| Literature DB >> 34454675 |
Lucia Hug1, Danzhen You2, Hannah Blencowe3, Anu Mishra2, Zhengfan Wang4, Miranda J Fix5, Jon Wakefield5, Allisyn C Moran6, Victor Gaigbe-Togbe7, Emi Suzuki8, Dianna M Blau9, Simon Cousens3, Andreea Creanga10, Trevor Croft11, Kenneth Hill12, K S Joseph13, Salome Maswime14, Elizabeth M McClure15, Robert Pattinson16, Jon Pedersen17, Lucy K Smith18, Jennifer Zeitlin19, Leontine Alkema4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Stillbirths are a major public health issue and a sensitive marker of the quality of care around pregnancy and birth. The UN Global Strategy for Women's, Children's and Adolescents' Health (2016-30) and the Every Newborn Action Plan (led by UNICEF and WHO) call for an end to preventable stillbirths. A first step to prevent stillbirths is obtaining standardised measurement of stillbirth rates across countries. We estimated stillbirth rates and their trends for 195 countries from 2000 to 2019 and assessed progress over time.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34454675 PMCID: PMC8417352 DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(21)01112-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet ISSN: 0140-6736 Impact factor: 79.321
Stillbirth rates and number of stillbirths globally and by region, 2000, 2010, and 2019
| 2000 | 2010 | 2019 | Percentage decrease 2000 to 2019 | 2000 | 2010 | 2019 | Percentage decrease 2000 to 2019 | Share of total stillbirths worldwide in 2019 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sub-Saharan Africa | 28·2 (25·7 to 32·7) | 24·5 (22·5 to 27·8) | 21·7 (19·9 to 24·8) | 23·0% (15·4 to 30·6) | 805 (731 to 938) | 850 (778 to 968) | 856 (782 to 980) | −6·4% (−17·1 to 4·5) | 43·6% (39·5 to 46·1) | |
| Eastern and southern Africa | 27·3 (24·4 to 32·4) | 23·7 (21·6 to 27·3) | 20·5 (18·7 to 23·6) | 24·9% (16·0 to 33·8) | 395 (351 to 471) | 406 (368 to 468) | 390 (355 to 450) | 1·2% (−10·9 to 13·2) | 19·8% (17·4 to 21·7) | |
| West and central Africa | 29·0 (25·0 to 35·9) | 25·2 (22·1 to 30·1) | 22·8 (19·8 to 27·7) | 21·4% (9·0 to 32·9) | 410 (352 to 510) | 444 (387 to 534) | 466 (403 to 568) | −13·7% (−32·2 to 3·4) | 23·7% (20·2 to 26·7) | |
| Middle East and north Africa | 15·9 (14·0 to 19·2) | 12·2 (10·9 to 14·4) | 10·3 (9·1 to 12·3) | 35·3% (25·8 to 43·9) | 125 (110 to 151) | 116 (103 to 136) | 105 (92 to 125) | 16·4% (4·1 to 27·7) | 5·3% (4·5 to 6·1) | |
| South Asia | 32·1 (27·6 to 38·1) | 23·7 (22·3 to 26·4) | 18·2 (17·6 to 22·1) | 43·4% (26·3 to 50·1) | 1276 (1092 to 1526) | 893 (839 to 995) | 651 (630 to 796) | 49·0% (33·2 to 55·3) | 33·1% (31·5 to 37·8) | |
| East Asia and the Pacific | 14·2 (13·1 to 15·6) | 10·3 (9·7 to 11·1) | 7·0 (6·4 to 7·7) | 50·8% (45·1 to 55·9) | 458 (424 to 504) | 333 (313 to 358) | 213 (196 to 236) | 53·5% (48·0 to 58·3) | 10·8% (9·5 to 11·6) | |
