The extra time results in more brain development, and a study suggests
perhaps better scores on academic tests, too. Full-term is generally between 37
weeks and 41 weeks; newborns born before 37 weeks are called premature and are
known to face increased chances for health and developmental problems.
The children in the study were all full-term, and the vast majority did
fine on third-grade math and reading tests. The differences were small, but the
study found that more kids born at 37 or 38 weeks did poorly than did kids born
even a week or two later.
The researchers and other experts said the results suggest that the
definition of prematurity should be reconsidered. The findings also raise
questions about hastening childbirth by scheduling cesarean deliveries for
convenience – because women are tired of being pregnant or doctors are busy –
rather than for medical reasons, the researchers say. Women should “at least
proceed with caution before electing to have an earlier term birth,” said lead
author Dr. Kimberly Noble, an assistant pediatrics professor at Columbia
University Medical Center.
The study involved 128,000 New York City public school children and
included a sizable number of kids from disadvantaged families. But the authors
said similar results likely would be found in other children, too. Of the
children born at 37 weeks, 2.3 per cent had severely poor reading skills and
1.1 per cent had at least moderate problems in math. That compares to 1.8 per
cent and 0.9 per cent for the children born at 41 weeks.
Children born at 38 weeks faced only slightly lower risks than those
born at 37 weeks. Compared with 41-weekers, children born at 37 weeks faced a
33 per cent increased chance of having severe reading difficulty in third
grade, and a 19 per cent greater chance of having moderate problems in math. “These
outcomes are critical and predict future academic achievement,” said Naomi
Breslau, a Michigan State University professor and sociologist. Her own
research has linked lower IQs in 6-year-olds born weighing the same as the
average birth weights at 37 and 38 weeks’ gestation, compared with those born
heavier.
The research “will cause quite a stir,” said Dr. Judy Aschner, a
pediatrics professor and neonatology director at Vanderbilt University Medical
Center. “There are still a lot of babies who are being delivered more or less
electively at 37 and 38 weeks, with people thinking, ‘This is no big deal –
these babies are full-term.’ I think this is a big deal,” Aschner said. She was
not involved in the study. Aschner said no one is recommending trying to delay
childbirth for women who go into labour at 37 weeks or 38 weeks. “I don’t want
to panic moms whose babies come at 37 weeks,” she said. “But those elective
early deliveries really need to stop.”
Some hospitals including Vanderbilt require obstetricians planning
elective C-sections to complete a checklist and if appropriate boxes aren’t
checked, the operation can’t be performed, Aschner said. In the study, 15 per
cent of children were born in C-section operations but there was no information
on how many of these were elective or medically necessary procedures. C-sections
can cause birth complications that also increase chances for developmental
delays. But the researchers took that into account, along with other risk
factors including low birth weight, lack of prenatal care, smoking during
pregnancy and neighbourhood poverty – all of which could contribute to academic
difficulties. And they still found that birth at 37 weeks and 38 weeks was an
additional risk.
Metro News Canada
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