National routine data for low birthweight and preterm births: Systematic data quality assessment for United Nations member states (2000–2020)

Author:

Okwaraji Yemisrach B.1ORCID,Bradley Ellen1,Ohuma Eric O.1,Yargawa Judith1,Suarez‐Idueta Lorena2ORCID,Requejo Jennifer34,Blencowe Hannah1,Lawn Joy E.1

Affiliation:

1. Maternal, Adolescent, Reproductive & Child Health (MARCH) Centre London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine London UK

2. Mexican Society of Public Health Mexico City Mexico

3. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Baltimore Maryland USA

4. Global Financing Facility World Bank Group Washington DC USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveLow birthweight (<2500 g) and preterm birth (<37 weeks) are markers of newborn vulnerability. To facilitate informed decisions about investments in prevention and care, it is imperative to enhance data quality and use. Hence, the objective of this study is to systematically assess the quality of data concerning low birthweight and preterm births within routine administrative data sources.DesignSystematic data quality assessment by adopting the WHO Data Quality Framework.SettingNational routine data system from UN member states.PopulationLivebirths.MethodsNational routine administrative data on low birthweight and preterm births for 195 countries from 2000 to 2020 were systematically collated, totalling >700 million live births. The WHO data quality framework was adapted to undertake standardised data quality assessments.Main outcome measuresAvailability, reporting quality, internal and external consistency of low birthweight and preterm data.ResultsMost United States Member States (64%: 124/195) had national data on low birthweight and (40%: 82/195) had data on preterm birth. Routine data system reporting was highest in North America, Australasia and Europe, where more than 95% live births had data on low birthweight and over 75% had data preterm births. In contrast, data reporting was lowest in sub‐Saharan Africa (13% for low birthweight, 8% for preterm births) and Southern Asia (16% for low birthweight, 5% for preterm births). Most countries collect individual‐level data; but, aggregate data reporting from hospital‐based systems remain common in sub‐Saharan Africa and Southern Asia. While data quality was generally high in North America, Australasia and Europe, gaps remain in the availability of gestational age metadata. Consistency between low birthweight and preterm rates were poor in Southern Asia and sub‐Saharan Africa regions across time. There was high external consistency between low birthweight rates obtained from routine administrative data compared with low birthweight rates obtained from survey data for countries with high data quality.ConclusionsSub‐Saharan Africa and South Asia countries have data gaps but also opportunities for rapid progress. Most births occure in facilities, electronic health information systems already include low birthweight, and adding accurate gestational age including with ultrasound assessment is becoming increasingly attainable. Moving toward the collection of individual level data would enable monitoring of quality of care and longer‐term outcomes. This is crucial for every child and family and essential for measuring progress towards relevant sustainable development goals. The assessment will inform countries’ actions for data quality improvement at national level and use of data for impact.

Funder

Children's Investment Fund Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Obstetrics and Gynecology

Reference24 articles.

1. Small babies, big risks: global estimates of prevalence and mortality for vulnerable newborns to accelerate change and improve counting

2. Neonatal mortality risk for vulnerable newborn types in 15 countries using 125.5 million nationwide linked birth outcome records, 2000 to 2020;Suárez‐Idueta L;BJOG,2023

3. National, regional, and global estimates of low birthweight in 2020, with trends from 2000: a systematic analysis;Okwaraji YB;Lancet,2023

4. National, regional, and global estimates of preterm birth in 2020, with trends from 2010: a systematic analysis

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