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Priority Setting Partnerships

 Thank you for your participation. 

  • British Academy of Childhood Disability (BACD)
  • TinyLife - the premature baby charity for N.I.
  • Scope -about cerebral palsy.
  • Association of Paediatric Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland
  • The Children's Trust
  • Irish Premature Babies
  • Sands, the stillbirth and neonatal death charity
  • Bliss, the special care baby charity
  • Multiple Birth Foundation
  • The British Association of Paediatric Surgeons
  • Best Beginnings
  • Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists
  • TAMBA - The Twin and Multiple Birth Association
  • British Association of Perinatal Medicine
  • British Paediatric Pathology Association
  • Obstetric Anaesthetists Association
  • Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health
  • MCRN Neonatal Clinical Studies Advisory Group
  • The British Maternal and Fetal Medicine Society
  • Royal College of Surgeons of England
  • Action on Pre-eclampsia
  • British Paediatric Allergy, Immunity & Infection Group (BPAIIG)
  • Cochrane Pregnancy and Childbirth Group
  • Paediatric Intensive Care Society
  • Cochrane Neonatal Group
  • The Neonatal Nurses Association
  • Royal College of Nursing

 

  

 

This site is ARCHIVED: the project it described is now ended and these pages are not being updated anymore. The website is hosted by the EPPI Centre.

 

Introduction to our project

In the UK, one in every 13 babies is born before 37 weeks (preterm) and one in every 100 babies is born before 32 weeks (very preterm). They have immature lungs and kidneys and often need help with breathing, feeding, and other life support.

Those who survive may spend months in hospital, and suffer ill health and/or disability in childhood. Even a modest improvement for these children and their families would be important.
Research is needed to assess which treatments lead to better health. Usually it is researchers who decide which treatments to assess, and how. Past research has often not addressed the questions about treatments that are of greatest importance to patients, their carers, and their clinicians. The James Lind Alliance (JLA) has developed methods for bringing patients and clinicians together in 'Priority Setting Partnerships' to identify and prioritise ‘treatment uncertainties’, in order to inform publicly funded research.
Have you had an experience of preterm birth in your family?
Or are you a clinician working in health care services and have dealt with preterm birth?
Then you are invited to participate in the Preterm Birth Priority Setting Partnership. Your feedback and opinion could have an impact to improve quality of care and outcomes at very preterm birth. For more information, please contact Seilin(s.uhm@ioe.ac.uk).

  
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