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      Rate and Time Trend of Perinatal, Infant, Maternal Mortality, Natality and Natural Population Growth in Kosovo

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          Abstract

          Aim:

          The aim of work has been the presentation of the rate and time trends of some indicators of the heath condition of mothers and children in Kosovo: fetal mortality, early neonatal mortality, perinatal mortality, infant mortality, natality, natural growth of population etc. The treated patients were the newborn and infants in the post neonatal period, women during their pregnancy and those 42 days before and after the delivery.

          Methods:

          The data were taken from: register of the patients treated in the Pediatric Clinic of Prishtina, World Health Organization, Mother and Child Health Care, Reproductive Health Care, Ministry of Health of the Republic of Kosovo, Statistical Department of Kosovo, the National Institute of Public Health and several academic texts in the field of pediatrics. Some indicators were analyzed in a period between year 1945-2010 and 1950-2010, whereas some others were analyzed in a time period between year 2000 and 2011.

          Results:

          The perinatal mortality rate in 2000 was 29.1‰, whereas in 2011 it was 18.7‰. The fetal mortality rate was 14.5‰ during the year 2000, whereas in 2011 it was 11.0‰, in 2000 the early neonatal mortality was 14.8‰, in 2011 it was 7.5‰. The infant mortality in Kosovo was 164‰ in 1950, whereas in 2010 it was 20.5‰. The most frequent causes of infant mortality have been: lower respiratory tract infections, acute infective diarrhea, perinatal causes, congenital malformations and unclassified conditions. Maternal death rate varied during this time period. Maternal death in 2000 was 23 whereas in 2010 only two cases were reported. Regarding the natality, in 1950 it reached 46.1 ‰, whereas in 2010 it reached 14‰, natural growth of population rate in Kosovo was 29.1‰ in 1950, whereas in 2011 it was 11.0‰.

          Conclusion:

          Perinatal mortality rate in Kosovo is still high in comparison with other European countries (Turkey and Kyrgyzstan have the highest perinatal mortality rate), even though it is in a continuous decrease. Infant mortality considerably decreased (from 164‰ in 1950 to 20.5‰ in 2010). The causes of infant mortality have still been tightly related with the causes of the developing countries. Next to this, natality and the natural population growth have experienced a considerably decrease in Kosovo. Even though there have been some improvements within the health care in Kosovo, there is still a lot to be done with the aim of constant improvement of health care in order to promote the health care for mothers and children.

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          Most cited references4

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          World Medical Association Declaration of Otava on the right of the child health care

          (1999)
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            Zaštita majki i dijeteta. U: Duško Mardešić i suradnici

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              Konvencija o pravima djeteta

              (1997)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Mater Sociomed
                Mater Sociomed
                MSM
                Materia Socio-Medica
                AVICENA, d.o.o., Sarajevo
                1512-7680
                1986-597X
                2012
                : 24
                : 4
                : 238-241
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Pediatric Clinic, University Clinical Center of Kosovo, Pristina, Kosovo
                [2 ]National Institute of Public Health, Pristina, Kosovo
                [3 ]Gynecology and Obstetrics Clinic, University Clinical Center of Kosovo, Pristina, Kosovo
                Author notes
                Corresponding author: Assocate professor Mehmedali Azemi, MD, PhD, tel: +377(44)146-463. E-mail: mehmedaliazemi@ 123456hotmail.com
                Article
                MSM-24-238
                10.5455/msm.2012.24.238-241
                3633379
                23678327
                be19656c-38d7-4f8e-9f7d-d934ad9e6d3d
                © 2012 AVICENA

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 21 July 2012
                : 25 September 2012
                Categories
                Article

                perinatal,infant and maternal mortality,natality and natural growth of population.

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