Experts
warn more research is needed to find out how to reduce the number of babies
born early.
Prematurity
is the second most common cause of death for children aged five. An analysis of
39 developed countries, suggests numbers could be cut by measures such as
stopping multiple IVF pregnancies - but only by 5%. But experts writing in the
Lancet say the reasons for many early births remain unknown and much more
research is needed.
Each
year 15 million babies are born before 37 weeks of pregnancy, and rates are
rising almost everywhere. But there is limited understanding as to why this is
happening or what could be done. An estimated 1.1 million premature babies die
each year. Most are born just a few weeks early in developing countries, where
they die from a lack of simple care. But experts believe developed countries
can also cut rates.
'Shockingly
small'
Child
health experts from organisations including the World Health Organization, Save
the Children and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine looked at
what could be done in the 39 most developed countries if five recognised
measures were implemented.
These
interventions are stopping smoking, promoting single pregnancies in IVF
treatments, reducing planned Caesarean sections - which are often carried out
before due dates - unless there is a medical reason by 80%, providing
progesterone supplements to women with high-risk pregnancies and cervical
stitches for women with a "weak" cervix that could mean a baby does
not go to term. If all these were implemented, the researchers suggest
premature birth could be prevented for 58,000 babies. Issuing their call in
advance of World Prematurity Day on 17 November, the experts say the reductions
- which could be achieved by 2015, would vary from 8% in the US to much smaller
reductions in most European countries, and only 2% in the UK.
Dr
Joy Lawn, of Save the Children, who is part of the Born Too Soon initiative
that seeks to cut prematurity rates, said: ""Our analysis shows that
the current potential for preterm birth prevention is shockingly small. "Our
hope is that the proposed target of a 5% relative reduction in preterm births
in high income countries will motivate immediate programme action, and the 95%
knowledge gap will motivate immediate, strategic research. "Research should also focus on preterm
birth causes and solutions in low income countries where preterm birth rates
are highest and the underlying causes may be much simpler to address."
Writing
in the Lancet, Jane Norman and Andrew Shennan, of Tommy's Centre for Maternal
and Fetal Health, at the University of Edinburgh, said: "Until
considerable strides have been made in our understanding of how, why and when
preterm births occur, and the effects that this has on both mother and baby,
preterm births will remain a major public health problem, from which no country
in the world is immune."
Source: BBC News
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