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Items: 5

1.
Figure 1

Figure 1. From: The adverse neuro-developmental effects of postnatal steroids in the preterm infant: a systematic review of RCTs.

Meta-analysis of the effects of postnatal steroids on death. Studies are displayed in order of the degree of known contamination of the randomization, Fitzhardinge and O'Shea known to have no contamination, Yeh, Shinwell, and Jones with progressively increasing degrees of contamination, and Cummings, Subhedar and Vincer unknown.

Keith J Barrington. BMC Pediatr. 2001;1:1-1.
2.
Figure 2

Figure 2. From: The adverse neuro-developmental effects of postnatal steroids in the preterm infant: a systematic review of RCTs.

Meta-analysis of the effects of postnatal steroids on neurodevelopmental impairment, among all randomized infants. Studies are displayed in order of the degree of known contamination of the randomization, Fitzhardinge and O'Shea known to have no contamination, Yeh, Shinwell, and Jones with progressively increasing degrees of contamination, and Cummings, Subhedar and Vincer unknown.

Keith J Barrington. BMC Pediatr. 2001;1:1-1.
3.
Figure 4

Figure 4. From: The adverse neuro-developmental effects of postnatal steroids in the preterm infant: a systematic review of RCTs.

Meta-analysis of the effects of postnatal steroids on cerebral palsy, among all randomized infants. Studies are displayed in order of the degree of known contamination of the randomization, Fitzhardinge and O'Shea known to have no contamination, Yeh, Shinwell, and Jones with progressively increasing degrees of contamination, and Cummings, Subhedar and Vincer unknown.

Keith J Barrington. BMC Pediatr. 2001;1:1-1.
4.
Figure 3

Figure 3. From: The adverse neuro-developmental effects of postnatal steroids in the preterm infant: a systematic review of RCTs.

Meta-analysis of the effects of postnatal steroids on neurodevelopmental impairment among surviving, followed up, infants. Studies are displayed in order of the degree of known contamination of the randomization, Fitzhardinge and O'Shea known to have no contamination, Yeh, Shinwell, and Jones with progressively increasing degrees of contamination, and Cummings, Subhedar and Vincer unknown.

Keith J Barrington. BMC Pediatr. 2001;1:1-1.
5.
Figure 5

Figure 5. From: The adverse neuro-developmental effects of postnatal steroids in the preterm infant: a systematic review of RCTs.

Meta-analysis of the effects of postnatal steroids on cerebral palsy among surviving, followed up, infants. Studies are displayed in order of the degree of known contamination of the randomization, Fitzhardinge and O'Shea known to have no contamination, Yeh, Shinwell, and Jones with progressively increasing degrees of contamination, and Cummings, Subhedar and Vincer unknown.

Keith J Barrington. BMC Pediatr. 2001;1:1-1.

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