He Knight
Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists
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Publication
Featured researches published by He Knight.
British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology | 2013
J.A. Villar; Douglas G. Altman; Manorama Purwar; J.A. Noble; He Knight; P. Ruyan; L Cheikh Ismail; Fernando C. Barros; Ann Lambert; A T Papageorghiou; M. Carvalho; Y A Jaffer; Enrico Bertino; Michael G. Gravett; Zulfiqar A. Bhutta; S Kennedy
Please cite this paper as: Villar J, Altman D, Purwar M, Noble J, Knight H, Ruyan P, Cheikh Ismail L, Barros F, Lambert A, Papageorghiou A, Carvalho M, Jaffer Y, Bertino E, Gravett M, Bhutta Z, Kennedy S, for the International Fetal and Newborn Growth Consortium for the 21st Century (INTERGROWTH‐21st). The objectives, design and implementation of the INTERGROWTH‐21st Project. BJOG 2013; 120 (Suppl. 2): 9–26.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2012
Michael S. Kramer; A T Papageorghiou; Jennifer Culhane; Zulfiqar A. Bhutta; Robert L. Goldenberg; Michael G. Gravett; Jay D. Iams; Agustin Conde-Agudelo; Sarah A. Waller; Fernando C. Barros; He Knight; J.A. Villar
In 2009, the Global Alliance to Prevent Prematurity and Stillbirth Conference charged the authors to propose a new comprehensive, consistent, and uniform classification system for preterm birth. This first article reviews issues related to measurement of gestational age, clinical vs etiologic phenotypes, inclusion vs exclusion of multifetal and stillborn infants, and separation vs combination of pathways to preterm birth. The second article proposes answers to the questions raised here, and the third demonstrates how the proposed system might work in practice.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2012
Robert L. Goldenberg; Michael G. Gravett; Jay D. Iams; A T Papageorghiou; Sarah A. Waller; Michael S. Kramer; Jennifer Culhane; Fernando C. Barros; Augustin Conde-Agudelo; Zulfiqar A. Bhutta; He Knight; J.A. Villar
A comprehensive classification system for preterm birth requires expanded gestational boundaries that recognize the early origins of preterm parturition and emphasize fetal maturity over fetal age. Exclusion of stillbirths, pregnancy terminations, and multifetal gestations prevents comprehensive consideration of the potential causes and presentations of preterm birth. Any step in parturition (cervical softening and ripening, decidual-membrane activation, and/or myometrial contractions) may initiate preterm parturition, and should be recorded for every preterm birth, as should the condition of the mother, fetus, newborn, and placenta, before a phenotype is assigned.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2012
J.A. Villar; A T Papageorghiou; He Knight; Michael G. Gravett; Jay D. Iams; Sarah A. Waller; Michael S. Kramer; Jennifer Culhane; Fernando C. Barros; Agustin Conde-Agudelo; Zulfiqar A. Bhutta; Robert L. Goldenberg
Preterm birth is a syndrome with many causes and phenotypes. We propose a classification that is based on clinical phenotypes that are defined by ≥ 1 characteristics of the mother, the fetus, the placenta, the signs of parturition, and the pathway to delivery. Risk factors and mode of delivery are not included. There are 5 components in a preterm birth phenotype: (1) maternal conditions that are present before presentation for delivery, (2) fetal conditions that are present before presentation for delivery, (3) placental pathologic conditions, (4) signs of the initiation of parturition, and (5) the pathway to delivery. This system does not force any preterm birth into a predefined phenotype and allows all relevant conditions to become part of the phenotype. Needed data can be collected from the medical records to classify every preterm birth. The classification system will improve understanding of the cause and improve surveillance across populations.
World review of nutrition and dietetics | 2013
J.A. Villar; Douglas G. Altman; Manorama Purwar; J.A. Noble; He Knight; P. Ruyan; L Cheikh Ismail; F C Barros; Ann Lambert; A T Papageorghiou; M. Carvalho; Y A Jaffer; Enrico Bertino; Michael G. Gravett; Zulfiqar A. Bhutta; Stephen Kennedy
Please cite this paper as: Villar J, Altman D, Purwar M, Noble J, Knight H, Ruyan P, Cheikh Ismail L, Barros F, Lambert A, Papageorghiou A, Carvalho M, Jaffer Y, Bertino E, Gravett M, Bhutta Z, Kennedy S, for the International Fetal and Newborn Growth Consortium for the 21st Century (INTERGROWTH‐21st). The objectives, design and implementation of the INTERGROWTH‐21st Project. BJOG 2013; 120 (Suppl. 2): 9–26.
