| Literature DB >> 23437101 |
Natasha Nassar1, Michal Schiff, Christine L Roberts.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is concern that the rate of planned births (by pre-labour caesarean section or induction of labour) is increasing and that the gestation at which they are being conducted is decreasing. The aim of this study was to describe trends in the distribution of gestational age, and assess the contribution of planned birth to any such changes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23437101 PMCID: PMC3577819 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0056238
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Maternal characteristics and birth outcomes and relative change throughout the study period, 1994–2009.
| 1994 N (%) | 1999 N (%) | 2004 N (%) | 2009 N (%) | Relative change | |
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| Maternal age (years) | |||||
| <20 | 4,358 (5.1) | 4,098 (4.8) | 3,387 (4.0) | 3,292 (3.5) | −31.4 |
| 20–34 | 70,680 (81.8) | 67,167 (78.2) | 64,110 (76.1) | 69,068 (72.7) | −11.1 |
| 35+ | 11,313 (13.1) | 14,668 (17.1) | 16,769 (19.9) | 22,658 (23.8) | 81.7 |
| Nulliparous | 34,194 (39.5) | 35,308 (41.1) | 35,795 (42.5) | 40,345 (42.4) | 7.3 |
| Non-Australian born | 22,587 (25.9) | 23,728 (27.2) | 23,471 (27.5) | 30,278 (31.5) | 21.6 |
| Multiple birth | 1,212 (1.4) | 1,291 (1.5) | 1,305 (1.5) | 1,366 (1.4) | 0 |
| Low risk women | 51,084 (59.1) | 47,018 (54.7) | 45,313 (53.8) | 48,286 (50.8) | −14.0 |
| Preterm birth | 5,067 (5.9) | 5,562 (6.5) | 5,553 (6.6) | 6,302 (6.6) | 11.9 |
| Private hospital | 13,357 (15.4) | 15,869 (18.5) | 20,551 (24.4) | 23,478 (24.7) | 60.4 |
| Labour induction | 17,536 (20.3) | 20,612 (24.0) | 20,549 (24.4) | 24,473 (25.7) | 26.6 |
| Pre-labour caesarean section | 8,055 (9.3) | 9,147 (10.6) | 12,929 (15.3) | 16,649 (17.5) | 88.2 |
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| Livebirths | 86,980 (99.2) | 86,734 (99.4) | 85,056 (99.3) | 95,827 (99.4) | 0.2 |
| Stillbirths | 494 (0.56) | 533 (0.61) | 561 (0.66) | 598 (0.62) | 10.1 |
Relative change was calculated by: [(2009 rate –1994 rate)/(1994 rate)].
100; Test-for-trend was significant for all factors except stillbirths and multiple births, P<0.001.
Low risk pregnancies defined as primiparae, aged 20–34 years, without pregnancy complications; and with a liveborn singleton infant, born in cephalic presentation and of normal fetal growth at the 10th–90th birth weight percentile of the distribution for gestational age and infant sex. [16].
Numbers may not add up to totals due to missing data or rounding.
Figure 1Trends in onset of labour in singleton (top) and multiple (bottom) births, 1994–2009.
Figure 2Distribution of gestational age at birth NSW, Australia, 1994–2009.
Figure 3Distribution of gestational age at birth for singleton births by onset of labour, 1994–2009.
Spontaneous labour (top), induced labour (middle) and pre-labour caesarean section (bottom).
Figure 4Distribution of gestational age at birth for multiple births by onset of labour, 1994–2009.
Spontaneous labour (top), induced labour (middle) and pre-labour caesarean section (bottom).