Sentences with phrase «early neonatal mortality»

Primary: maternal mortality, neonatal mortality, early neonatal mortality, and late neonatal mortality.
The excess total neonatal mortality for mid-wife home births compared with mid-wife hospital births was 9.32 per 10,000 births, and the excess early neonatal mortality was 7.89 per 10,000 births.
The authors concluded that the findings of this study showed a significantly increased total and early neonatal mortality for home births and even higher risks for women of 41 weeks or longer and women having a first birth.
Similar results were observed for early neonatal mortality.
The rate of stillbirth and early neonatal mortality combined was 3.3 per 1000 births.

Not exact matches

Main outcome measure A composite primary outcome of perinatal mortality and intrapartum related neonatal morbidities (stillbirth after start of care in labour, early neonatal death, neonatal encephalopathy, meconium aspiration syndrome, brachial plexus injury, fractured humerus, or fractured clavicle) was used to compare outcomes by planned place of birth at the start of care in labour (at home, freestanding midwifery units, alongside midwifery units, and obstetric units).
The primary outcome was a composite of perinatal mortality and specific neonatal morbidities: stillbirth after the start of care in labour, early neonatal death, neonatal encephalopathy, meconium aspiration syndrome, brachial plexus injury, fractured humerus, and fractured clavicle.13 This composite measure was designed to capture outcomes that may be related to the quality of intrapartum care, including morbidities associated with intrapartum asphyxia and birth trauma.
Most studies of homebirth in other countries have found no statistically significant differences in perinatal outcomes between home and hospital births for women at low risk of complications.36, 37,39 However, a recent study in the United States showed poorer neonatal outcomes for births occurring at home or in birth centres.40 A meta - analysis in the same year demonstrated higher perinatal mortality associated with homebirth41 but has been strongly criticised on methodological grounds.5, 42 The Birthplace in England study, 43 the largest prospective cohort study on place of birth for women at low risk of complications, analysed a composite outcome, which included stillbirth and early neonatal death among other serious morbidity.
The number you want for that is perinatal and neonatal mortality — perinatal is fetal deaths during labor and neonatal is deaths in either the first 8 days of life («early neonatal») or deaths between day 8 and day 28 («late neonatal»).
Comparison of Australian perinatal mortality (includes stillbirth and early and late neonatal mortality) between planned home births and all Australian births, 1985 - 90
It also examines intrapartum, early neonatal, and late neonatal mortality.
Here are the mortality rates (excluding lethal anomalies) for babies born to low risk women that were confirmed to be alive at the start of labor but die either during birth (intrapartum) or in the first week of life (early neonatal):
Main outcome measures were maternal outcomes (mortality; place and mode of birth; perineal trauma; type of management of the third stage of labor; post-partum hemorrhage; transfer to hospital); and neonatal outcomes (early mortality; Apgar score at 5 minutes; birth weight; breast - feeding initially and at 6 weeks; significant morbidity; transfer to hospital; admission to a special care nursery).
Early and total neonatal mortality in relation to birth setting in the United States, 2006 - 2009.
Maternal mortality (11 studies), neonatal mortality (21 studies), early (11 studies) and late (11 studies) neonatal mortality, perinatal mortality (17 studies), stillbirths (15 studies), institutional deliveries (16 studies), and measures of morbidity, and quality of care
Excluding lethal anomalies, the intrapartum, early neonatal, and late neonatal mortality rates were 1.30, 0.41, and 0.35 per 1000, respectively
(early neonatal death means the baby was born alive but died sometime in the first seven days), a baby is three times more likely to die at a home birth in the USA with a mortality rate of 1.71 / 1000 versus only 0.64 / 1000 babies dying in the Netherlands.
Looking at that same study for a comparison of total neonatal mortality rate (early plus late neonatal for both studies)... Birth Center study shows their neonatal mortality rate was 0.40 / 1000 excluding anomalies.
Study shows significantly increased baby death after home births, especially for women of 41 weeks or longer and first - time moms: Early and total neonatal mortality in relation to birth setting in the United States, 2006 - 2009
Findings are consistent with earlier reports that planned home birth is associated with a tripling of the neonatal mortality rate.
Effect of early infant feeding practices on infection - specific neonatal mortality: an investigation of the causal links with observational data from rural Ghana Karen M Edmond, Betty R Kirkwood, Seeba Amenga - Etego, Seth Owusu - Agyei, and Lisa S Hurt Beginning Breastfeeding From First Day of Life Reduces Infection Related Deaths in Newborns by 2.6 times.
The U.N.'s newest goals — the Sustainable Development Goals, a 15 - year strategy launched in early 2016 — include reducing the neonatal mortality rate in all countries to 12 deaths per 1,000 live births.
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