Cargando…

Temporal trends in stillbirth over eight decades in England and Wales: A longitudinal analysis of over 56 million births and lives saved by improvements in maternity care

BACKGROUND: Considering the public health importance of stillbirth, this study quantified the trends in stillbirths over eight decades in England and Wales. METHODS: This longitudinal study utilized the publicly available aggregated data from the Office for National Statistics that captured maternit...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kayode, Gbenga A, Judge, Andrew, Burden, Christy, Winter, Cathy, Draycott, Tim, Thilaganathan, Basky, Lenguerrand, Erik
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Society of Global Health 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9480862/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36112509
http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.12.04072
_version_ 1784791137062486016
author Kayode, Gbenga A
Judge, Andrew
Burden, Christy
Winter, Cathy
Draycott, Tim
Thilaganathan, Basky
Lenguerrand, Erik
author_facet Kayode, Gbenga A
Judge, Andrew
Burden, Christy
Winter, Cathy
Draycott, Tim
Thilaganathan, Basky
Lenguerrand, Erik
author_sort Kayode, Gbenga A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Considering the public health importance of stillbirth, this study quantified the trends in stillbirths over eight decades in England and Wales. METHODS: This longitudinal study utilized the publicly available aggregated data from the Office for National Statistics that captured maternity information for babies delivered in England and Wales from 1940 to 2019. We computed the trends in stillbirth with the associated incidence risk difference, incidence risk ratio, and extra lives saved per decade. RESULTS: From 1940-2019, 56 906 273 births were reported. The stillbirth rate declined (85%) drastically up to the early 1980s. In the initial five decades, the estimated number of deaths per decade further decreased by 67 765 (9.49/1000 births) in 1940-1949, 2569 (0.08/1000 births) in 1950-1959, 9121 (3.50/1000 births) in 1960-1969, 15 262 (2.31/1000 births) in 1970-1979, and 10 284 (1.57/1000 births) in 1980-1989. However, the stillbirth rate increased by an additional 3850 (0.58/1000 births) stillbirths in 1990-1999 and 693 (0.11/1000 births) stillbirths in 2000-2009. The stillbirth rate declined again during 2010-2019, with 3714 fewer stillbirths (0.54/1000 births). The incidence of maternal age <20 years reduced over time, but pregnancy among older women (>35 years) increased. CONCLUSIONS: The stillbirth rate declined drastically, but the rate of decline slowed in the last three decades. Though teenage pregnancy (<20 years) had reduced, the prevalence of women with a higher risk of stillbirth may have risen due to an increase in advanced maternal age. Improved, more personalised care is required to reduce the stillbirth rate further.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9480862
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher International Society of Global Health
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-94808622022-09-20 Temporal trends in stillbirth over eight decades in England and Wales: A longitudinal analysis of over 56 million births and lives saved by improvements in maternity care Kayode, Gbenga A Judge, Andrew Burden, Christy Winter, Cathy Draycott, Tim Thilaganathan, Basky Lenguerrand, Erik J Glob Health Articles BACKGROUND: Considering the public health importance of stillbirth, this study quantified the trends in stillbirths over eight decades in England and Wales. METHODS: This longitudinal study utilized the publicly available aggregated data from the Office for National Statistics that captured maternity information for babies delivered in England and Wales from 1940 to 2019. We computed the trends in stillbirth with the associated incidence risk difference, incidence risk ratio, and extra lives saved per decade. RESULTS: From 1940-2019, 56 906 273 births were reported. The stillbirth rate declined (85%) drastically up to the early 1980s. In the initial five decades, the estimated number of deaths per decade further decreased by 67 765 (9.49/1000 births) in 1940-1949, 2569 (0.08/1000 births) in 1950-1959, 9121 (3.50/1000 births) in 1960-1969, 15 262 (2.31/1000 births) in 1970-1979, and 10 284 (1.57/1000 births) in 1980-1989. However, the stillbirth rate increased by an additional 3850 (0.58/1000 births) stillbirths in 1990-1999 and 693 (0.11/1000 births) stillbirths in 2000-2009. The stillbirth rate declined again during 2010-2019, with 3714 fewer stillbirths (0.54/1000 births). The incidence of maternal age <20 years reduced over time, but pregnancy among older women (>35 years) increased. CONCLUSIONS: The stillbirth rate declined drastically, but the rate of decline slowed in the last three decades. Though teenage pregnancy (<20 years) had reduced, the prevalence of women with a higher risk of stillbirth may have risen due to an increase in advanced maternal age. Improved, more personalised care is required to reduce the stillbirth rate further. International Society of Global Health 2022-09-17 /pmc/articles/PMC9480862/ /pubmed/36112509 http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.12.04072 Text en Copyright © 2022 by the Journal of Global Health. All rights reserved. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
spellingShingle Articles
Kayode, Gbenga A
Judge, Andrew
Burden, Christy
Winter, Cathy
Draycott, Tim
Thilaganathan, Basky
Lenguerrand, Erik
Temporal trends in stillbirth over eight decades in England and Wales: A longitudinal analysis of over 56 million births and lives saved by improvements in maternity care
title Temporal trends in stillbirth over eight decades in England and Wales: A longitudinal analysis of over 56 million births and lives saved by improvements in maternity care
title_full Temporal trends in stillbirth over eight decades in England and Wales: A longitudinal analysis of over 56 million births and lives saved by improvements in maternity care
title_fullStr Temporal trends in stillbirth over eight decades in England and Wales: A longitudinal analysis of over 56 million births and lives saved by improvements in maternity care
title_full_unstemmed Temporal trends in stillbirth over eight decades in England and Wales: A longitudinal analysis of over 56 million births and lives saved by improvements in maternity care
title_short Temporal trends in stillbirth over eight decades in England and Wales: A longitudinal analysis of over 56 million births and lives saved by improvements in maternity care
title_sort temporal trends in stillbirth over eight decades in england and wales: a longitudinal analysis of over 56 million births and lives saved by improvements in maternity care
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9480862/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36112509
http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.12.04072
work_keys_str_mv AT kayodegbengaa temporaltrendsinstillbirthovereightdecadesinenglandandwalesalongitudinalanalysisofover56millionbirthsandlivessavedbyimprovementsinmaternitycare
AT judgeandrew temporaltrendsinstillbirthovereightdecadesinenglandandwalesalongitudinalanalysisofover56millionbirthsandlivessavedbyimprovementsinmaternitycare
AT burdenchristy temporaltrendsinstillbirthovereightdecadesinenglandandwalesalongitudinalanalysisofover56millionbirthsandlivessavedbyimprovementsinmaternitycare
AT wintercathy temporaltrendsinstillbirthovereightdecadesinenglandandwalesalongitudinalanalysisofover56millionbirthsandlivessavedbyimprovementsinmaternitycare
AT draycotttim temporaltrendsinstillbirthovereightdecadesinenglandandwalesalongitudinalanalysisofover56millionbirthsandlivessavedbyimprovementsinmaternitycare
AT thilaganathanbasky temporaltrendsinstillbirthovereightdecadesinenglandandwalesalongitudinalanalysisofover56millionbirthsandlivessavedbyimprovementsinmaternitycare
AT lenguerranderik temporaltrendsinstillbirthovereightdecadesinenglandandwalesalongitudinalanalysisofover56millionbirthsandlivessavedbyimprovementsinmaternitycare
AT temporaltrendsinstillbirthovereightdecadesinenglandandwalesalongitudinalanalysisofover56millionbirthsandlivessavedbyimprovementsinmaternitycare