On a frigid Minnesota morning more than a decade ago, Erin Clark got a call that would determine the trajectory of her medical career. A family had agreed to let Clark, then a second-year resident at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, observe the birth of their child. The experience, she said, proved nothing short of inspiring. âThis baby was just in [the mother] and now itâs an independent, living, breathing being,â said Clark, now director of the University of Utahâs Division of Maternal-Fetal Medi... <iframe src="http://www.sltrib.com/csp/mediapool/sites/sltrib/pages/garss.csp" height="1" width="1" > </frame>