PLOS ONE | 2013
He Knight; Alice Self; Stephen Kennedy
Background The ‘three delays model’ attempts to explain delays in women accessing emergency obstetric care as the result of: 1) decision-making, 2) accessing services and 3) receipt of appropriate care once a health facility is reached. The third delay, although under-researched, is likely to be a source of considerable inequity in access to emergency obstetric care in developing countries. The aim of this systematic review was to identify and categorise specific facility-level barriers to the provision of evidence-based maternal health care in developing countries. Methods and Findings Five electronic databases were systematically searched using a 4-way strategy that combined search terms related to: 1) maternal health care; 2) maternity units; 3) barriers, and 4) developing countries. Forty-three original research articles were eligible to be included in the review. Thirty-two barriers to the receipt of timely and appropriate obstetric care at the facility level were identified and categorised into six emerging themes (Drugs and equipment; Policy and guidelines; Human resources; Facility infrastructure; Patient-related and Referral-related). Two investigators independently recorded the frequency with which barriers relating to the third delay were reported in the literature. The most commonly cited barriers were inadequate training/skills mix (86%); drug procurement/logistics problems (65%); staff shortages (60%); lack of equipment (51%) and low staff motivation (44%). Conclusions This review highlights how a focus on patient-side delays in the decision to seek care can conceal the fact that many health facilities in the developing world are still chronically under-resourced and unable to cope effectively with serious obstetric complications. We stress the importance of addressing supply-side barriers alongside demand-side factors if further reductions in maternal mortality are to be achieved.
Archives of Disease in Childhood | 2010
J.A. Villar; He Knight; M. de Onis; Enrico Bertino; G. Gilli; A T Papageorghiou; L Cheikh Ismail; F C Barros; Zulfiqar A. Bhutta
Monitoring and interpreting the growth of preterm infants is a major clinical task for neonatologists. The effectiveness of this process depends upon the robustness of the standard selected. Concerns have been raised regarding the nature of the charts currently being used, as well as their appropriateness for present-day neonatal care. To overcome these problems, there is a need for new prescriptive standards based on a population of preterm infants without evidence of impaired fetal growth and born to low-risk women followed up since early pregnancy for precise gestational age dating. Preterm infants contributing to the new standards should be free of congenital malformations and major clinical conditions associated with impaired postnatal growth. These infants should receive standardised, evidence-based clinical care and should follow current feeding recommendations based on exclusive/predominant breastfeeding. This strategy should provide a population that is conceptually as close as possible to the prescriptive approach used for the construction of the WHO infant and child growth standards. New international standards constructed in this way should contribute to the evidence-based care of these preterm infants.
British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology | 2014
He Knight; Ipek Gurol-Urganci; J van der Meulen; Tahir Mahmood; David Richmond; A. Dougall; David Cromwell
To investigate the demographic and obstetric factors associated with the uptake and success rate of vaginal birth after caesarean section (VBAC).
British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology | 2013
L Cheikh Ismail; He Knight; E O Ohuma; L Hoch; Wm. Cameron Chumlea
The primary aim of the INTERGROWTH‐21st Project is to construct new, prescriptive standards describing optimal fetal and preterm postnatal growth. The anthropometric measurements include the head circumference, recumbent length and weight of the infants, and the stature and weight of the parents. In such a large, international, multicentre project, it is critical that all study sites follow standardised protocols to ensure maximal validity of the growth and nutrition indicators used. This paper describes in detail the anthropometric training, standardisation and quality control procedures used to collect data for these new standards. The initial standardisation session was in Nairobi, Kenya, using newborns, which was followed by similar sessions in the eight participating study sites in Brazil, China, India, Italy, Kenya, Oman, UK and USA. The intraobserver and inter‐observer technical error of measurement values for head circumference range from 0.3 to 0.4 cm, and for recumbent length from 0.3 to 0.5 cm. These standardisation protocols implemented at each study site worldwide ensure that the anthropometric data collected are of the highest quality to construct international growth standards.
British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology | 2013
L Cheikh Ismail; He Knight; Zulfiqar A. Bhutta; Wm. Cameron Chumlea
The primary aim of the INTERGROWTH‐21st Project is to construct new, prescriptive standards describing optimal fetal and preterm postnatal growth. The anthropometric measurements include the head circumference, recumbent length and weight of the infants, and the stature and weight of the parents. In such a large, international, multicentre project, it is critical that all study sites follow standardised protocols to ensure maximal validity of the growth and nutrition indicators used. This paper describes, in detail, the selection of anthropometric personnel, equipment, and measurement and calibration protocols used to construct the new standards. Implementing these protocols at each study site ensures that the anthropometric data are of the highest quality to construct the international standards.