Volume 68, Issue 3 | Page 12

PEDIATRICS NEONATOLOGY: CARING FOR THE TINIEST OF PATIENTS AUTHOR John Roberts, MD While records can be found across the millennia, in all countries of the world, of men and women providing rudimentary medical care to newborns, Western societies did not take an interest in newborn survival until the middle of the 19 th century. European countries and the US, their populations ravaged by wars, struggled to meet the manpower needs of the industrial revolution and to repopulate armies. National wealth and security depended on a large healthy population, and countries could no longer afford the high rates of infant mortality. Registration of all births became mandatory in England in 1856, at which time the infant mortality rate was nearly 25%. In the US, the rate was 16% when the US Census Bureau was created in 1902. Today in the US, the infant mortality rate is 5.8 per 1,000 live births (0.58%). This improvement has been largely due to advances in nutrition and sanitation. As overall infant mortality improved, individuals began focusing on the survival of the 10% of infants born prematurely. This required medical expertise and technology not previously available. Perhaps the greatest invention in the field is the incubator. Unable to maintain their own body temperature outside the uterus, many prematurely born infants developed hypothermia, became feeble and died. The original incubators were adapted from those in chicken hatcheries in Europe in the 1800s. Martin Couney successfully exploited the public’s curiosity in the 1930s by displaying premature infants in incubators at a permanent exhibit at Coney Island and at world fairs. 1 The price of admission was 25 cents and supported the care of the infants. The first pioneers of the field of newborn medicine were often obstetricians and midwives. A few physicians proclaimed themselves to be pediatricians, though this title had no standardization in the US until the American Board of Pediatrics, the American Medical Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics established training requirements and a certification exam in 1935. It was not until 1960 that the term “neonatology” was first used; some say it took the death of a president’s son to light fire to the discipline. In 1963, Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, after being born at 34 weeks gestation and weighing 2,100 g (4 lbs 9 oz), died of respiratory complications of prematurity. His death led to increased public awareness of prematurity and its consequences, increased funding for research, and the development and miniaturization of technologies appropriately sized for newborns. Key among the developments has been the miniaturization of laboratory testing. The volume of blood or plasma needed for common laboratory tests in the adult was unacceptable in caring 10 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE