Source: News Medical
Leaders of prominent, international philanthropic and research organizations are convening in Seattle July 14-16 to address the global crisis of preterm birth and develop an action roadmap of research priorities and opportunities.
Led by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Global Alliance to Prevent Prematurity and Stillbirth (an initiative of Seattle Children's), the March of Dimes Foundation, and the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, attendees will identify specific, strategic areas of research critical for understanding the causes and mechanisms of preterm birth. This knowledge will provide the basis for identifying barriers and developing strategies and solutions to prevent preterm birth.
The summit comes just two months after the release of Born Too Soon: The Global Action Report on Preterm Birth, showing that the number of preterm births around the world has increased to 15 million per year, with more than one million of those babies dying in infancy. As a result, prematurity is now the second-leading cause of death in all children under age five.
In 2009, the International Conference on Prematurity and Stillbirth yielded the Global Action Agenda, a comprehensive set of recommendations that include milestones and success metrics for preventing prematurity and stillbirth and improving related maternal, newborn and child health outcomes.
The meeting, Accelerating Research and Development to Address the Global Crisis of Preterm Birth, will build on the groundwork laid by the Global Action Agenda and the Born Too Soon report, while also exploring the magnitude of the lifelong health problems resulting from preterm birth and determining what is needed for research and development to reduce preterm birth worldwide.
It is a critical time to invest in research in countries with the highest burden and fewest solutions, to advance understanding of the multiple and complex causes of preterm birth, and to test new strategies to prevent preterm birth that are low-cost, practical, and feasible.
