Trends in an obstetric patient population: An eighteen-year study
Autor: | LeRoy J. Dierker, Graham G. Ashmead, Leon I. Mann, Patrick M. Catalano, Saeid B. Amini |
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Rok vydání: | 1994 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Percentile medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent Birth weight Population Gestational Age Pregnancy Ethnicity medicine Birth Weight Humans Longitudinal Studies Prospective Studies education education.field_of_study Insurance Health Cesarean Section business.industry Obstetrics Infant Newborn Urban Health Obstetrics and Gynecology Gestational age Infant Low Birth Weight Delivery Obstetric medicine.disease Trend analysis Regression Analysis Gestation Population study Female business Infant Premature |
Zdroj: | American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 171:1014-1021 |
ISSN: | 0002-9378 |
DOI: | 10.1016/0002-9378(94)90025-6 |
Popis: | Our goal was to evaluate various trends including gestational age, birth weight, and mode of delivery in an inner-city obstetric patient population delivered at a tertiary medical center.We used an 18-year computerized perinatal database collected prospectively since 1975 in an inner-city tertiary medical center. More than 63,500 deliveries from 1975 through 1992 were evaluated. Trends in gestational age, birth weight, and mode of delivery were investigated with Cox-Stuart, regression, and other trend analysis methods.The number of deliveries increased from 2682 in 1975 to 4740 in 1991, an increase of 77%. The median maternal age has increased from 20 years in 1975 to 23 years in 1992 (p0.001). Overall, the mean gestational age has declined monotonically from 39.2 +/- 2.84 weeks in 1975 to 38.3 +/- 3.17 weeks in 1992 (p = 0.057). While the median and lower percentiles of birth weight for singleton births have declined, the 75th and higher percentiles of birth weight have increased during 18 years. Overall, the proportion of preterm births (37 completed weeks gestational age) has increased from 3.3% in 1975 to 7.8% in 1991 (p0.001). During this period the proportion of low-birth-weight infants (2,500 gm) increased significantly from 12.7% to 17.3% (p0.001). The proportion of cesarean section deliveries for private patients has declined from 37% in 1975 to 25% in 1992 (p = 0.025), while this proportion has increased monotonically for staff patients from 10% to 17% during this period (p0.001).Considering the large size of the database and diverse background of the study population, we believe that these trends can provide a realistic characterization of an obstetric patient population for a large inner-city urban population. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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