In general, outcomes for premature babies are very good. Before the development of Neonatal Intensive Care Units (NICUs),
many premature babies did not survive. The introduction of incubators, mechanical ventilation, and other technologies and
medical techniques, as well as a more complete understanding of newborn baby physiology, have increased premature baby survival
dramatically. As a result, some premature babies who would have died in the past now survive, but may have lifelong problems.
Medical professionals make this distinction using the words “morbidity” and “mortality.”
Mortality and morbidity
Mortality is the rate of death or the number of premature babies admitted to an NICU who do not survive compared to those
who do. As noted above, the mortality rate of premature babies has dramatically improved over the last 20 years or so. The
overwhelming majority of babies with access to the modern technology and medical techniques available in the NICU now survive.
At the same time, there are limits to the medical technology and techniques available in the NICU; some babies who are born
too soon are too small to either save at all or save without serious disability or morbidity.
Morbidity is the number of babies who survive but with lasting complications, compared to the number who survive with no lasting
complications. In other words, the morbidity rate is the number of premature babies who grow up with medical, developmental,
or psychological problems compared to those who grow up without any of these issues. Although many premature babies go on
to live normal, healthy lives, the success rate in this regard is not as overwhelming as the dramatic improvement in mortality.
In fact, the two statistics are related: medicine has become very successful at keeping premature babies alive, especially
the extremely premature, who tend to have more complications than other premature babies.
Mild, moderate, and extreme prematurity
In general, outcomes are related to:
The spectrum of prematurity
Based on their gestational age and birth weight, premature babies are placed into loosely defined categories of mild, moderate,
and extreme prematurity.
Mildly premature babies do better than moderately premature babies, who in turn do better than extremely premature babies.
This makes intuitive sense: barring other complications not due to prematurity, the longer a baby has spent in the womb, the
more developed her organs are and therefore the more prepared she is for the challenges of the outside world.
Statistics and the individual baby
As specific complications are addressed in this site, outcome statistics specific to that condition are provided where appropriate.
However, mortality and morbidity statistics are based on group data and do not take into account the individual baby. The
body is very much an interconnected system. The ways in which two or more complications affect each other can have a huge
impact on morbidity and mortality, making the course and outcomes of illness difficult to predict.
Some, though few, extremely premature babies do surprisingly well and go on to thrive as healthy children. Conversely, some
mildly premature babies who are expected to do well develop complications and lifelong problems or do not survive at all.
This is not to say that statistics and outcome data should be ignored; this information is extremely useful to physicians
and other medical professionals who are devoted to producing the best possible outcomes for premature babies. Mortality and
morbidity data can help medical staff anticipate and predict problems that have not surfaced yet, allowing for pre-emptive
or preventive treatment that will benefit the baby.
Outcome statistics are not definitive. Rather, they are a guide to be used by medical professionals, and parents and families.
Given all the possible combinations of complications premature babies may face, making an actual outcome prediction can be
complex, even impossible. At other times, a particular complication or series of complications may make outcome prediction,
both good and poor, more simple. For this reason, staff at the NICU will speak in terms of probabilities: for example, they
may say that 75% of babies with a specific condition will recover completely without lifelong complications. Predicting an
individual baby’s outcome cannot be done with absolute certainty.