Australia’s mothers and babies 2007
Embryology - 2 Dec 2023 ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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Introduction
This data summarised below is provided to help you as a clinician or researcher understand the current trends in reproductive medicine within Australia.
The information is based upon data from the publication "Australia's mothers and babies 2007"[1] and is provided for educational purposes only. The original full publication is available online from AIHW Perinatal statistics series no. 23.
Australia’s mothers and babies: 2017 | 2016 | 2015 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 | 2007 | National Perinatal Statistics Unit | AIHW | Australian Statistics | birth |
Statistics Links: Introduction | Reports | World Population | World Fertility | World Infant Mortality | Maternal Mortality | Australia | Brazil | Canada | China | Germany | India | Indonesia | Europe | Myanmar | Netherlands | Spain | United Kingdom | Romania | Uganda | United States | BGD Tutorial - Applied Embryology and Teratology | National Perinatal Statistics Unit | AIHW | Category:Statistics | |
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Mothers
- 289,496 women gave birth resulting in a total of 294,205 births
- increase of 4.3% from 2006, and 14.4% increase since 2004
- 2,177 were fetal deaths
- 29.9 years was the maternal mean age in 2007
- compared with 28.9 years in 1998
- 41.6% of mothers had their first baby and 33.5% had their second baby
- 10,883 women were Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander (3.8% of all women who gave birth)
- 39.5% of all mothers in the Northern Territory
- 25.2 years was the average age of women who gave birth
Assisted reproduction technology
- 3.1% women received ART treatment
- ranging from 1.4% in the Australian Capital Territory to 3.7% in Tasmania
- 34.1 years was the average age of women who received ART
- 62.7% of mothers who received ART treatment were having their first baby and 37.3% had given birth previously
Smoking during pregnancy
- 16.6% of women smoked during pregnancy
- this proportion is little changed over the previous five years
Preterm birth
- 7.4% of all mothers (less than 37 completed weeks of gestation)
- 38.8 weeks is the average duration of pregnancy
Multiple pregnancy
- 4,634 multiple pregnancies (1.6% of all mothers) increasing due to the increased use of ART
- 4,558 twin pregnancies
- 76 triplet pregnancies
- no quadruplet pregnancies
Presentation at birth
- 94.6% cephalic (any part vertex, face, or brow of the fetal head)
- 4.0% breech (buttocks or feet)
Method of birth
- 57.9% vaginal births
- 11.2% had an instrumental vaginal delivery (forceps or vacuum extraction)
- 30.9% caesarean section births
- 21.1% in 1998, 30.8% in 2006, rate recently stable
- 83.3% of these were repeat caesarean sections
- epilepsy, diabetes mellitus and hypertension, antepartum haemorrhage, gestational diabetes, cord prolapse and retained placenta, pregnancy-induced hypertension, fetal distress in labour and post-partum haemorrhage rates
Postnatal length of stay
- 2.0 days non-instrumental vaginal birth
- 3.0 days vacuum extraction delivery
- 4.0 days caesarean section or forceps delivery
Babies
- 292,027 live births and 2,177 fetal deaths
- stillbirth rate of 7.4 per 1,000 births
- most births occurred in March, August and October
- 105.6 sex ratio (number of male per 100 female liveborn babies)
Gestational age
- 90.9% term (37–41 weeks gestation)
- 8.1% were preterm
- 33.2 weeks was the mean gestational age for all preterm births
- Preterm births were classified groups of 20–27 weeks, 28–31 weeks and 32–36 weeks
Birthweight
- 92.1% of liveborn babies had a birthweight in the range 2,500–4,499 grams
- average birthweight was 3,374 grams
- 17,976 (6.2%) low birthweight (weighing less than 2,500 grams)
- 2,956 (1.0%) very low birthweight (weighing less than 1,500 grams)
- 1,288 (0.4%) extremely low birthweight (weighing less than 1,000 grams)
Apgar scores
- 1.4% of liveborn babies had a low Apgar score (between 0 and 6) at 5 minutes (More? Apgar test)
Special care nurseries or neonatal intensive care units
- 14.5% of liveborn babies were admitted to an SCN or NICU
Perinatal mortality
- 2,177 fetal deaths (7.4 per 1,000 births)
- fetal deaths are if the birthweight is at least 400 grams or the gestational age is 20 weeks or more
- 846 neonatal deaths (2.9 per 1,000 live births)
- neonatal deaths are those occurring in live births up to 28 completed days after birth
- 3,024 perinatal deaths
- perinatal death includes birthweight of at least 400 grams or, where birthweight is unknown, a gestational age of at least 20 weeks
- 23.5% congenital abnormalities (anomalies)
- 13.8% maternal conditions
- 12.6% unexplained antepartum death
References
- ↑ Laws P & Sullivan EA 2009. Australia's mothers and babies 2007 AIHW Perinatal statistics series no. 23 Cat. no. PER 48. Sydney: AIHW National Perinatal Statistics Unit.