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Health

15 million premature babies born each year

Prematurity is the leading cause of newborn deaths, according to an international report that set new goals for all countries on reducing the problem.

Simple care could save hundreds of thousands of lives worldwide, report says

A mother performs kangaroo care, or skin-to-skin contact, with her premature baby in Havana, a simple approach that could save an estimated 450,000 lives a year. (Claudia Daut/Reuters)

Prematurity is the leading cause of newborn deaths, according to an international report that set new goals for all countries on reducing the problem.

Worldwide, 15 million of the 135 million babies born in 2010 were premature, and of those, 1.1 million died, according to Wednesday's report by the March of Dimes, United Nations, Save the Children and World Health Organization.

"Being born too soon is an unrecognized killer," saidDr.Joy Lawn, co-editor of the report.

It's the first ranking of preterm birth rates by country, the groups said.

For countries like Canada with a newborn mortality rate of less than five per 1,000 live births, the goal is to eliminate preterm births before 37 weeks of pregnancy.

Survivors face a lifetime of potential disability. About a quarter bornearlier than 28 weeks are blindor visually impaired,five to 10 per cent are deaf, 40 per cent have chronic lung disease andan unknown number havelearning impairments.

Canada's rate was 7.78 per cent.

The 10 countries with the highest number of preterm births include Brazil, the United States, India and Nigeria.

Rates of preterm birth ranged fromfour per cent in Belarus to 18 per cent in Malawi andgenerally mirrored poverty.

The U.S. rate was 12 per cent, the worst among G8 countries.

In high-income countries, the increases in the number of preterm births are linked to the number of older women having babies, increased use of fertility drugs and the resulting multiple pregnancies, and lifestyle challenges such as obesity, smoking and diabetes.

Medically unnecessary inductions and C-sectionsbefore full term have also increased preterm births.

The report's authors championed two strategies: prevention and care.

Prevention includeseducationon family planning and adolescent friendly services.Care ranges from resuscitation of infants and kangaroo care holding newbornsskin to skin on the mother's chest to keep themwarm, making frequent breastfeeding easy, preventing infections and providing constant maternal supervision.

Kangaroo care alone couldsave 450,000 lives a year, the authors said.

"Weighing less than a packet of sugar at only 2.2 poundsTantufye survived with the help of kangaroo mother care,"her mother Grace, in Malawi, said in the report. Shesurvived against the odds and is now a healthy young girl.

Giving steroid injections for mothers in premature labour that cost$1 per injection could save almost 400,000 babies a year by helpingdevelop immature fetal lungs and prevent respiratory problems.

The report was funded by 40 organizations, including the government of Canada.