In the province of Hainaut (Belgium), a study was undertaken in order to assess a pediatric pathology department, organized at the regional level. The study concerned 182 perinatal deaths, occurring among the 16,071 births in 9 maternity hospitals, in 1982 and 1983. The frequency of autopsies was 51%, both for stillbirths and for early neonatal deaths. It was 76% in the group of deaths related to congenital malformations and 48% in the group of deaths of unknown cause. The lack of an autopsy was explained in 20% of cases by the parents' refusal, in 8% of cases by the state of maceration of the fetus and by the obviousness of the diagnosis in 24%. In 46% of cases, no etiology was found and it appeared that the degree of physician interest was an important factor in the frequency of autopsies. Dissection alone revealed the cause of death in 13 of the 94 autopsies. In children presenting with congenital malformations, the performance of a complete pathologic study almost always led to genetic counseling for the parents. This counseling was almost never given when autopsy was not performed.

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