and sister Antonia in Australia.

Nicole and Sunday Rose visited to celebrate Antonia’s marriage to banker Craig Marran following the couple’s Singapore wedding.

In the lead up to her Aussie visit Nicole was busy filming with Jennifer Aniston for Adam Sandler’s movie Just Go with It in Hawaii and is in early talks to star with Nicolas Cage in an action thriller Trespass, the UK’s Guardian reported.

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One highschool, 45 teen mums!

One highschool, 45 teen mums!

A high school on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast is giving teenage mums a fighting chance to turn their lives around. Warren Gibbs reports.

It’s a classroom like no other – students with books under one arm, bottles, booties and babies under the other.

Meet the young mums from Burnside State High School – all 45 of them! Among them is Amanda Tidy-Russ, 17, bounding out of class at the bell to give her son, 22-month-old Bailey, a hug and kiss.

While Amanda has been busy studying maths, Bailey has spent the morning in an adjacent crèche playing with building blocks.

Standing in the corridor is Tegan Dunstan, 19, surrounded by a smiling group of well-wishers. She may be a little old for show-and-tell, but this is Tegan’s first day back at school following the birth of now four-month-old Xavier, and she is proudly showing him off to her classmates.

In a school of 450 students, this group of mothers – some as young as 14 – is reaping the rewards of the STEMM (Supporting Teenagers with Education, Mothering and Mentoring) program, which provides free childcare so the girls can get on with their studies while their babies are well looked after, and never far away.

See the full story in this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 21, 2010.

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Harrison Ford and Calista Flockhart finally married!

From one MasterChef mum to another

Hollywood’s unlikeliest couple, movie veteran Harrison Ford, 67, and former Ally McBeal actress Calista Flockhart, 45, proved the doubters wrong last week by marrying after eight years together..

In typical style, the pair wed in a low-key ceremony, far from the glitz of Hollywood, walking down the aisle in Sante Fe, New Mexico – where Harrison is filming his new movie Cowboys & Aliens. The ceremony was officiated by State Governor Bill Richardson, and took place at his mansion.

It’s been a long and sometimes bumpy ride to the altar for the couple, who met at the 2002 Golden Globes. Calista made a strong first impression by spilling wine over the Indiana Jones legend.

Adding to their odd-couple image, it’s the first marriage for Calista, while Harrison has been down the aisle twice before, first with actress Mary Marquardt, then with screenwriter Melissa Mathison. His second wife reportedly walked away with a $170 million divorce settlement in January 2004.

To read the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 21, 2010.

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David Campbell and dad Jimmy united by baby love

From one MasterChef mum to another

They’ve always shared a passion for music, but David Campbell says he and his dad Jimmy Barnes have now been united by an even greater love – that for his newborn boy.

Speaking from his home town of Adelaide, David says he has grown much closer to his father since the birth of his first child, Leo Richard James Campbell, this month.

“Bad jokes and music are the ways we communicate, especially on stage,” David says. “But now I think fatherhood has brought us a bit closer together. We still share a lot of experiences with that and we are still learning what those experiences are.

“We are both very similar, and cry-babies at heart, too. I don’t want to ruin his image, but he can be quite the baby.”

Getting to know Jimmy has been a long road for David. Raised by his grandmother, Joan, he didn’t even realise the Cold Chisel frontman was his father until the age of 11. And while he says he doesn’t hold a grudge about his unconventional upbringing, David, 36, is equally adamant history won’t repeat itself, and he will be around to watch his young son grow up.

To read the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 21, 2010.

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Angelina Jolie turns to scientology

Angelina Jolie turns to scientology

Brad Pitt’s feud with Tom Cruise looks set to explode, as Tom encourages Angelina Jolie to join his controversial religion. Matthew Denby reports.

They’ve been at war for 16 years, and now Brad Pitt has another reason to dislike Tom Cruise – he’s converting an enthusiastic Angelina Jolie to Scientology.

The actors famously fell out on the set of their 1994 movie Interview With The Vampire, with then-rising star Brad slamming Tom’s pushy ways and competitiveness – and now he’s furious over Tom’s growing influence over Angelina.

