Perinatal mortality: a continuing collaborative regional survey.
- 9 June 1984
- Vol. 288 (6432), 1717-1720
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.288.6432.1717
Abstract
A collaborative survey of perinatal mortality in each district of the Northern region set up in July 1980 was able to obtain information on 99% of all the registered perinatal deaths among babies born in 1981-2 to mothers resident in the region. There were 12.4 perinatal deaths/1000 births over this two year period, but 41% of the stillbirths and early neonatal deaths were of babies with a lethal malformation or weighing less than 1000 g at birth (or both). All causes of perinatal mortality had become less common than they had been at the time of the National Birthday Trust survey in 1958, though there had been a relatively small decrease in the number of deaths due to malformation (in the absence of any neural tube defect) and in the number of stillbirths of normally developed fetuses: 36% of the antepartum stillbirths among non-malformed singleton fetuses were associated with poor fetal growth (weight below the fifth centile at birth) and 21% were due to sudden unexplained placental abruption.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Standard national perinatal data: a suggested common core of tabulationsCrossref Listing of Deleted Dois, 1983
- NATIONAL TRENDS IN THE CERTIFIED CAUSES OF PERINATAL MORTALITY, 1968 to 1978BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 1980
- MONITORING PERINATAL MORTALITYThe Lancet, 1980
- Classification and Causes of Perinatal MortalityBMJ, 1956