Prevention of premature birth

Author affiliations
  • University of Alabama at Birmingham ROR

The New England Journal of Medicine, 339(5), 313-320, 1998

DOI 10.1056/NEJM199807303390506 PMID 9682045

Abstract

Preterm birth, which occurs in 11 percent of all pregnancies, is responsible for the majority of neonatal deaths and nearly one half of all cases of congenital neurologic disability, including cerebral palsy.1Although all births before 37 weeks of gestation are considered premature, births before 32 weeks' gestation (2 percent of all births) account for most neonatal deaths and disorders.2 State and national vital statistics indicate that the incidence of preterm birth has risen over the past 15 years (Figure 1), and it remains twice as high among black women as among white women.35 Preterm birth is commonly categorized . . .

Topics

prevention of premature birth strategies review, preterm birth before 32 weeks neonatal outcomes, racial disparities preterm birth black white women, preterm delivery incidence trends United States, Goldenberg Rouse premature birth prevention, cerebral palsy neonatal death prematurity risk, categories of preterm birth causes and management, rising incidence preterm delivery epidemiology, preterm birth 37 weeks gestation prevention interventions, neonatal morbidity congenital neurologic disability prematurity
PMID 9682045 9682045 DOI 10.1056/NEJM199807303390506 10.1056/NEJM199807303390506

Cite this article

Goldenberg, R. L., & Rouse, D. J. (1998). Prevention of premature birth. *The New England journal of medicine*, *339*(5), 313-320. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJM199807303390506

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