were inductions. As planned births increased, maternal risks shifted, including a decline in inductions with maternal hypertension from 31.9% to 23.9%. Earlier birth was contemporaneous with increases (trend P<0.001) in neonatal and maternal morbidity from 3.0% to 3.2% and 0.9 % to 1.3%, respectively.
Conclusion:Planned birth before the due date is increasing but without reducing perinatal deaths.
Abstract:We aimed to develop a maternity hospital classification, using stable and easily available criteria, that would have wide application in maternity services research and allow comparison across state, national and international jurisdictions. A classification with 13 obstetric groupings (12 hospital groups and home births) was based on neonatal care capability, urban and rural location, annual average number of births and public/private hospital status. In a case study of early elective birth we demonstrate that neonatal morbidity differs according to the maternity hospital classification, and also that the 13 groups can be collapsed in ways that are pragmatic from a clinical and policy decision-making perspective, and are manageable for analysis.
In the first 11 months, 25% of the state's maternity practitioners had received training in the first stage of the FONT project. The FONT project has shown short-term improvements in learning and communication skills and in the participants of the project.
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