| Literature DB >> 15298712 |
Noreen Maconochie1, Pat Doyle, Susan Prior.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Miscarriage is a common event but is remarkably difficult to measure in epidemiological studies. Few large-scale population-based studies have been conducted in the UK.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15298712 PMCID: PMC514555 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-4-35
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
The National Women's Health Survey – response rates
| No. | Crude % | Adjusted1 % | |
| - | |||
| Returned undelivered2 | 3,661 | 6% | - |
| Responded | 26,050 | 43% | 46% |
| Did not wish to participate | 2,738 | 5% | 5% |
| Aged >55 years or otherwise ineligible3 | 5,564 | 9% | 10% |
| Aged < = 55 years but never attempted to have children | 4,713 | 8% | 8% |
| Aged < = 55, ever attempted to have children | 13,035 | 21% | 23% |
| | |||
| | - | ||
| | - | ||
| - | |||
| Returned undelivered | 16 | 0.2% | - |
| Responded | 7,882 | 73% | 73% |
| No longer wished to participate | 180 | 2% | 2% |
| Completed questionnaire | 7,702 | 71% | 71% |
| | |||
| | |||
| | |||
1 Adjusted for undelivered mail 2 Includes 70 women who died before the study start 3 Under 18 at study start (6th November 2001); male; foreign national; or too ill to participate 4 344 women who had had a miscarriage since 1995, but whose last pregnancy was not a miscarriage, were sent a second stage 2 questionnaire and were asked to supply details in relation to their most recent miscarriage. 285 (83%) of the women responded to this third questionnaire.
NWHS Stages 1 and 2 – description of women reporting one or more pregnancy, and of the pregnancies they reported
| <30 | 1247 | (9.8) | 685 | (10.6) |
| 30–34 | 2007 | (15.8) | 1284 | (20.6) |
| 35–39 | 2618 | (20.6) | 1629 | (28.6) |
| > = 40 | 6678 | (52.6) | 3910 | (39.3) |
| Not known | 145 | (1.1) | - | |
| | ||||
| <1980 | 3201 | (25.2) | 1798 | (24.0) |
| 1980–84 | 1902 | (15.0) | 1131 | (15.1) |
| 1985–89 | 2091 | (16.5) | 1259 | (16.8) |
| 1990–94 | 2158 | (17.0) | 1356 | (18.1) |
| 1995–99 | 2079 | (16.4) | 1406 | (18.7) |
| 2000–02 | 7882 | (6.2) | 5583 | (7.4) |
| Not known | 476 | (3.8) | - | |
| 1 | 2607 | (20.5) | 1403 | (18.7) |
| 2 | 5077 | (40.0) | 3162 | (42.1) |
| 3 | 2962 | (23.3) | 1749 | (23.3) |
| 4 | 1573 | (12.4) | 818 | (10.9) |
| 5 | 285 | (2.2) | 229 | (3.1) |
| > = 6 | 191 | (1.5) | 147 | (1.9) |
| | ||||
| No dates given for any pregnancies | 436 | (3.4) | - | |
| All pregnancies occurred before 1980 | 1495 | (11.8) | 853 | (11.4) |
| Pregnancies before and after 1980 | 1707 | (13.5) | 945 | (12.6) |
| Pregnancy history commenced 1980 onwards | 9057 | (71.3) | 5710 | (76.1) |
| | (4.4) | |||
| Livebirth, surviving >7 days | 24081 | (78.9) | 14782 | (80.4) |
| Livebirth, early neonatal death | 95 | (0.3) | 56 | (0.3) |
| Stillbirth | 188 | (0.6) | 110 | (0.6) |
| Miscarriage4 | 3512 | (11.5) | 2326 | (12.7) |
| Ectopic | 226 | (0.7) | 102 | (0.6) |
| Termination for medical reasons5 | 312 | (1.0) | 89 | (0.5) |
| Termination for non-medical reasons6 | 1424 | (4.6) | 562 | (3.1) |
| Molar pregnancy | 47 | (0.2) | 26 | (0.1) |
| Ongoing (current) pregnancy | 482 | (1.6) | 338 | (1.8) |
| Not known | 294 | (1.0) | - | |
| <1980 | 6093 | (19.9) | 3486 | (18.0) |
