Yorkshire Post

Grades of pre-term children studied

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CHILDREN BORN pre-term are at no greater risk of underperfo­rming by the end of secondary school than those who arrive at full-term – unless they were very premature, a study suggests.

Despite premature babies being more likely to go on to have poorer attainment in primary education, this trend only continues up to the age of 16 for those born earlier than 32 weeks, the research found.

The study, by researcher­s Dr Neora Alterman and Maria Quigley and published in the journal Plos One, used data on children born in England from 2000-2001 who were surveyed in the population-based UK Millennium Cohort Study.

It defines pre-term births as those before 37 weeks and very pre-term births as those before 32 weeks of pregnancy. Of 11,695 children in that sample, the authors analysed data on attainment in primary school at age 11 for 6,950 pupils, and informatio­n on secondary school attainment at age 16 for 7,131 pupils.

At the end of primary school, children born very pre-term were more than twice as likely not achieve the expected level in English and maths as those born full-term, and all premature babies were more likely to underperfo­rm, the researcher­s say.

But at the end of secondary school, only children born before 32 weeks were at any increased risk of failing to pass five GCSEs, according to the study. Some 60 per cent in this group did not reach that benchmark, compared with 45.2 per cent among the total sample, the researcher­s say.

They added that further studies were needed to confirm the result.

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