Outcome of very preterm birth: children reviewed with ease at 2 years differ from those followed up with difficulty
a South Cleveland Hospital, Middlesbrough
TS4 3BW, b Royal Victoria Infirmary,
Newcastle upon Tyne
Correspondence to: Dr Win Tin.
Accepted 11 February 1998
AIM
To determine whether those most easily
reviewed in a population prevalence study differ from those followed up
only with difficulty.
METHODS
All babies born before 32 weeks of
gestation in the North of England in 1983, 1990, and 1991 were traced,
and all the survivors assessed at two years by one of two independent clinicians.
RESULTS
818 of the 1138 live born babies survived
to discharge. There was some non-significant, excess disability in the
5% of long term survivors who were difficult to trace because of
social mobility, but eight times as much severe disability in the 1%
(9/796) in care and in the 5% (38/796) whose parents initially failed
to keep a series of home or hospital appointments for interview, and
five times as much emergent disability in the 2.7% (22/818) who died
after discharge but before their second birthday. Had the babies who
were seen without difficulty been considered representative of all the
babies surviving to discharge, the reported disability rate would have
been two thirds what it really was (6.9% instead of 11.0%).
CONCLUSIONS
Population prevalence studies
that ignore those who seem reluctant to cooperate risk serious
ascertainment bias.
|
Key messages
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© 1998 by Archives of Disease in Childhood
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