| 1980–84 | 4503 | (14.7) | 2623 | (14.3) |
| 1985–89 | 5028 | (16.4) | 3000 | (16.3) |
| 1990–94 | 5549 | (18.1) | 3434 | (18.7) |
| 1995–99 | 5808 | (18.9) | 3865 | (21.0) |
| 2000–02 | 27217 | (8.9) | 19838 | (10.8) |
| Not known | 959 | (3.1) | - | |
1 Where date of birth given 2 Includes 486 women whose first pregnancy was conceived after 31st March 2000, 126 of whom were currently pregnant for the first time at time of survey 3 Includes 329 women whose first pregnancy was conceived after 31st March 2000, 73 of whom were currently pregnant for the first time at time of survey 4 Fetal death at <24 weeks gestation. Includes missed miscarriages (fetal death at <24 weeks without spontaneous expulsion of fetus) and blighted ova (anembryonic pregnancy) 5 Termination of pregnancy because of a defect identified in the baby, or because continuing the pregnancy would put the mother's health at risk 6 Termination of pregnancy for reasons other than a defect identified in the baby or risk to mother's health 7 1,718 of these pregnancies were conceived after 31st March 2000 8 1,232 of these pregnancies were conceived after 31st March 2000
Comparison with population birth data of reported births in Stages 1 and 21 of the National Women's Health Study occurring since 19802
| No. stillbirths3 | Total livebirths & stillbirths3 | SRSR4 (95% CI) | |||
| 1980–2002 | 102 | 18,740 | 115 | (94 – 139) | |
| 1980–2002 | 59 | 12,061 | 102 | (79 – 132) | |
| No. multiple deliveries5 | Total deliveries5 | SMDR4 (95% CI) | |||
| 1980–2002 | 264 | 18,391 | 111 | (99 – 126) | |
| 1980–2002 | 169 | 11,887 | 108 | (93 – 126) | |
| No. first6 livebirths | Mean (SD) age7 | England & Wales8 | |||
| Year of delivery | |||||
| 1980–84 | 1,724 | 25.2 (4.12) | 25.5 | ||
| 1985–89 | 1,916 | 25.9 (4.56) | 26.4 | ||
| 1990–94 | 2,058 | 27.1 (4.85) | 27.8 | ||
| 1995–99 | 2,026 | 28.6 (5.01) | 29.0 | ||
| 2000–02 | 699 | 29.4 (5.06) | 29.6 | ||
| 1980–84 | 1,032 | 25.5 (4.02) | 25.5 | ||
| 1985–89 | 1,182 | 26.0 (4.45) | 26.4 | ||
| 1990–94 | 1,325 | 27.3 (4.78) | 27.8 | ||
| 1995–99 | 1,432 | 28.8 (4.81) | 29.0 | ||
| 2000–02 | 540 | 29.7 (4.89) | 29.6 | ||
1 Stage 2 data are a subset of Stage 1 data (see methods). 2 Pregnancies with missing maternal age have been excluded from this analysis. 3 Registered stillbirths 1980–2002, defined as fetal death at ≥ 28 weeks prior to 1992, or at ≥24 weeks thereafter. 41 (40%) of stillbirths had no gestational age, but were described as stillbirths by the mother. Unit of analysis is a baby; multiple births counted as many times as there are babies. Denominator contains all reported livebirths and registered stillbirths 1980–2002. 4 Standardised Registered Stillbirth Ratio (SRSR) and Standardised registered Multiple Delivery Ratio (SMDR). Standardised for maternal age (5-year intervals) and single year of birth using data for England and Wales 1980–2002. 5 Unit of analysis is a delivery (pregnancy) containing one or more registered live or stillbirth; multiple pregnancies counted once only. Multiple pregnancies containing only one registered birth (with another non-registrable outcome, such as miscarriage) considered as singleton in this analysis. 6 First registered birth, if live. 7 NWHS data relates to livebirths both within and outside marriage 8 Livebirths within marriage only