Abstract
SummaryBackgroundStillbirths 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.MethodsFor a systematic assessment, we created a dataset of 2833 country-year datapoints from 171 countries relevant to stillbirth rates, including data from registration and health information systems, household-based surveys, and population-based studies. After data quality assessment and exclusions, we used 1531 datapoints to estimate country-specific stillbirth rates for 195 countries from 2000 to 2019 using a Bayesian hierarchical temporal sparse regression model, according to a definition of stillbirth of at least 28 weeks’ gestational age. Our model combined covariates with a temporal smoothing process such that estimates were informed by data for country-periods with high quality data, while being based on covariates for country-periods with little or no data on stillbirth rates. Bias and additional uncertainty associated with observations based on alternative stillbirth definitions and source types, and observations that were subject to non-sampling errors, were included in the model. We compared the estimated stillbirth rates and trends to previously reported mortality estimates in children younger than 5 years.FindingsGlobally in 2019, an estimated 2·0 million babies (90% uncertainty interval [UI] 1·9–2·2) were stillborn at 28 weeks or more of gestation, with a global stillbirth rate of 13·9 stillbirths (90% UI 13·5–15·4) per 1000 total births. Stillbirth rates in 2019 varied widely across regions, from 22·8 stillbirths (19·8–27·7) per 1000 total births in west and central Africa to 2·9 (2·7–3·0) in western Europe. After west and central Africa, eastern and southern Africa and south Asia had the second and third highest stillbirth rates in 2019. The global annual rate of reduction in stillbirth rate was estimated at 2·3% (90% UI 1·7–2·7) from 2000 to 2019, which was lower than the 2·9% (2·5–3·2) annual rate of reduction in neonatal mortality rate (for neonates aged <28 days) and the 4·3% (3·8–4·7) annual rate of reduction in mortality rate among children aged 1–59 months during the same period. Based on the lower bound of the 90% UIs, 114 countries had an estimated decrease in stillbirth rate since 2000, with four countries having a decrease of at least 50·0%, 28 having a decrease of 25·0–49·9%, 50 having a decrease of 10·0–24·9%, and 32 having a decrease of less than 10·0%. For the remaining 81 countries, we found no decrease in stillbirth rate since 2000. Of these countries, 34 were in sub-Saharan Africa, 16 were in east Asia and the Pacific, and 15 were in Latin America and the Caribbean.InterpretationProgress in reducing the rate of stillbirths has been slow compared with decreases in the mortality rate of children younger than 5 years. Accelerated improvements are most needed in the regions and countries with high stillbirth rates, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. Future prevention of stillbirths needs increased efforts to raise public awareness, improve data collection, assess progress, and understand public health priorities locally, all of which require investment.FundingBill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.
Highlights
Rate of stillbirth is regarded by the global health com munity as an important marker of a health system’s quality of care during pregnancy and childbirth,[1] but global monitoring of trends in stillbirth rate has been infrequent
Evidence before this study Before the release of estimates from the UN Inter-agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation, to our knowledge, the only global estimates of stillbirths were published by WHO and the Global Burden of Disease Study (GBD; latest estimates in 2017)
Stillbirth estimates from GBD 2017 were based on a space-time Gaussian process regression model for estimating the stillbirth rate to neonatal mortality rate ratio as a function of educational attainment of women of reproductive age, a non-linear function of the neonatal death rate, location random effects, and random effects for specific data source types nested within each location
Summary
Rate of stillbirth is regarded by the global health com munity as an important marker of a health system’s quality of care during pregnancy and childbirth,[1] but global monitoring of trends in stillbirth rate has been infrequent. Countries and the global health community have given notably less attention to this public health issue than to maternal and child mortality.[2] Stillbirths are missing as a www.thelancet.com Vol 398 August 28, 2021. The previous estimates from WHO for developed countries with high quality data were obtained from stillbirth rate data directly, and smoothed with Loess regression. Stillbirths are a major public health issue and a sensitive marker of the quality of care around pregnancy and birth. We estimated stillbirth rates and their trends for 195 countries from 2000 to 2019 and assessed progress over time
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