Small babies, big risks: Global estimates of prevalence and mortality for vulnerable newborns to accelerate change and improve counting

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

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Small babies, big risks : Global estimates of prevalence and mortality for vulnerable newborns to accelerate change and improve counting. / Bygbjerg, Ib Christian; Lancet Small Vulnerable Newborn Steering Committee.

I: The Lancet, Bind 401, Nr. 10389, 20.05.2023, s. 1707-1719.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Bygbjerg, IC & Lancet Small Vulnerable Newborn Steering Committee 2023, 'Small babies, big risks: Global estimates of prevalence and mortality for vulnerable newborns to accelerate change and improve counting', The Lancet, bind 401, nr. 10389, s. 1707-1719. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(23)00522-6

APA

Bygbjerg, I. C., & Lancet Small Vulnerable Newborn Steering Committee (2023). Small babies, big risks: Global estimates of prevalence and mortality for vulnerable newborns to accelerate change and improve counting. The Lancet, 401(10389), 1707-1719. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(23)00522-6

Vancouver

Bygbjerg IC, Lancet Small Vulnerable Newborn Steering Committee. Small babies, big risks: Global estimates of prevalence and mortality for vulnerable newborns to accelerate change and improve counting. The Lancet. 2023 maj 20;401(10389):1707-1719. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(23)00522-6

Author

Bygbjerg, Ib Christian ; Lancet Small Vulnerable Newborn Steering Committee. / Small babies, big risks : Global estimates of prevalence and mortality for vulnerable newborns to accelerate change and improve counting. I: The Lancet. 2023 ; Bind 401, Nr. 10389. s. 1707-1719.

Bibtex

@article{3bce8b6b2fa0499484f82e8c2abba176,
title = "Small babies, big risks: Global estimates of prevalence and mortality for vulnerable newborns to accelerate change and improve counting",
abstract = "Small newborns are vulnerable to mortality and lifelong loss of human capital. Measures of vulnerability previously focused on liveborn low-birthweight (LBW) babies, yet LBW reduction targets are off-track. There are two pathways to LBW, preterm birth and fetal growth restriction (FGR), with the FGR pathway resulting in the baby being small for gestational age (SGA). Data on LBW babies are available from 158 (81%) of 194 WHO member states and the occupied Palestinian territory, including east Jerusalem, with 113 (58%) having national administrative data, whereas data on preterm births are available from 103 (53%) of 195 countries and areas, with only 64 (33%) providing national administrative data. National administrative data on SGA are available for only eight countries. Global estimates for 2020 suggest 13·4 million livebirths were preterm, with rates over the past decade remaining static, and 23·4 million were SGA. In this Series paper, we estimated prevalence in 2020 for three mutually exclusive types of small vulnerable newborns (SVNs; preterm non-SGA, term SGA, and preterm SGA) using individual-level data (2010-20) from 23 national datasets (∼110 million livebirths) and 31 studies in 18 countries (∼0·4 million livebirths). We found 11·9 million (50% credible interval [Crl] 9·1-12·2 million; 8·8%, 50% Crl 6·8-9·0%) of global livebirths were preterm non-SGA, 21·9 million (50% Crl 20·1-25·5 million; 16·3%, 14·9-18·9%) were term SGA, and 1·5 million (50% Crl 1·2-4·2 million; 1·1%, 50% Crl 0·9-3·1%) were preterm SGA. Over half (55·3%) of the 2·4 million neonatal deaths worldwide in 2020 were attributed to one of the SVN types, of which 73·4% were preterm and the remainder were term SGA. Analyses from 12 of the 23 countries with national data (0·6 million stillbirths at ≥22 weeks gestation) showed around 74% of stillbirths were preterm, including 16·0% preterm SGA and approximately one-fifth of term stillbirths were SGA. There are an estimated 1·9 million stillbirths per year associated with similar vulnerability pathways; hence integrating stillbirths to burden assessments and relevant indicators is crucial. Data can be improved by counting, weighing, and assessing the gestational age of every newborn, whether liveborn or stillborn, and classifying small newborns by the three vulnerability types. The use of these more specific types could accelerate prevention and help target care for the most vulnerable babies.",
keywords = "Infant, Pregnancy, Female, Infant, Newborn, Humans, Stillbirth/epidemiology, Premature Birth/epidemiology, Prevalence, Infant, Small for Gestational Age, Infant, Low Birth Weight, Fetal Growth Retardation/epidemiology",
author = "Lawn, {Joy E} and Ohuma, {Eric O} and Ellen Bradley and Idueta, {Lorena Su{\'a}rez} and Elizabeth Hazel and Okwaraji, {Yemisrach B} and Erchick, {Daniel J} and Judith Yargawa and Joanne Katz and Lee, {Anne C C} and Mike Diaz and Mihretab Salasibew and Jennifer Requejo and Chika Hayashi and Ann-Beth Moller and Elaine Borghi and Black, {Robert E} and Hannah Blencowe and Bygbjerg, {Ib Christian} and {Lancet Small Vulnerable Newborn Steering Committee}",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2023 World Health Organization. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.",
year = "2023",
month = may,
day = "20",
doi = "10.1016/S0140-6736(23)00522-6",
language = "English",
volume = "401",
pages = "1707--1719",
journal = "The Lancet",
issn = "0140-6736",
publisher = "TheLancet Publishing Group",
number = "10389",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Small babies, big risks

