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. 2013 Nov;26(16):1641-8.
doi: 10.3109/14767058.2013.794208. Epub 2013 May 9.

Estimation of birth population-based perinatal-neonatal mortality and preterm rate in China from a regional survey in 2010

Collaborators, Affiliations
Free PMC article

Estimation of birth population-based perinatal-neonatal mortality and preterm rate in China from a regional survey in 2010

L Sun et al. J Matern Fetal Neonatal Med. 2013 Nov.
Free PMC article

Abstract

Objective: To estimate birth population-based perinatal-neonatal mortality and preterm rate in China from a regional survey in 2010.

Study design: Data of total births in 2010 obtained from 151 level I-III hospitals in Huai'an, Jiangsu, were prospectively collected and analyzed.

Results: From 61,227 birth registries (including 60,986 live births and 241 stillbirths), we derive a birth rate of 11.3‰ (of 5.4 million regional population), a male-to-female ratio of 116:100 and valid data from 60,615 newborns. Mean birth weight (BW) was 3441 ± 491 g with 13.6% macrosomia. Low BW was 2.8% (1691/60,372) with 8.83% mortality. Preterm rate was 3.72% (2239/60,264) with 7.61% mortality. Cesarean section rate was 52.9% (31,964/60,445), multiple pregnancy 1.8% (1088/60,567) and birth defects 6.7‰ (411/61,227). There were 97.4% healthy newborns and 2.2% (1298) requiring hospitalized after birth. The perinatal mortality was 7.7‰ (471/61,227, including 241 stillbirths, 230 early neonatal deaths). The neonatal mortality was 4.4‰ (269/60,986). The main causes of neonatal death were birth asphyxia (24.5%), respiratory diseases (21.5%), prematurity related organ dysfunction (18.5%) and congenital anomalies (7.7%), whereas incidence of congenital heart disease and respiratory distress syndrome was 8.6‰ and 6.1‰, respectively.

Conclusions: This regional birth population-based data file contains low perinatal-neonatal mortality rates, associated with low proportion of LBW and preterm births, and incidences of major neonatal disease, by which we estimate, in a nationwide perspective, in 16 million annual births, preterm births should be around 800,000, perinatal and neonatal mortality may be 128,000-144,000 and 80,000-96,000, respectively, along with 100,000 respiratory distress syndrome.

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