Behavioural and emotional outcome of very low birth weight infants--literature review.
Affiliation
Department of Paediatrics, Midland Regional Hospital, Mullingar, Ireland. bredahayes@hotmail.comIssue Date
2009-10MeSH
Case-Control StudiesChild
Cognition Disorders
Developmental Disabilities
Emotions
Humans
Infant Behavior
Infant, Newborn
Infant, Very Low Birth Weight
Outcome Assessment (Health Care)
Psychomotor Performance
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Show full item recordCitation
Behavioural and emotional outcome of very low birth weight infants--literature review. 2009, 22 (10):849-56 J. Matern. Fetal. Neonatal. Med.Journal
The journal of maternal-fetal & neonatal medicine : the official journal of the European Association of Perinatal Medicine, the Federation of Asia and Oceania Perinatal Societies, the International Society of Perinatal ObstetriciansDOI
10.1080/14767050902994507PubMed ID
19521926Additional Links
http://informahealthcare.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14767050902994507Abstract
To examine whether low birth weight (LBW) children are at greater risk for behavioural and emotional problems than normal birth weight children.Electronic databases (PubMed, Google) were searched. Key search terms (LBW, emotional behavioural outcome) were used to identify possible studies. Selection of studies was limited to those including detailed assessment of behavioural and/or emotional outcome of very low birth weight or very preterm infants with normal term infants as controls, published from the year 2000 to date. A total of 20 studies were identified for inclusion in our review.
Overall studies showed a significant increase in behavioural problems in particular poor attention span, withdrawn behaviour and poorer adaptive functioning. Rates of a clinically significant neurobehavioural impairment in cases ranged from 25% to 55% with controls displaying a relatively constant rate of around 7%. Attention problems without hyperactivity (ADD) were more common than 'classical attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder' in LBW children. Only 4% of the LBW children had previously been referred to a consultant psychiatric suggesting that at present these problems are being under-recognised.
VLBW or very preterm infants are at significant risk of behavioural and emotional problems. The risk is further increased when cognitive or motor difficulties are present or when social circumstances are poor.
Item Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
1476-4954ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1080/14767050902994507
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