Abstract

BackgroundModern obstetrics is faced with a serious paradox. Obstetric practice is becoming increasingly interventionist based on empirical evidence but without a theoretical basis for such intervention. Whereas obstetric models of perinatal death show that mortality declines exponentially with increasing gestational duration, temporal increases in medically indicated labour induction and cesarean delivery have resulted in rising rates of preterm birth and declining rates of postterm birth. Other problems include a disconnection between patterns of gestational age-specific growth restriction (constant across gestation) and gestational age-specific perinatal mortality (exponential decline with increasing duration) and the paradox of intersecting perinatal mortality curves (low birth weight infants of smokers have lower neonatal mortality rates than the low birth weight infants of non-smokers).DiscussionThe fetuses at risk approach is a causal model that brings coherence to the various perinatal phenomena. Under this formulation, pregnancy complications (such as preeclampsia), labour induction/cesarean delivery, birth, revealed small-for-gestational age and death show coherent patterns of incidence. The fetuses at risk formulation also provides a theoretical justification for medically indicated early delivery, the cornerstone of modern obstetrics. It permits a conceptualization of the number needed to treat (e.g., as low as 2 for emergency cesarean delivery in preventing perinatal death given placental abruption and fetal bradycardia) and a calculation of the marginal number needed to treat (i.e., the number of additional medically indicated labour inductions/cesarean deliveries required to prevent one perinatal death). Data from the United States showed that between 1995–96 and 1999–2000 rates of labour induction/cesarean delivery increased by 45.1 per 1,000 and perinatal mortality decreased by 0.31 per 1,000 total births among singleton pregnancies at > = 28 weeks of gestation. The marginal number needed to treat was 145 (45.1/0.31), showing that 145 excess labour inductions/cesarean deliveries in 1999–2000 (relative to 1995–96) were responsible for preventing 1 perinatal death among singleton pregnancies at > = 28 weeks gestation.SummaryThe fetuses at risk approach, with its focus on incidence measures, provides a coherent view of perinatal phenomena. It also provides a theoretical justification for medically indicated early delivery and reconciles the contemporary divide between obstetric theory and obstetric practice.

Highlights

  • Modern obstetrics is faced with a serious paradox

  • Summary: The fetuses at risk approach, with its focus on incidence measures, provides a coherent view of perinatal phenomena. It provides a theoretical justification for medically indicated early delivery and reconciles the contemporary divide between obstetric theory and obstetric practice

  • This paper examines the 'paradox of modern obstetrics' [15] and various other conundrums within perinatology and discusses the 'fetuses at risk approach' as a potential solution

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Summary

Discussion

2.1 Problems with traditional models The conundrums and paradoxes evident in contemporary perinatology are, at least partly, a consequence of the manner in which time related concepts are addressed in traditional models. The fetuses at risk approach provides insights into issues as diverse as the etiology of cerebral palsy [74] and the need for customized fetal growth standards [59,75] It shows that the rate of critical neurologic injury that causes cerebral palsy increases with advancing gestational age [74] and suggests that the pregnancy complications (which precede preterm birth) are. Incidence of medically indicated early delivery, birth, revealed SGA, and death The rate of labor induction and/or cesarean delivery increased with increasing gestational age (Figure 5a), being lowest among pregnancies with no medical risk factors and higher among pregnancies with complications. The systematic nature of the problem means that the incidence patterns of perinatal mortality and morbidity are not seriously affected,

Background
Summary
Health Canada
16. Joseph KS
24. Nelson KB
27. Gruenwald P
29. David R
41. World Health Organization
46. Yerushalmy J
56. Cheung YB
64. Lerner JP
69. The Magpie Trial Collaborative Group
Findings
77. Joseph KS: Form should follow function in epidemiologic modeling
81. Crowley P
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