| Latin America and the Caribbean | 11·2 (10·5 to 12·4) | 9·0 (8·5 to 9·7) | 7·9 (7·4 to 8·8) | 29·3% (22·1 to 36·1) | 131 (122 to 144) | 98 (92 to 105) | 83 (78 to 92) | 36·3% (29·8 to 42·5) | 4·2% (3·7 to 4·6) | |
| North America | 3·3 (3·2 to 3·4) | 3·0 (2·9 to 3·0) | 3·0 (2·6-3·4) | 9·8% (−2·6 to 20·6) | 14 (14 to 15) | 13 (13 to 14) | 13 (11 to 15) | 9·3% (−3·3 to 20·2) | 0·7% (0·5 to 0·7) | |
| Europe and central Asia | 6·9 (6·5 to 7·5) | 4·9 (4·7 to 5·2) | 4·1 (3·9 to 4·4) | 41·2% (36·7 to 45·5) | 70 (66 to 77) | 55 (53 to 59) | 44 (42 to 48) | 37·1% (32·2 to 41·8) | 2·3% (2·0 to 2·4) | |
| Eastern Europe and central Asia | 9·7 (8·9 to 10·9) | 6·4 (6·0 to 7·0) | 5·0 (4·7 to 5·5) | 48·4% (43·0 to 53·4) | 52 (47 to 58) | 39 (37 to 42) | 30 (28 to 34) | 41·1% (34·8 to 46·8) | 1·5% (1·3 to 1·7) | |
| Western Europe | 3·9 (3·7 to 4·0) | 3·1 (3·1 to 3·2) | 2·9 (2·7 to 3·0) | 25·7% (21·1 to 29·9) | 19 (18 to 20) | 16 (16 to 17) | 14 (13 to 15) | 26·4% (21·9 to 30·5) | 0·7% (0·6 to 0·7) | |
| Low income | 29·5 (26·6 to 34·7) | 25·7 (23·6 to 29·2) | 22·7 (20·9 to 25·6) | 23·1% (15·1 to 31·7) | 516 (464 to 610) | 534 (489 to 610) | 532 (490 to 603) | −3·1% (−14·2 to 8·7) | 27·1% (24·1 to 29·0) | |
| Lower-middle income | 28·0 (25·2 to 32·3) | 21·2 (20·1 to 23·4) | 17·1 (16·5 to 20·0) | 38·9% (26·5 to 45·0) | 1759 (1577 to 2037) | 1370 (1296 to 1514) | 1111 (1073 to 1303) | 36·8% (23·7 to 43·3) | 56·5% (54·8 to 60·4) | |
| Upper-middle income | 13·4 (12·6 to 14·4) | 9·7 (9·3 to 10·3) | 7·0 (6·6 to 7·6) | 47·6% (42·7 to 51·9) | 554 (522 to 599) | 409 (391 to 433) | 285 (269 to 309) | 48·6% (43·8 to 52·9) | 14·5% (12·9 to 15·3) | |
| High income | 3·9 (3·8 to 4·2) | 3·3 (3·2 to 3·4) | 3·0 (2·8 to 3·2) | 24·4% (19·4 to 28·9) | 51 (49 to 54) | 43 (42 to 46) | 38 (36 to 40) | 25·9% (21·0 to 30·4) | 1·9% (1·7 to 2·0) | |
Numbers in parentheses are 90% uncertainty intervals.
UNICEF regional classifications (appendix pp 7–8).
World Bank Group 2020 classification.
Figure 1Stillbirth rates and numbers of stillbirths by region, 2000–19
Shading around the lines shows 90% uncertainty intervals.
Figure 2Stillbirth rates by country, 2019
Figure 3Global share of stillbirths by region, 2000–19
Figure 4Annual rates of reduction in mortality outcomes globally and by region, 2000–19*
Horizontal bars are UIs. Maternal mortality ratio is shown with 80% UIs. All other indicators use 90% UIs. UI=uncertainty interval. *The annual rate of reduction for maternal mortality ratio refers to the years 2000–17.
Figure 5Annual rates of reduction in stillbirth rate globally and by region, 2000–09 and 2010–19
Horizontal bars are 90% uncertainty intervals.
Figure 6Ratio of stillbirth rate to neonatal mortality rate globally and by region, 2000–19
Shading shows 90% uncertainty intervals.