2018
DOI: 10.1136/gpsych-2018-100034
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Influencing factors of the neurodevelopment of high-risk infants

Abstract: BackgroundHigh-risk infants refer to newborns exposed to high-risk factors in the prenatal, natal or postnatal period. High-risk infants are at high risk of developmental retardation, and early identification of developmental abnormalities plays a vital role in improving high-risk infants’ quality of life.AimsTo describe the neurodevelopment of high-risk infants aged less than 1 year old, and to analyse the incidences and influencing factors of neurodevelopmental abnormalities in order to provide a basis for n… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(15 citation statements)
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References 8 publications
(11 reference statements)
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“…Higher DQ reflects better neurodevelopmental performance. As with other child development studies using the Chinese version of GDS, we defined developmental delay in each domain as DQ < 86 (21)(22)(23). To use a composite indicator to reflect the severity of adverse developmental outcomes across all five domains in the present study, we defined "poor neurodevelopmental outcome" as developmental delay in more than two domains on the GDS.…”
Section: Gdsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Higher DQ reflects better neurodevelopmental performance. As with other child development studies using the Chinese version of GDS, we defined developmental delay in each domain as DQ < 86 (21)(22)(23). To use a composite indicator to reflect the severity of adverse developmental outcomes across all five domains in the present study, we defined "poor neurodevelopmental outcome" as developmental delay in more than two domains on the GDS.…”
Section: Gdsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on previous research [ 22 25 ], other variables were used to describe maternal and infants’ demographic characteristics and control for confounding variables. These variables were collected from hospital records (maternal age, maternal pre-pregnancy BMI [ 26 ], gestational weight gain (GWG), delivery mode, parity, child sex, gestational weeks, and birth weight) and questionnaires (maternal education, annual family income, primary caregiver, mode of infant feeding, the introduction of solid foods at the age of 6 months and micronutrients supplementation (Iron, Vitamin B12 and Zinc) at the age of 6 months).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on previous research [22][23][24][25], other variables were used to describe maternal and infants' demographic characteristics and control for confounding variables. These variables were collected from hospital records (maternal age, maternal pre-pregnancy BMI [26], gestational weight gain (GWG) , delivery mode, parity, child sex, gestational weeks, and birth weight) and questionnaires (maternal education, annual family income, the primary caregiver, mode of infant feeding, the introduction of solid foods at six months and micronutrients supplementation (Iron, Vitamin B12 and Zinc) at six months).…”
Section: Covariatesmentioning
confidence: 99%