Brad, 46, and Ange, 35, are already under pressure, with Angelina fuming over Brad’s recent late night rendezvous with his ex-wife Jennifer Aniston at the offices of his Plan B Entertainment production house.

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“She’s learning everything she can about Scientology, reading about it and interviewing her Hollywood friends who have any connection to it,” a long-time household source tells Woman’s Day exclusively.

To read the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 21, 2010.

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Meet the real life *Underbelly* women

Meet the real life Underbelly women

As her gripping story plays out on Underbelly 3, the hooker who later joined the police force tells Naomi Toy how she has finally moved on from her past.

The seedy streets of Sydney’s Kings Cross are an intimidating place to be. Sex and drugs and an undercurrent of menace ripple along the so-called Golden Mile like electricity, charging the air even in the warm glow of the midday sun.

But Kim Hollingsworth, the prostitute who dreamed only of becoming a policewoman, is perfectly at ease. She’s immune to the stares as Woman’s Day’s cameras capture her in her old stamping ground.

She gives a nod or “G’day” in her broad Australian accent, at one point asking after the welfare of a woman who has clearly never escaped the life that could so easily have been Kim’s.

Drive about two hours west of Sydney’s underbelly and Kim is even more at ease. She’s home. Home in the quiet country, where she lives alone, looking after her beloved horses.

As her story plays out on the small screen in Nine’s third Underbelly series, Kim, 43, is feeling better than she has in a long time.

To read the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 21, 2010.

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Pauline Hanson: Our Jails are too good for Schapelle

Pauline Hanson: Our Jails are too good for Schapelle

Despite her time in maximum security, Pauline tells Warren Gibbs Aussie jails are too good for Schapelle.

As former Prisoner C70079, Pauline Hanson knows all too well the harsh realities of life behind bars. Faced with the prospect of three years locked up in the Brisbane Women’s Correctional Centre’s Maximum Security Unit, Pauline admits she was at her lowest ebb.

Yet, although she knows only too well what life behind razor wire and security check-points feels like, she says if convicted drug trafficker Schapelle Corby is truly guilty, she should serve out the rest of her jail time at Bali’s Kerobokan Prison – not at taxpayer’s expense in Australia.

“The fact is, she was convicted on drug charges in Bali and that’s where she must do her time,” says Pauline. “That’s unless, of course, our government is prepared to seek an exchange program with other countries.

“Non-Australian nationals should be deported back to their country if they are convicted of a criminal offence which carries a sentence of 12 months or more to do their time.

“Our jails, especially in Queensland from my experience, are far too soft for convicted murderers, rapists, drug traffickers, paedophiles and now our ever increasing numbers of people smugglers,” she tells Woman’s Day.

To read the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 21, 2010.

The views expressed in the comments below are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of Woman’s Day or ninemsn.

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Bec and Lleyton: How baby number three saved our marriage

Bec and Leyton: How baby number three saved our marriage

As tennis champ Lleyton Hewitt prepares to quit while he’s on top, his long-suffering wife Bec will finally see an end to the constant globe-trotting and the strain it’s placed on their family life.

With Bec Hewitt sporting the glow of pregnancy and her tennis ace husband Lleyton in winning form, the one source of friction that’s plagued their marriage is set to end.

Now Lleyton’s tennis career is in its final stages and the couple’s eldest child Mia is about to start school, friends say Bec will finally get her wish and return home to Australia.

Bec has been a doting partner since she and Lleyton became engaged in 2005, and a fixture on the professional tennis circuit as she endures its relentless touring.

And while Lleyton was being admired for his endurance and tenacity on court, Bec was slogging away as his support crew while raising their two children on the road.

But her unbridled support has always been on one condition – that when Lleyton’s career on court winds up, she finally gets to go home.

Bec proclaimed last year that she and Lleyton would “wait until we’re finished travelling” before they had another child. Now, confirmation of their surprise third pregnancy has changed everything.

To read the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 21, 2010.

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