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Just to confuse you all:
http://the-truths.com/2014/01/14/tribe-africa-birth-date-child-counted-born/


Sharon Trotter 



-----Original Message-----
From: A forum for discussion on midwifery and reproductive health research.
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Alexander Sophie
Sent: 15 January 2014 03:58
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: day of birth: postnatal day 1 or 0?

This is very interesting, because it is of course sensible for
administrative AND bilingue purposes, but not for epidemiologists or
auditing.  e.g. If baby has a diaphragmatic hernia or a transposition of
great vessels, undiagnosed antenatally and is born in level II institution,
it would be a marker of good care that that baby is transferred to a higher
level of care in the 1st 24 hours of his life?
Sophie

In the US, at least on the east coast, we start Day 1 at midnight, even if
baby came at 11:59pm  or 23:59 military time.
>I guess there has to be a starting point!
>
>
>Janet Brooks
>Midwife
>Hudson River Health Care
>Peekskill NY
>
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>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Anna Byrom <[log in to unmask]>
>To: MIDWIFERY-RESEARCH <[log in to unmask]>
>Sent: Tue, Jan 14, 2014 6:17 am
>Subject: Re: day of birth: postnatal day 1 or 0?
>
>
>
>Ooh hello there again!
>
>Anna Byrom
>Midwifery lecturer
>UCLan
>Sent from my iPhone
>(Any spelling or grammatical errors should be blamed on my inventive 
>auto-correct)
>
>
>On 14 Jan 2014, at 11:11, "Laura Iannuzzi" <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
>
>
>Hi!
>In Italy too it generally depends on the time of the day of birth (e.g. if
the child was born before 2 pm that day is already postnatal day 1, if after
2 pm it counts as postnatal day 0).
>Practices may vary a lot depending on geographical areas and local 
>protocols. hope this can be helpful Best wishes Laura
>
>
>Laura Iannuzzi
>RM, BMid, PGCert, MSci , Phd student - Health Studies School of Health 
>Sciences, The University of Nottingham Senior midwife, Ds professional 
>University Hospital of Careggi, Florence, Italy
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>2014/1/14 Lisa Common <[log in to unmask]>
>
>Hi Paula in Nottingham, UK the date of birth is anytime during the 24 hours
on a specific date.
>
>Babies become postnatal day 1, when the date changes. Therefore a baby born
at 23:55 on 14 Jan will become postnatal day 1 after midnight on 15 Jan.
>
>We used to use midday, rather than midnight as the change though, so it
hasn't always been like this. I think it is related to our IT system
requirements. I hope this helps.
>
>Lisa
>
>
>> On 14 Jan 2014, at 09:00, "Paula" <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>>
>> How does each country define the day of birth? As postnatal day 1 or 0?
Or does this, for example, depend on the time of the day the child was born?
In The Netherlands, day one is defined as the day of birth. Althought I have
heard that this may depend on the time of the day (day 0 when born after 7
pm). So for example, if a child has a (postnatal) age 4, how old is this
child? Three (i.e. approximately 72 hours) or four days (i.e. approximately
96 hours) old?
>
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