The developmental paediatrician and neonatal follow-up |
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Authors: | Diane Moddemann and Sarah Shea |
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Affiliation: | 1 Department of Pediatrics and Child Health, Children’s Hospital and University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba;2 Department of Pediatrics, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia |
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Abstract: | Recent advances in modern perinatal and neonatal intensive care have led to an increase in the survival of premature infants. This increased survival, unfortunately, has not been accompanied by an improvement in neurodevelopmental outcomes. Premature infants, especially those with an extremely low birth weight (less than 1000 g) or those born at less than 28 weeks’ gestation, are at increased risk of major disabilities and complex, ‘low severity’ dysfunctions that have significant, lasting effects on their school function, academic performance and behaviour, as well as on family function. Neonatal follow-up programs provide a number of functions to centres providing neonatal intensive care, including quality assurance and audits, research and follow-up clinical care to neonatal intensive care unit survivors and their families. The challenge for neonatal follow-up programs is to meet the often competing objectives of providing clinical services to children and their families while providing quality assurance and audits, and high-quality long-term outcome research components, given the available resources. There is also a need for ongoing research to develop and evaluate effective postdischarge intervention programs to improve the long-term outcome of prematurity and other neonatal complications. Developmental paediatricians – with their background and training in the provision of specialized health care to children and their care-givers with respect to developmental and psychosocial well-being, and in conducting developmental and behavioural disabilities research – play a valuable role in the follow-up assessment and care of neonatal intensive care unit graduates, and strengthen the multidisciplinary research groups necessary to assess long-term outcomes and the effects of perinatal and postdischarge interventions. |
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Keywords: | Developmental outcomes Extremely low birth weight Neonatal follow-up Prematurity |
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