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Re: US neonatal mortality and morbidilty, was Homebirth, was VBAC, ectFrom: Laure (lfolgar@vianwe.com)Fri Apr 28 03:47:48 2006
Of course we are comparing oranges with apples. The most important item for evaluate obstetric activitie is perinatal mortality rate (neonatal and stillbirth after 22 weeks (154 days) of gestation). Do you use legal reports to achive medical activitie?. We donīt. One thing is the legal population movement index (22 weeks or 22 cm or 500 gr) and other is the medical reports (22 weeks). Nowdays many people want to have a legal report even if the gestation was under 22, because they want to consider tha his child existed. Legal athorities do it, they donīt mind. L. Folgar OBGYN County Hospital Melilla Spain -----Mensaje original----- De: ob-gyn-l@obgyn.net [mailto:ob-gyn-l@obgyn.net] En nombre de Joanne Bulley, MD Enviado el: viernes, 28 de abril de 2006 2:31 Para: Multiple recipients of list OB-GYN-L Asunto: Re: US neonatal mortality and morbidilty, was Homebirth, was VBAC, ect Actually, when it comes to "neonatal death" and what goes into the numerator and denominator ... that is up to the States. In NH the legislature defined a "live birth" as > or = 500 grams - and most of those were < 26 weeks and previable. But they got reported as live births ot still borns and what were essentially 2nd trimester spontaneous abortions were part of the dismal statistics. I am not sure if it is still the NH definition, but this type of state by state decision on "what counts" makes it tough to compare "statistics" of one country to another. It makes us "look" worse regardless of how well we care for the 26 week infant and older. Joanne
At Thu, 27 Apr 2006, Laure wrote:
>
-- Joanne Bulley, MD Keene, NH, USA
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