Literature DB >> 19477557

[Perinatal mortality assessment in native and immigrant women: influence of exhaustiveness and quality of the registries].

Isabel Río Sánchez1, Susana Bosch Sánchez, Adela Castelló Pastor, Aurora López-Maside, Carmen García Senchermes, Oscar Zurriaga Llorens, Sol Juárez, Marisa Rebagliato Ruso, Francisco Bolúmar Montrull.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To analyze the exhaustiveness and reliability of the data on perinatal mortality in two Spanish registries, namely, the National Statistics Institute and the Perinatal Mortality Registry of the Valencian Community and to calculate and compare the perinatal mortality rate (PMR) and its components in native and immigrant women, based on the cases reported to both registries in 2005 and 2006.
METHODS: Perinatal mortality and its components were defined according to the World Health Organization's criteria. The magnitude of underreporting was calculated by taking into account the frequencies and percentages of deaths not declared for 2005-2006. Rates and their 95% confidence intervals were calculated and compared between native and immigrant women using data from both registries.
RESULTS: Fetal and neonatal deaths were substantially underreported in the National Statistics Institute compared with the Perinatal Mortality Registry of the Valencian Community. Moreover, in the National Statistics Institute, some neonatal deaths among the offspring of immigrant women were misclassified as being of Spanish nationality. These two factors distorted the proportion of fetal and neonatal deaths in immigrant women, giving rise to an underestimation of the PMR and its components, since the rates obtained from the Perinatal Mortality Registry of the Valencian Community were higher in immigrant than in Spanish women, particularly among east-European and sub-Saharan women.
CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate that both registries are complementary. However, the Perinatal Mortality Registry of the Valencian Community was found to be more exhaustive and to have greater reliability. Our results also suggest the importance of monitoring trends in PMR in the immigrant population in Spain.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19477557     DOI: 10.1016/j.gaceta.2009.01.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gac Sanit        ISSN: 0213-9111            Impact factor:   2.139


  3 in total

Review 1.  Revisiting the Healthy Migrant Paradox in Perinatal Health Outcomes Through a Scoping Review in a Recent Host Country.

Authors:  Sol P Juárez; Gaby Ortiz-Barreda; Andrés A Agudelo-Suárez; Elena Ronda-Pérez
Journal:  J Immigr Minor Health       Date:  2017-02

2.  Inequalities in perinatal mortality rates among immigrant and native population in Spain, 2005-2008.

Authors:  Carmen Barona-Vilar; Aurora López-Maside; Susana Bosch-Sánchez; Jordi Pérez-Panadés; Inmaculada Melchor-Alós; Rosa Mas-Pons; Óscar Zurriaga
Journal:  J Immigr Minor Health       Date:  2014-02

3.  Disparities in pre-eclampsia and eclampsia among immigrant women giving birth in six industrialised countries.

Authors:  M L Urquia; R H Glazier; A J Gagnon; L H Mortensen; A-M Nybo Andersen; T Janevic; S Guendelman; D Thornton; F Bolumar; I Río Sánchez; R Small; M-A Davey; A Hjern
Journal:  BJOG       Date:  2014-04-24       Impact factor: 6.531

  3 in total

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