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Authors
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Perinatal mortality rate is an important mark to evaluate women and perinatal health
care. It is of utmost importance to know causes and the evolution of its two components aiming to improve health care in different fields – sanitary conditions, diagnosis and treatment of infectious disease, immunisations, diagnosing and caring for medical diseases induced by pregnancy or directly related to it, providing skilled birth attendance, preventing birth asphyxia, preventing preterm birth complications and
infections. In high-income countries the epidemiology varies mainly with social and
economic conditions; in low-income countries, paired with poverty, undernutrition, superstition, lack of medical care, deficient basic sanitary conditions are also found.
Also, in rich countries, responsible for 1% of deaths, data are published and
improvements evaluated, while in low-income countries responsible for 99% of deaths
numbers and causes are unknown, making difficult to implement cost effective
interventions, a reason why “stillbirth rates in low-income countries are now where
they were in high-income countries 50 to 100 years ago”. Knowledge on causes of death are very important as often what is needed are “simple” measures as improvement
of sanitary conditions and immunisation programmes rather than high technologies.
About four million babies dye each year in the first 28 days of life and another 3 million dye before birth in the third-trimester, with 98% occurring in low-income and middle income countries and more than 1 million occurring during labour and delivery.
Classically stillbirths are the major component of perinatal mortality rate. Causes of death are even more difficult to know. In low-income countries a great proportion of women give birth at home. Worldwide the main causes of stillbirth are asphyxia due to obstructed labour, eclampsia, abruption placenta and umbilical cord complications - making valid the assumption that skilled birth attendance would decrease stillbirth; and infection - chorioamnioitis, syphilis and malaria. In high-income countries placental pathology and infection, congenital anomalies, complications of preterm birth and post
term delivery, are the most common. If in low-income countries famine and lack of
provisions and health care are common, in high-income countries, advanced maternal
age and diabetes, obesity, hypertension, smoking, are frequent findings.
Description
Keywords
Morte Perinatal - Etiologia Morte Perinatal - Epidemiologia HDE UCI NEO
Citation
IN: World Congress of Perinatal Medicine; 2011, 8 a 11 Novembro.Punta del Este, Uruguai
Publisher
Unidade de Cuidados Intensivos Neonatais, Hospital de Dona Estefânia, Centro Hospitalar de Lisboa Central, EPE