T2 - Global estimates of prevalence and mortality for vulnerable newborns to accelerate change and improve counting

AU - Lawn, Joy E

AU - Ohuma, Eric O

AU - Bradley, Ellen

AU - Idueta, Lorena Suárez

AU - Hazel, Elizabeth

AU - Okwaraji, Yemisrach B

AU - Erchick, Daniel J

AU - Yargawa, Judith

AU - Katz, Joanne

AU - Lee, Anne C C

AU - Diaz, Mike

AU - Salasibew, Mihretab

AU - Requejo, Jennifer

AU - Hayashi, Chika

AU - Moller, Ann-Beth

AU - Borghi, Elaine

AU - Black, Robert E

AU - Blencowe, Hannah

AU - Bygbjerg, Ib Christian

AU - Lancet Small Vulnerable Newborn Steering Committee

N1 - Copyright © 2023 World Health Organization. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.

PY - 2023/5/20

Y1 - 2023/5/20

N2 - Small newborns are vulnerable to mortality and lifelong loss of human capital. Measures of vulnerability previously focused on liveborn low-birthweight (LBW) babies, yet LBW reduction targets are off-track. There are two pathways to LBW, preterm birth and fetal growth restriction (FGR), with the FGR pathway resulting in the baby being small for gestational age (SGA). Data on LBW babies are available from 158 (81%) of 194 WHO member states and the occupied Palestinian territory, including east Jerusalem, with 113 (58%) having national administrative data, whereas data on preterm births are available from 103 (53%) of 195 countries and areas, with only 64 (33%) providing national administrative data. National administrative data on SGA are available for only eight countries. Global estimates for 2020 suggest 13·4 million livebirths were preterm, with rates over the past decade remaining static, and 23·4 million were SGA. In this Series paper, we estimated prevalence in 2020 for three mutually exclusive types of small vulnerable newborns (SVNs; preterm non-SGA, term SGA, and preterm SGA) using individual-level data (2010-20) from 23 national datasets (∼110 million livebirths) and 31 studies in 18 countries (∼0·4 million livebirths). We found 11·9 million (50% credible interval [Crl] 9·1-12·2 million; 8·8%, 50% Crl 6·8-9·0%) of global livebirths were preterm non-SGA, 21·9 million (50% Crl 20·1-25·5 million; 16·3%, 14·9-18·9%) were term SGA, and 1·5 million (50% Crl 1·2-4·2 million; 1·1%, 50% Crl 0·9-3·1%) were preterm SGA. Over half (55·3%) of the 2·4 million neonatal deaths worldwide in 2020 were attributed to one of the SVN types, of which 73·4% were preterm and the remainder were term SGA. Analyses from 12 of the 23 countries with national data (0·6 million stillbirths at ≥22 weeks gestation) showed around 74% of stillbirths were preterm, including 16·0% preterm SGA and approximately one-fifth of term stillbirths were SGA. There are an estimated 1·9 million stillbirths per year associated with similar vulnerability pathways; hence integrating stillbirths to burden assessments and relevant indicators is crucial. Data can be improved by counting, weighing, and assessing the gestational age of every newborn, whether liveborn or stillborn, and classifying small newborns by the three vulnerability types. The use of these more specific types could accelerate prevention and help target care for the most vulnerable babies.

