Objective: To develop national birthweight: percentiles by gestational age
for male and female singleton infants born in Australia, and to compare the
birthweight percentiles of Indigenous and non-indigenous infants.
Design and setting: Cross-sectional study of singleton live births to Austr
alian-born mothers from 1991 to 1994.
Main outcome measures: Birthweight percentiles by gestational age.
Results: During 1991-1994 Australian-born women gave birth to 769 077 live
singleton infants. Of these, 28 230 (3.7%) were reported as births to Abori
ginal or Torres Strait Islander women. Birthweight was missing for 581 (0.1
%) births and gestational age was missing for 3014 (0.4%). An additional 32
83 (0.4%) births were excluded because the recorded birthweights were extre
me outliers for their recorded gestational ages. Indigenous women were more
likely to be recorded as giving birth preterm (< 37 weeks' gestation) than
non-indigenous women (11.6% v. 5.4%) and were more likely to give birth to
small-for-gestational-age infants at term. After 34 weeks' gestation, the
median birthweights of Indigenous infants were consistently lower than thos
e of non-indigenous infants. At 40 weeks' gestation the difference in the m
edian birthweights between these two groups was 160 g for males and 130 g f
or females.
Conclusions: We present recent birthweight percentiles by gestational age b
ased on national data in Australia. These percentiles provide current Austr
alian norms for clinicians and researchers, and can provide a baseline for
monitoring indigenous perinatal outcomes.