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Research shows that fetal surveillance from 39 weeks' gestation reduces stillbirth in women of South Asian origin

Putting theory into practice to reduce stillbirth
L-R: Neelima Kota with Baby Arjun and Dr Miranda Davies-Tuck Credit: Hudson Institute of Medical Research

Translating analysis into action with immediate impact, Dr. Miranda Davies-Tuck turned her study of perinatal mortality into new clinical practices that dramatically reduce rates of stillbirth.

After previously identifying that women of South Asian origin (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka) had higher risk of in late pregnancy, she recommended earlier fetal monitoring for this group of women, and the results were striking.

Dr. Davies-Tuck said that initial research showed the rate of stillbirth at 39 weeks among women of South Asian origin was equivalent to what it is for the rest of the population at 41 weeks, suggesting that pregnancy length might be shorter for South Asian women.

Recommendations to reduce stillbirth rates

"This work, published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, provides evidence of the first potential intervention to reduce stillbirth in South Asian women and provides an alternative to earlier routine induction of labor," Dr. Davies-Tuck said.

"Following our recommendations, Victoria's largest maternity service implemented the new clinical guideline to offer South Asian-born women fetal surveillance from 39 weeks instead of 41 weeks, which is the usual practice," she said.

"There was a 64% reduction in term stillbirth and significant reductions in rates of early neonatal death and special care nursery admission and the rates of stillbirth at term for South Asian women became equivalent to all other women."

Intervention to reduce stillbirth,

"We have not observed a stillbirth at 40 or 41 weeks since its introduction."

"There were no significant differences in birth weight, admission to the , or other important measures of maternal and ."

"To our knowledge this is the first stillbirth prevention intervention for migrant globally," Dr. Davies-Tuck said.

More information: Miranda L. Davies-Tuck et al, Fetal surveillance from 39 weeks' gestation to reduce stillbirth in South Asian-born women, American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.ajog.2023.02.028

Citation: Research shows that fetal surveillance from 39 weeks' gestation reduces stillbirth in women of South Asian origin (2023, June 20) retrieved 27 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2023-06-fetal-surveillance-weeks-gestation-stillbirth.html
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