Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-10-S1-S6
Title: Global report on preterm birth and stillbirth (6 of 7): Ethical considerations
Authors: Kelley, M
Rubens, C.E
Cash, R.
Freedman, L.
Gavin, A.
Hazemba, A.
Ho, C. 
Jamison, D.
Jesani, A.
Kutty, R.
Lie, R.
Ndebele, P.
Ramanathan, M.
Rodriguez, A.
Wikler, D.
Wise, P.
Zhai, X.
Keywords: bioethics
community
data analysis
family
funding
health care policy
health disparity
human
maternal care
medical ethics
medical literature
newborn care
prematurity
research ethics
review
stillbirth
women's health
developing country
ethics
female
fetus death
health care delivery
health care disparity
information processing
medical research
newborn
pregnancy
prematurity
prenatal care
socioeconomics
Biomedical Research
Data Collection
Developing Countries
Ethics
Female
Fetal Death
Health Services Accessibility
Healthcare Disparities
Humans
Infant, Newborn
Pregnancy
Premature Birth
Prenatal Care
Socioeconomic Factors
Stillbirth
Issue Date: 2010
Citation: Kelley, M, Rubens, C.E, Cash, R., Freedman, L., Gavin, A., Hazemba, A., Ho, C., Jamison, D., Jesani, A., Kutty, R., Lie, R., Ndebele, P., Ramanathan, M., Rodriguez, A., Wikler, D., Wise, P., Zhai, X. (2010). Global report on preterm birth and stillbirth (6 of 7): Ethical considerations. BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth 10 (SUPPL. 1) : S6. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-10-S1-S6
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Introduction: Despite the substantial global burden of preterm and stillbirth, little attention has been given to the ethical considerations related to research and interventions in the global context. Ethical dilemmas surrounding reproductive decisions and the care of preterm newborns impact the delivery of interventions, and are not well understood in low-resource settings. Issues such as how to address the moral and cultural attitudes surrounding stillbirths, have cross-cutting implications for global visibility of the disease burden. This analysis identifies ethical issues impacting definitions, discovery, development, and delivery of effective interventions to decrease the global burden of preterm birth and stillbirth.Methods: This review is based on a comprehensive literature review; an ethical analysis of other articles within this global report; and discussions with GAPPS's Scientific Advisory Council, team of international investigators, and a community of international experts on maternal, newborn, and child health and bioethics from the 2009 International Conference on Prematurity and Stillbirth. The literature review includes articles in PubMed, Academic Search Complete (EBSCO), and Philosopher's Index with a range of 1995-2008.Results: Advancements in discovery science relating to preterm birth and stillbirth require careful consideration in the design and use of repositories containing maternal specimens and data. Equally important is the need to improve clinical translation from basic science research to delivery of interventions, and to ensure global needs inform discovery science agenda-setting. Ethical issues in the development of interventions include a need to balance immediate versus long-term impacts-such as caring for preterm newborns rather than preventing preterm births. The delivery of interventions must address: women's health disparities as determinants of preterm birth and stillbirth; improving measurements of impact on equity in coverage; balancing maternal and newborn outcomes in choosing interventions; and understanding the personal and cross-cultural experiences of preterm birth and stillbirth among women, families and communities.Conclusion: Efforts to improve visibility, funding, research and the successful delivery of interventions for preterm birth and stillbirth face a number of ethical concerns. Thoughtful input from those in health policy, bioethics and international research ethics helped shape an interdisciplinary global action agenda to prevent preterm birth and stillbirth. © 2010 Kelley et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
Source Title: BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/181676
ISSN: 14712393
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2393-10-S1-S6
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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