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Before Viability: A Geographically Based Outcome Study of Infants Weighing 500 Grams or Less at Birth

84

Citations

32

References

1998

Year

Abstract

The majority of infants born at gestational age 20 weeks or more weighing <500 g were stillborn. Among live births, neonatal intensive care was withheld in 70% and initiated in 30%. Of the latter, 11% survived to 36 months of age, and of these, 4 infants (31%), most of whom are small for gestational age, female infants, avoided major disabilities but 9 (69%) had one or more major disabilities. Survivors are prone to rehospitalizations early in life, slow growth, feeding problems, and minor visual difficulties; rates of learning-related and behavioral problems at school age are not yet known. Implications. Parents and caregivers faced with the impending delivery of an infant in this gestational age/birth weight category should understand that survival without multiple major disabilities is possible but rare. They should be made aware of local population-based results and not just isolated reports.

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