Professor Jenny Kurinczuk
Jenny Kurinczuk
BSc (Hons), MBChB, MSc (Epid), MD, FFPH
Emeritus Professor of Perinatal Epidemiology
- National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit
- Co-Director, Policy Research Unit in Maternal Health and Care National Lead - MBRRACE-UK
Jenny's mission at the National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit (NPEU) is to conduct methodologically rigorous research to provide evidence to improve the care provided to women and their families during pregnancy, childbirth, the newborn period and early childhood as well as promoting the effective use of resources by perinatal health services.
Her particular research focuses on the causes and consequences of conditions from conception through pregnancy which affect newborn babies some of which have subsequent effects on the health of the babies as they grow and develop during childhood and beyond. These include newborn brain dysfunction (neonatal encephalopathy), cerebral palsy and congenital anomalies (sometimes also called birth defects), and the health and development of children born following assisted conception, for example IVF.
Jenny is also involved in: leading the MBRRACE-UK collaboration responsible for the national maternal, newborn and infant clinical outcome review programme; studies of near miss maternal morbidity; and the evaluation of paediatric surgical interventions for congenital anomalies.
Recent publications
Neonatal mortality risk of large-for-gestational-age and macrosomic live births in 15 countries, including 115.6 million nationwide linked records, 2000-2020.
Journal article
Suárez-Idueta L. et al, (2025), BJOG, 132 Suppl 8, S109 - S120
Vulnerable newborn types: Analysis of population-based registries for 165 million births in 23 countries, 2000-2021.
Journal article
Suárez-Idueta L. et al, (2025), BJOG, 132 Suppl 8, S5 - S19
Stillbirth risk by fetal size among 126.5 million births in 15 countries from 2000 to 2020: A fetuses-at-risk approach.
Journal article
Okwaraji YB. et al, (2025), BJOG, 132 Suppl 8, S85 - S96
Stillbirths: Contribution of preterm birth and size-for-gestational age for 125.4 million total births from nationwide records in 13 countries, 2000-2020.
Journal article
Okwaraji YB. et al, (2025), BJOG, 132 Suppl 8, S73 - S84
