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Stillbirths : Rates, risk factors, and acceleration towards 2030

Authors :
Joy E Lawn
Hannah Blencowe
Peter Waiswa
Agbessi Amouzou
Colin Mathers
Dan Hogan
Vicki Flenady
J Frederik Frøen
Zeshan U Qureshi
Claire Calderwood
Suhail Shiekh
Fiorella Bianchi Jassir
Danzhen You
Elizabeth M McClure
Matthews Mathai
Simon Cousens
Mary V Kinney
Luc de Bernis
Alexander Heazell
Susannah Hopkins Leisher
Kishwar Azad
Anisur Rahman
Shams El-Arifeen
Louise T Day
Stacy L Shah
Shafi Alam
Sonam Wangdi
Tinga Fulbert Ilboudo
Jun Zhu
Juan Liang
Yi Mu
Xiaohong Li
Nanbert Zhong
Theopisti Kyprianou
Kärt Allvee
Mika Gissler
Jennifer Zeitlin
Abdouli Bah
Lamin Jawara
Nicholas Lack
Flor de Maria Herandez
Neena Shah More
Nirmala Nair
Prasanta Tripathy
Rajesh Kumar
Ariarathinam Newtonraj
Manmeet Kaur
Madhu Gupta
Beena Varghese
Jelena Isakova
Tambosi Phiri
Jennifer A Hall
Ala Curteanu
Dharma Manandhar
Chantal Hukkelhoven
Joyce Dijs-Elsinga
Kari Klungsøyr
Olva Poppe
Henrique Barros
Sofi Correia
Shorena Tsiklauri
Jan Cap
Zuzana Podmanicka
Katarzyna Szamotulska
Robert Pattison
Ahmed Ali Hassan
Aimable Musafi
Sanni Kujala
Anna Bergstrom
Jens Langhoff -Roos
Ellen Lundqvist
Daniel Kadobera
Anthony Costello
Tim Colbourn
Edward Fottrell
Audrey Prost
David Osrin
Carina King
Melissa Neuman
Jane Hirst
Sayed Rubayet
Lucy Smith
Bradley N Manktelow
Elizabeth S Draper
Source :
The Lancet 387 (2016) 10018, The Lancet, 387(10018), 587-603
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

An estimated 2·6 million third trimester stillbirths occurred in 2015 (uncertainty range 2·4-3·0 million). The number of stillbirths has reduced more slowly than has maternal mortality or mortality in children younger than 5 years, which were explicitly targeted in the Millennium Development Goals. The Every Newborn Action Plan has the target of 12 or fewer stillbirths per 1000 births in every country by 2030. 94 mainly high-income countries and upper middle-income countries have already met this target, although with noticeable disparities. At least 56 countries, particularly in Africa and in areas aff ected by confl ict, will have to more than double present progress to reach this target. Most (98%) stillbirths are in low-income and middle-income countries. Improved care at birth is essential to prevent 1·3 million (uncertainty range 1·2-1·6 million) intrapartum stillbirths, end preventable maternal and neonatal deaths, and improve child development. Estimates for stillbirth causation are impeded by various classifi cation systems, but for 18 countries with reliable data, congenital abnormalities account for a median of only 7·4% of stillbirths. Many disorders associated with stillbirths are potentially modifi able and often coexist, such as maternal infections (population attributable fraction: malaria 8·0% and syphilis 7·7%), non-communicable diseases, nutrition and lifestyle factors (each about 10%), and maternal age older than 35 years (6·7%). Prolonged pregnancies contribute to 14·0% of stillbirths. Causal pathways for stillbirth frequently involve impaired placental function, either with fetal growth restriction or preterm labour, or both. Two-thirds of newborns have their births registered. However, less than 5% of neonatal deaths and even fewer stillbirths have death registration. Records and registrations of all births, stillbirths, neonatal, and maternal deaths in a health facility would substantially increase data availability. Improved data alone will not save lives but provide a way to target interventions to reach more than 7000 women every day worldwide who experience the reality of stillbirth.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01406736
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet 387 (2016) 10018, The Lancet, 387(10018), 587-603
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....28da888f2e2db34b3f6ab8f3f3af6bfd