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HEALTH SERVICE UTILIZATION OF LATE PRETERM INFANTS

Preterm birth (< 37 weeks gestation) is a major health burden for affected children. Although the risk of health problems increases as the gestational age decreases, research in the last decades has revealed that even late preterm infants born at 34-36 weeks gestational age have higher mortality and morbidity than term infants. Because late preterm infants constitute three fourths of preterm infants, they are important from both public health and health policy perspectives. This doctoral thesis sought to answer important knowledge gaps in health service utilization of late preterm infants via three studies.
Study A, a systematic review and meta-analysis comparing health service utilizations of late preterm infants with those of term infants, found that late preterm infants had increased hospitalization compared with term infants that persisted from the neonatal period through adolescence. Study B is a cohort study evaluating the re-admissions and emergency department visits by late preterm and term singletons and twins for the first 5 years after birth. Study B demonstrated that late preterm infants had higher re-admission rates than term infants although differences in twins were less pronounced than in singletons. Study C is a population-based cohort study with cost analyses assessing the health care costs and resource utilization related to three different discharge timings of late preterm and term singletons: early (< 48 hours), late (48-71 hours), and very-late (72-95 hours) discharge after birth. Study C found that early discharge was not associated with the reduction of health care cost in late preterm infants, and instead was associated with an increase in the cost in term infants over the first year after birth. These findings are useful for parents, care providers, health policy makers, and guideline developers to provide optimal care for late preterm infants. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/22523
Date11 1900
CreatorsIsayama, Tetsuya
ContributorsMcDonald, Sarah, Health Research Methodology
Source SetsMcMaster University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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