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Jonathan Morris, University of Sydney
Over the past two decades there has been a major change in birth practices that has resulted in a silent but steady shift towards women giving birth before 40 weeks.
Planned early births, either by inducing labour or by planned caesarean, have fuelled this shift.
Until recently, researchers had thought there were no long-term risks to babies born a little early. However, a growing body of evidence points to long-term developmental delay by the time these children reach school.
It’s time to rethink our attitude to early planned births and to advise women and their care givers that giving birth early carries long-term as well as short-term risks.
A shifting pattern
In New South Wales, in the mid 90s, a woman was most likely to deliver at 40 weeks. Now, between 38 and 39 weeks is the most common. During that time there has also been a year-on-year increase in the number of births between 34 to 39 weeks. Currently nearly one in five of all single babies born is at 38 weeks, one in 15 at 37 weeks and one in 40 at 36 weeks.
The rise in early planned birth is a result of both planned interventions because of concerns over the mother’s and/or baby’s welfare or, less commonly, for convenience.
Factors that have contributed to planned early births on health grounds have included increased ultrasound surveillance in pregnancy, which has increased the detection of babies who are small for their gestational age. The lack of sufficiently accurate tests to distinguish a healthy small baby from a small one that is compromised means these babies can be delivered early in the belief this is a safer option.