AB - Small newborns are vulnerable to mortality and lifelong loss of human capital. Measures of vulnerability previously focused on liveborn low-birthweight (LBW) babies, yet LBW reduction targets are off-track. There are two pathways to LBW, preterm birth and fetal growth restriction (FGR), with the FGR pathway resulting in the baby being small for gestational age (SGA). Data on LBW babies are available from 158 (81%) of 194 WHO member states and the occupied Palestinian territory, including east Jerusalem, with 113 (58%) having national administrative data, whereas data on preterm births are available from 103 (53%) of 195 countries and areas, with only 64 (33%) providing national administrative data. National administrative data on SGA are available for only eight countries. Global estimates for 2020 suggest 13·4 million livebirths were preterm, with rates over the past decade remaining static, and 23·4 million were SGA. In this Series paper, we estimated prevalence in 2020 for three mutually exclusive types of small vulnerable newborns (SVNs; preterm non-SGA, term SGA, and preterm SGA) using individual-level data (2010-20) from 23 national datasets (∼110 million livebirths) and 31 studies in 18 countries (∼0·4 million livebirths). We found 11·9 million (50% credible interval [Crl] 9·1-12·2 million; 8·8%, 50% Crl 6·8-9·0%) of global livebirths were preterm non-SGA, 21·9 million (50% Crl 20·1-25·5 million; 16·3%, 14·9-18·9%) were term SGA, and 1·5 million (50% Crl 1·2-4·2 million; 1·1%, 50% Crl 0·9-3·1%) were preterm SGA. Over half (55·3%) of the 2·4 million neonatal deaths worldwide in 2020 were attributed to one of the SVN types, of which 73·4% were preterm and the remainder were term SGA. Analyses from 12 of the 23 countries with national data (0·6 million stillbirths at ≥22 weeks gestation) showed around 74% of stillbirths were preterm, including 16·0% preterm SGA and approximately one-fifth of term stillbirths were SGA. There are an estimated 1·9 million stillbirths per year associated with similar vulnerability pathways; hence integrating stillbirths to burden assessments and relevant indicators is crucial. Data can be improved by counting, weighing, and assessing the gestational age of every newborn, whether liveborn or stillborn, and classifying small newborns by the three vulnerability types. The use of these more specific types could accelerate prevention and help target care for the most vulnerable babies.

KW - Infant

KW - Pregnancy

KW - Female

KW - Infant, Newborn

KW - Humans

KW - Stillbirth/epidemiology

KW - Premature Birth/epidemiology

KW - Prevalence

KW - Infant, Small for Gestational Age

KW - Infant, Low Birth Weight

KW - Fetal Growth Retardation/epidemiology

U2 - 10.1016/S0140-6736(23)00522-6

DO - 10.1016/S0140-6736(23)00522-6

M3 - Review

C2 - 37167989

VL - 401

SP - 1707

EP - 1719

JO - The Lancet

JF - The Lancet

SN - 0140-6736

IS - 10389

ER -

ID: 359604002