RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: To analyze the causes of neonatal mortality, its distribution, the moment of appearance and risk factors. PATIENTS AND METHOD: We studied a cohort of 46,297 live newborns born at the mentioned hospital, weighing 500 g or more. In a database we registered: birth weight, gestational age, days of hospital stay, discharged condition, one and five Apgar minute score, morbidity, death causes, moment of death, reducible death/reducible difficult death rate presented in less than 24 hours, 1 to 6 days, and 7 to 27 postnatal days. We compared morbidity, mortality, and risk factors in a three-year period to facilitate the analysis. RESULTS: Mortality increased with the lesser one minute Apgar score: 0.2, 9.7 and 42.9% when score was 7-10, 4-6, or 0-3, respectively, and 0.6, 41.9 and 62.9% at five minute Apgar score. Malformations were the first cause of death, which increased from 28.6 to 40.3%. Respiratory distress syndrome mortality decreased 34% and that of meconium aspiration syndrome 53%. Reducible death/hardly reducible death rate occurred from 1 to 6 days decreased 67%, from 5.2 to 1.7 (reference value 1). CONCLUSIONS: Preventable causes of death decreased significantly, particularly those related to perinatal causes, although they are still high compared with developed countries.
Assuntos
Mortalidade Infantil , Índice de Apgar , Peso ao Nascer , Causas de Morte , Feminino , Idade Gestacional , Maternidades/estatística & dados numéricos , Humanos , Recém-Nascido , Masculino , México/epidemiologia , Estudos Retrospectivos , Fatores de RiscoRESUMO
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the neonatal mortality and the specific neonatal mortality rates by groups of birthweight and gestacional age, at the Ignacio García Téllez National Medical Center which is a reference tertiary perinatal center of the Social Security Mexican Institute for the Yucatan Peninsula, along the period of 1995-2004. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A cohort of 46,297 live newborns was studied with birtweight of 500 grams or more, that were discharged between January 1st 1995 and December 31st 2004. Birthweight, gestational age, length of hospitalization, condition at discharge were captured in a data base. Triennial analysis of mortality was done. RESULTS: The proportion of neonates with birthweight <2,500 g increased and 19% neonates <1,000 g 50%, the increment was 21% for preterm neonates, 46% for immature, and 40% for those extremely immature. The early neonatal mortality rate diminished from 7.0 to 6.9, the late mortality from 3.0 to 2.2, the neonatal from 10.0 to 9.2/1,000 live newborn, the survival increased 232% in neonates with birthweight between 500-749 g, 25% between 750-999 g, 5.8% between 1,000-1,249 g, 8.2% between 1,250-1,499 g. The neonatal mortality decreased 31.8% from the expected, because the adjusted neonatal mortality rate was 13.5 compared with the observed 9.2/1,000 live newborn. CONCLUSIONS: There was a significant increase of the survival with lesser birthweight and gestational age, although it was not reflected in the brut neonatal mortality rate because there was an increase of the risk population.