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Provider-initiated delivery, late preterm birth and perinatal mortality: a secondary analysis of the WHO multicountry survey on maternal and newborn health

INTRODUCTION: In high-income countries, a reduced clinical threshold for obstetric interventions such as labour induction (LI) and prelabour caesarean delivery (PLCD) has played a substantial role in increasing rates of late preterm births. However, the association between provider-initiated deliver...

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Autores principales: Morisaki, Naho, Zhang, Xun, Ganchimeg, Togoobaatar, Vogel, Joshua P, Souza, Joo Paulo Dias, Cecatti, Jose G, Torloni, Maria Regina, Ota, Erika, Mori, Rintaro, Mittal, Suneeta, Tough, Suzanne, Dolan, Siobhan, Kramer, Michael S
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Global Health 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5444091/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28589019
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2016-000204
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author Morisaki, Naho
Zhang, Xun
Ganchimeg, Togoobaatar
Vogel, Joshua P
Souza, Joo Paulo Dias
Cecatti, Jose G
Torloni, Maria Regina
Ota, Erika
Mori, Rintaro
Mittal, Suneeta
Tough, Suzanne
Dolan, Siobhan
Kramer, Michael S
author_facet Morisaki, Naho
Zhang, Xun
Ganchimeg, Togoobaatar
Vogel, Joshua P
Souza, Joo Paulo Dias
Cecatti, Jose G
Torloni, Maria Regina
Ota, Erika
Mori, Rintaro
Mittal, Suneeta
Tough, Suzanne
Dolan, Siobhan
Kramer, Michael S
author_sort Morisaki, Naho
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: In high-income countries, a reduced clinical threshold for obstetric interventions such as labour induction (LI) and prelabour caesarean delivery (PLCD) has played a substantial role in increasing rates of late preterm births. However, the association between provider-initiated delivery and perinatal outcomes have not been studied in a multicountry setting including low-income and middle-income countries. METHODS: 286 hospitals in 29 countries participated in the WHO Multi-Country Survey on Maternal and Newborn Health and yielded 2 52 198 singleton births of at least 34 weeks in 2010–2011. We used an ecological analysis based on generalised estimating equations under multilevel logistic regression to estimate associations between hospital rates of PLCD and LI with rates of late preterm birth (34–36 weeks), stillbirth and intrahospital early neonatal death, in relation to country development based on the Human Development Index (HDI). RESULTS: Rates of LI were higher in hospitals from very high-HDI (median 10.9%) and high-HDI (11.2%) countries compared with medium-HDI (4.0%) or low-HDI (3.8%) countries. Rates of PLCD were by far the lowest in low-HDI countries compared with countries in the other three categories (5.1% vs 12.0%–17.9%). Higher rates of PLCD were associated with lower perinatal death rates (OR 0.87 (0.79, 0.95) per 5% increase in PLCD) and non-significantly with late preterm birth (1.04 (0.98, 1.10)) regardless of country development. LI rates were positively associated with late preterm birth (1.04 (1.01, 1.06)) regardless of country development and with perinatal death (1.06 (0.98, 1.15)) only in middle-HDI and low- HDI countries. CONCLUSION: PLCD was associated with reduced perinatal mortality and non-significantly with increased late preterm birth. LI was associated with increases in both late preterm birth and, in less-developed countries, perinatal mortality. Efforts to provide sufficient, but avoid excessive, access to provider-initiated delivery should be tailored to the local context.
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spelling pubmed-54440912017-06-06 Provider-initiated delivery, late preterm birth and perinatal mortality: a secondary analysis of the WHO multicountry survey on maternal and newborn health Morisaki, Naho Zhang, Xun Ganchimeg, Togoobaatar Vogel, Joshua P Souza, Joo Paulo Dias Cecatti, Jose G Torloni, Maria Regina Ota, Erika Mori, Rintaro Mittal, Suneeta Tough, Suzanne Dolan, Siobhan Kramer, Michael S BMJ Glob Health BMJ Global Health INTRODUCTION: In high-income countries, a reduced clinical threshold for obstetric interventions such as labour induction (LI) and prelabour caesarean delivery (PLCD) has played a substantial role in increasing rates of late preterm births. However, the association between provider-initiated delivery and perinatal outcomes have not been studied in a multicountry setting including low-income and middle-income countries. METHODS: 286 hospitals in 29 countries participated in the WHO Multi-Country Survey on Maternal and Newborn Health and yielded 2 52 198 singleton births of at least 34 weeks in 2010–2011. We used an ecological analysis based on generalised estimating equations under multilevel logistic regression to estimate associations between hospital rates of PLCD and LI with rates of late preterm birth (34–36 weeks), stillbirth and intrahospital early neonatal death, in relation to country development based on the Human Development Index (HDI). RESULTS: Rates of LI were higher in hospitals from very high-HDI (median 10.9%) and high-HDI (11.2%) countries compared with medium-HDI (4.0%) or low-HDI (3.8%) countries. Rates of PLCD were by far the lowest in low-HDI countries compared with countries in the other three categories (5.1% vs 12.0%–17.9%). Higher rates of PLCD were associated with lower perinatal death rates (OR 0.87 (0.79, 0.95) per 5% increase in PLCD) and non-significantly with late preterm birth (1.04 (0.98, 1.10)) regardless of country development. LI rates were positively associated with late preterm birth (1.04 (1.01, 1.06)) regardless of country development and with perinatal death (1.06 (0.98, 1.15)) only in middle-HDI and low- HDI countries. CONCLUSION: PLCD was associated with reduced perinatal mortality and non-significantly with increased late preterm birth. LI was associated with increases in both late preterm birth and, in less-developed countries, perinatal mortality. Efforts to provide sufficient, but avoid excessive, access to provider-initiated delivery should be tailored to the local context. BMJ Global Health 2017-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC5444091/ /pubmed/28589019 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2016-000204 Text en © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted. This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
spellingShingle BMJ Global Health
Morisaki, Naho
Zhang, Xun
Ganchimeg, Togoobaatar
Vogel, Joshua P
Souza, Joo Paulo Dias
Cecatti, Jose G
Torloni, Maria Regina
Ota, Erika
Mori, Rintaro
Mittal, Suneeta
Tough, Suzanne
Dolan, Siobhan
Kramer, Michael S
Provider-initiated delivery, late preterm birth and perinatal mortality: a secondary analysis of the WHO multicountry survey on maternal and newborn health
title Provider-initiated delivery, late preterm birth and perinatal mortality: a secondary analysis of the WHO multicountry survey on maternal and newborn health
title_full Provider-initiated delivery, late preterm birth and perinatal mortality: a secondary analysis of the WHO multicountry survey on maternal and newborn health
title_fullStr Provider-initiated delivery, late preterm birth and perinatal mortality: a secondary analysis of the WHO multicountry survey on maternal and newborn health
title_full_unstemmed Provider-initiated delivery, late preterm birth and perinatal mortality: a secondary analysis of the WHO multicountry survey on maternal and newborn health
title_short Provider-initiated delivery, late preterm birth and perinatal mortality: a secondary analysis of the WHO multicountry survey on maternal and newborn health
title_sort provider-initiated delivery, late preterm birth and perinatal mortality: a secondary analysis of the who multicountry survey on maternal and newborn health
topic BMJ Global Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5444091/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28589019
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2016-000204
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