Optimizing Outcomes in Regionalized Perinatal Care: Integrating Maternal and Neonatal Emergency Referral, Triage, and Transport

Author:

Stewart Michael J.,Smith Jacqui,Boland Rosemarie A.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

Reference60 articles.

1. Marlow N, Bennett C, Draper ES, Hennessy EM, Morgan AS, Costeloe KL. Perinatal outcomes for extremely preterm babies in relation to place of birth in England: the EPICure 2 study. Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed. 2014;99(3):F181–F8.

2. •• Goh A, Browning Carmo K, Morris J, Berry A, Wall M, Abdel-Latif M. Outcomes of high-risk obstetric transfers in New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory: The High-Risk Obstetric Transfer Study. Aust N Z J Obstet Gynaecol. 2015;55(5):434–9. This research identified that one third of in utero transfer for TPTL did not deliver and identified clinical characteristics of the group who did not deliver. Such information could be used to inform the development of a preterm birth prediction model.

3. Boland RA, Dawson JA, Davis PG, Doyle LW. Why birthplace still matters for infants born before 32 weeks: infant mortality associated with birth at 22–31 weeks’ gestation in non-tertiary hospitals in Victoria over two decades. Aust N Z J Obstet Gynaecol. 2015;55(2):163–9.

4. • Boland RA, Davis PG, Dawson JA, Doyle LW. Outcomes of infants born at 22–27 weeks’ gestation in Victoria according to outborn/inborn birth status. Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed. 2017;102(2):F153–F61. This paper highlights the significant differences in mortality rates for outborn compared with inborn EPT infants in Victoria, largely because outborn EPT infant are less likely to be admitted to NICU (and die at the birth hospital) after livebirth compared with inborn peers.

5. The EXPRESS Group. One-year survival of extremely preterm infants after active perinatal care in Sweden. JAMA. 2009;301(21):2225–33.

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