Comparison of mortality and rates of cerebral palsy in two populations of very low birthweight infants.
Open Access
- 1 March 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Archives of Disease in Childhood: Fetal & Neonatal
- Vol. 70 (2) , F96-100
- https://doi.org/10.1136/fn.70.2.f96
Abstract
Comparisons of mortality and rates of cerebral palsy in different populations can be confusing. This is illustrated by comparing two populations of very low birthweight infants born in the 1980s, one from the Netherlands, the other from the UK (Oxford region). Although a number of biases were controlled for while comparing two large geographically defined populations, by assessing the survivors at similar ages and describing their health status in a standard way, some problems in interpretation of outcome remained. Differences in registration practice of live births at early gestational ages, as well as differences in withholding or withdrawing treatment, which occurred in about half of the cases of neonatal death in the Netherlands and in about one third of those in the Oxford region, may have influenced the incidence of registered live births, neonatal mortality, and the rate of cerebral palsy.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Impairments, disabilities, and handicaps of very preterm and very-low-birthweight infants at five years of ageThe Lancet, 1991
- European Community collaborative study of outcome of pregnancy between 22 and 28 weeks' gestation: WORKING GROUP ON THE VERY LOW BIRTHWEIGHT INFANT*The Lancet, 1990
- Neonatal Seizures in Very Preterm and Very Low Birthweight Infants: Mortality and Handicaps at Two Years of Age in a Nationwide Cohort*Neuropediatrics, 1990
- Attitudes to viability of preterm infants and their effect on figures for perinatal mortality.BMJ, 1990
- Outcome studies of low birth weight infants published in the last decade: A metaanalysisThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1989
- Changing Pattern of Cerebral Palsy in the Southwest Region of FinlandActa Paediatrica, 1989
- Children of birth weight <1000 g: Changing outcome between ages 2 and 5 yearsThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1987
- Outcome in infants 501 to 1000 gm birth weight delivered to residents of the McMaster Health RegionThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1984
- Outcome in infants with birth weight 500 to 999 gm:A regional study of 1979 and 1980 birthsThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1984
- PERINATAL MORTALITY RATES DO NOT CONTAIN WHAT THEY PURPORT TO CONTAINThe Lancet, 1984