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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Epidemiology of preterm birth

Janet Tucker, +1 more
- 16 Sep 2004 - 
- Vol. 329, Iss: 7467, pp 675-678
TLDR
Over the past 20-30 years advances in perinatal care have improved outcomes for infants born after short gestations, but there is still uncertainty and incomplete recording of estimates of gestation in developed countries.
Abstract
Preterm birth is a major challenge in perinatal health care. Most perinatal deaths occur in preterm infants, and preterm birth is an important risk factor for neurological impairment and disability. Preterm birth not only affects infants and their families—providing care for preterm infants, who may spend several months in hospital, has increasing cost implications for health services. Preterm birth is the delivery of a baby before 37 completed weeks' gestation. Most mortality and morbidity affects “very preterm” infants (those born before 32 weeks' gestation), and especially “extremely preterm” infants (those born before 28 weeks of gestation). Definitions of preterm live births by completed weeks of gestation Over the past 20-30 years advances in perinatal care have improved outcomes for infants born after short gestations. The number of weeks of completed gestation that defines whether a birth is preterm rather than a fetal loss has become smaller. In 1992 the boundary that required registration as a preterm live birth in the United Kingdom was lowered from 28 completed weeks' gestation to 24 weeks' gestation. This boundary varies internationally, however, from about 20 to 24 weeks. Some classification of fetal loss, still birth, and early neonatal death for these very short gestations may be unreliable. Even in developed countries, there is often uncertainty and incomplete recording of estimates of gestation. In most of the United Kingdom data on birth weight data but not on gestational age are collected routinely. Although some concordance exists between the categories of birth weight and gestational age, they are not interchangeable. The categories for birth weight are: Only around two thirds of …

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The worldwide incidence of preterm birth: a systematic review of maternal mortality and morbidity

TL;DR: Developing countries, especially those in Africa and southern Asia, incur the highest burden in terms of absolute numbers, although a high rate is also observed in North America.
Journal Article

The Worldwide Incidence of Preterm Birth: A Systematic Review of Maternal Mortality and morbidity/Incidence Mondiale De la Missance Avant Terme: Revue Sytemtique De la Mortalite et De la Morbidite maternelle/Incidencia Mundial De Parto Prematuro: Revision Sistematica De la Morbilidad Y Mortalidad Maternas

TL;DR: Preterm birth, defined as childbirth occurring at less than 37 completed weeks or 259 days of gestation, is a major determinant of neonatal mortality and morbidity and has long-term adverse consequences for health as mentioned in this paper.
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The epidemiology of smoking during pregnancy: smoking prevalence, maternal characteristics, and pregnancy outcomes.

TL;DR: Smoking during pregnancy is in many countries recognized as the most important preventable risk factor for an unsuccessful pregnancy outcome.
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Community-Based Interventions for Improving Perinatal and Neonatal Health Outcomes in Developing Countries: A Review of the Evidence

TL;DR: A package of priority interventions to include in programs is identified and research priorities for advancing the state of the art in neonatal health care are formulated for future research and program learning.
Journal ArticleDOI

Maternal obesity and risk of preterm delivery.

TL;DR: In Sweden, maternal overweight and obesity during pregnancy were associated with increased risks of preterm delivery, especially extremely preterm Delivery, and these associations should be assessed in other populations.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Neurologic and developmental disability after extremely preterm birth. EPICure Study Group.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated all children who were born at 25 or fewer completed weeks of gestation in the United Kingdom and Ireland from March through December 1995 at the time when they reached a median age of 30 months.
Reference EntryDOI

Interventions for promoting smoking cessation during pregnancy

TL;DR: Smoking cessation interventions in pregnancy reduce the proportion of women who continue to smoke in late pregnancy, and reduce low birthweight and preterm birth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Socio-economic disparities in pregnancy outcome: why do the poor fare so poorly?

TL;DR: Research that identifies and quantifies the causal pathways and mechanisms whereby social disadvantage leads to higher risks of IUGR and preterm birth may eventually help to reduce current disparities and improve pregnancy outcome across the entire socio-economic spectrum.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prediction of survival for preterm births by weight and gestational age: retrospective population based study

TL;DR: Easy to use birth weight and gestational age specific predicted survival graphs for preterm infants facilitate decision making for clinicians and parents and need regular updating to allow for improvements in survival of infants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Obtaining informed consent to neonatal randomised controlled trials: interviews with parents and clinicians in the Euricon study

TL;DR: Current standards of informed consent to neonatal research projects could be improved and little support was found for the argument that informed consent should be relinquished for the parents' own good.
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