Malta Independent

Average of 337 premature births between 2014 and 2016

-

Between 2014 and 2016 an average of 337 babies were born pre-term each year, Health Minister Chris Fearne said this week.

He was replying to a parliament­ary question by Partit Demokratik­u MP Godfrey Farrugia.

Pre-term means babies born before 37 weeks.

The principal factors leading to these pre-term births were: multiple pregnancie­s, IVF, chronic illness in the mothers (including high blood pressure and diabetes) and intrauteri­ne growth retardatio­n in the foetus.

A total of 13,343 babies were born in Malta between 2014 and 2016, Fearne said, 2,500 of which were born to foreign mothers.

Replying to another PQ, Fearne said that 449 infants under the age of three had been admitted to or transferre­d to the Neonatal Paediatric Intensive Care Unit (NPICU) in 2015. Average bed occupancy that year stood at 81%.

In 2016 there were 472 admissions and transfers to the NPICU and the average bed occupancy was 87%. The figures for 2017 are still being compiled.

The minister said that there were 13 resident doctors at the unit. Referring to the nurse-to-patient ratio, he said that this varied according to the patients’ conditions. Some infants require a 1:1 nurse-to-patient ratio while others may require high dependency care that does not require a 1:1 ratio. These ratios, he said, compare well to similar units abroad.

Farrugia also asked for the percentage and actual number of babies born with a congenital abnormalit­y (anomalies or defects) in 2015, 2016 and 2017. He also asked how many babies had died during the neonatal period during the same timeframe.

Fearne said 393 babies (3%) had been born with a congenital anomaly (according to EUROCAT criteria) between 2013 and 2015.

Twelve of these were stillbirth­s and 14 died during the neonatal period (within 27 days from birth).

The main reasons were: multiple congenital anomalies, congenital heart defects, nervous system defects and chromosoma­l defects.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta