Publication | Closed Access
Prediction of possibly preventable death: a case‐control study of postneonatal mortality in southern New Zealand
14
Citations
16
References
1990
Year
Preventable DeathMortality StudiesEpidemiological OutcomeCase‐control StudyNew ZealandPediatricsMaternal HealthPerinatal EpidemiologySouthern New ZealandPreterm BirthPrenatal CareMortality RatesEpidemiologic MethodPublic HealthLife ExpectancyBirth WeightEpidemiologyHigh-risk Pregnancy
The postneonatal mortality rate in three southern regions of New Zealand was 8.1 per 1000 live births for 1979-1984. The possibly preventable postneonatal mortality rate was 7.1 per 1000 live births and data on 377 possibly preventable deaths and 936 randomly selected controls were used to develop a two-stage risk-scoring system. Logistic regression analysis was undertaken separately on two sub-samples of the total sample. The data were used to evaluate three other previously published scoring systems. The four variables used in our birth score (mother's age, parity, marital status, and birth weight) have all appeared in other scoring systems, and this score could identify a group of infants in southern New Zealand with an estimated 1.7% mortality rate in the first year of life. It is suggested that currently the only valid use of risk-scoring in this region is for the definition of a high-risk population for the purpose of evaluating potential intervention strategies.
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