# Maternal region of birth and stillbirth trends in Victoria, Australia, 2012–2019: a cohort study

**Authors:** Natalie Holowko, Natalie Y Liu, Sharon Weerasingha, Roshan Selvaratnam, Mary-Ann Davey, Tanya Farrell, Miranda Davies-Tuck

PMC · DOI: 10.1136/bmjph-2025-003004 · BMJ Public Health · 2025-10-21

## TL;DR

This study examines stillbirth trends in Victoria, Australia, and finds that women born in Africa and South Asia have higher stillbirth rates compared to locally born women.

## Contribution

The study identifies maternal region of birth as an independent risk factor for stillbirth and highlights disparities in stillbirth trends across different regions.

## Key findings

- Stillbirth rates are significantly higher for women born in Africa and South Asia compared to Australian-born women.
- Stillbirth rates for African-born women remain consistently high, while Australian-born women show decreasing trends.
- Iatrogenic births have increased over the study period, and causes of stillbirth vary by maternal region of birth.

## Abstract

Given the increasing attention to reduce stillbirth rates in migrant women and variable clinical guidance, we quantified contemporary trends in stillbirth based on maternal region of birth.

Population-based study of singleton births ≥20 weeks of gestation between 2012 and 2019 from the Victorian Perinatal Data Collection (N=571 998). We investigated the association between maternal self-reported region of birth and stillbirth overall using logistic regression, and gestation and timing of stillbirth using multinomial regression. Trends in stillbirth overall, iatrogenic births, admission to a neonatal intensive care unit or special care nursery, neonatal death and cause of stillbirth by region of birth were also investigated.

Rates of stillbirth were significantly higher in women born in Africa (adjusted OR (aOR) 1.76: 1.47 to 2.12) and South Asia (aOR 1.26: 1.11 to 1.43) when compared with locally born non-Indigenous women. For women born in Africa, this was irrespective of gestation, while for women born in South Asia, this was specific to preterm stillbirths. Overall, we observed a decreasing trend in stillbirth among women born in Australia, while the stillbirth rate remained consistently higher and did not significantly decrease in women born in Africa, Oceania, New Zealand and South Asia. Over the same period, iatrogenic births significantly increased. Causes of stillbirth also differed by maternal region of birth.

While we observed some improvements in stillbirth rates and increasing rates of iatrogenic birth, maternal region of birth remains an independent risk factor for stillbirth requiring targeted approaches.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** neonatal death (MESH:D066087), stillbirth (MESH:D050497)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

43 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12551549/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12551549