Over 15 million born prematurely
by Lauran NEERGAARD
About 15 million premature babies are born every year - more than 1
in 10 of the world's births and a bigger problem than previously
believed, according to the first country-by-country estimates of this
obstetric epidemic.
The startling toll: 1.1 million of these fragile newborns die as a
result, and even those who survive can suffer lifelong disabilities.
Most of the world's preemies are born in Africa and Asia, says the
report released Wednesday.
It's a problem for the US, too, where half a million babies are born
too soon. That's about 1 in 8 US births, a higher rate than in Europe,
Canada, Australia or Japan - and worse even than rates in a number of
less developed countries, too, the report found.
The starkest difference between rich and poorer countries, however,
is survival. “Being born too soon is an unrecognized killer,” said Dr.
Joy Lawn of Save the Children, who co-authored the report with the March
of Dimes, World Health Organisation and a coalition of international
health experts. “And it's unrecognised in the countries where you could
have a massive effect in reducing these deaths.”
Majority
Sophisticated and expensive intensive care saves the majority of
preterm babies in the U.S. and other developed nations, even the
tiniest, most premature ones. The risk of death from prematurity is at
least 12 times higher for an African newborn than for a European baby,
the report found.
Globally, prematurity is not only the leading killer of newborns but
the second-leading cause of death in children under 5.
“These facts should be a call to action,” United Nations
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon wrote in an introduction to the report.
Three-quarters of the deaths could be prevented by spreading some
simple, inexpensive treatments to the neediest countries, the report
concludes. For example, providing $1 steroid shots during preterm labor
hastens development of immature fetal lungs. They're standard in
developed countries; wider use in low-income countries could save nearly
400,000 babies a year.
Even more lives could be saved by teaching “kangaroo care,” in which
moms carry their tiny babies nestled skin-to-skin on their bare chests
for warmth when there are no incubators.“To see babies who are 900 grams
(about 2 pounds) survive without any technology, it's fantastic,” says
Lawn, who has watched kangaroo care save lives in countries like Malawi,
with the highest preterm birth rate – 18.1 per cent.
Antibiotics
Also needed: Antibiotics to fight the infections that often kill
newborns, and antiseptic cream to prevent umbilical cord
infection.Survival is not the only hurdle. No one knows how many
preemies suffer disabilities including cerebral palsy, blindness or
learning disorders.
That's why preventing preterm births in the first place is the
ultimate goal, one reason for comparing countries - to learn why some do
better and some worse. Previously, the groups had estimated that 13
million babies were born prematurely each year, based on regional
data.About 12 per cent of US births are preterm, about the same as
Wednesday's report estimates in Thailand, Turkey and Somalia. In
contrast, just 5.9 per cent of births in Japan and Sweden are premature.
Experts can't fully explain why the US preemie rate is so much worse
than similar high-income countries. But part of the reason must be
poorer access to prenatal care for uninsured US women, especially
minority mothers-to-be, said March of Dimes epidemiologist Christopher
Howson. African-American women are nearly twice as likely as white women
to receive late or no prenatal care, and they have higher rates of
preterm birth as well, he said..
More disturbing for the Americans, the report ranks the US with a
worse preterm birth rate than 58 of the 65 countries that best track the
problem, including much of Latin America. Add dozens of poor countries
where the counts are less certain, and the report estimates that 127
other nations may have lower rates.
Whatever the precise numbers, “we have a shared problem among all
countries and we need a shared solution,” Howson said.
One key: Not just early prenatal care but more preconception care, he
said. Given that in the US alone, nearly half of pregnancies are
unplanned, health providers should use any encounter with a woman of
childbearing age to check for factors that could imperil a
pregnancy.“Ensure that mom goes into her pregnancy as healthy as
possible,” Howson said.
Causes
Scientists don't know what causes all preterm birth, and having one
preemie greatly increases the risk for another. But among the risk
factors:
* Diabetes, high blood pressure, infections and smoking.
* Being underweight or overweight, and spacing pregnancies less than
two years apart.
* Pregnancy before age 17 or over 40.
* Carrying twins or more.
* In wealthier countries, early elective inductions and C-sections.
“A healthy baby is worth the wait,” Howson said, noting that being
even a few weeks early can increase the risk of respiratory problems,
jaundice, even death.The WHO defines a preterm birth as before
completion of the 37th week of pregnancy. Most preemies fall in the
“late preterm” category, born between 32 and 37 weeks. Extreme preemies
are born before 28 weeks. So-called “very preterm” babies fall in
between.
- AP
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