Challenges and priorities for surveillance of stillbirths: a report on two workshops

Public Health Rep. 2009 Sep-Oct;124(5):652-9. doi: 10.1177/003335490912400507.

Abstract

Stillbirths, those with and without birth defects, are an important public health topic. The National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention conducted two workshops during April and July 2005. Both workshops explored the challenges of conducting surveillance of stillbirths. Workshop participants considered an approach that added the surveillance of stillbirths, those with and without birth defects, as part of existing population-based birth defects surveillance programs in Iowa and Atlanta. The workshops addressed three key aspects for expanding birth defects programs to conduct active, population-based surveillance on stillbirths: (1) case identification and ascertainment, (2) data collection, and (3) data use and project evaluation. Participants included experts in pediatrics, obstetrics, epidemiology, maternal-fetal medicine, perinatology and pediatric pathology, midwifery, as well as practicing clinicians and pathologists. Expanding existing birth defects surveillance programs to include information of stillbirths could potentially enhance the data available on fetal death reports and also could benefit such programs by improving the ascertainment of birth defects.

MeSH terms

  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S.
  • Congenital Abnormalities / epidemiology
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Population Surveillance / methods
  • Pregnancy
  • Stillbirth / epidemiology*
  • United States / epidemiology