학술논문

Incidence and characteristics of pregnancy-related death across ten low- and middle-income geographical regions: secondary analysis of a cluster randomised controlled trial.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology. Aug2020, Vol. 127 Issue 9, p1082-1089. 8p. 2 Charts, 2 Graphs.
Subject
*CLUSTER analysis (Statistics)
*SECONDARY analysis
*MATERNAL age
*MIDDLE-income countries
*MATERNAL health services
*UTERINE hemorrhage
*HYPERTENSION in pregnancy
*BLOOD pressure
*INTENSIVE care units
*RESEARCH
*HEALTH services accessibility
*BLOOD transfusion
*TIME
*RESEARCH methodology
*HEALTH status indicators
*DISEASE incidence
*EVALUATION research
*MEDICAL cooperation
*SEPSIS
*COMPARATIVE studies
*RANDOMIZED controlled trials
*PUERPERIUM
*HEART beat
*RESEARCH funding
*DEMOGRAPHY
*MATERNAL mortality
*STATISTICAL sampling
DEVELOPING countries
Language
ISSN
1470-0328
Abstract
Objective: The aim of this article is to describe the incidence and characteristics of pregnancy-related death in low- and middle-resource settings, in relation to the availability of key obstetric resources.Design: This is a secondary analysis of a stepped-wedge cluster randomised controlled trial.Setting: This trial was undertaken at ten sites across eight low- and middle-income countries in sub-Saharan Africa, India and Haiti.Population: Institutional-level consent was obtained and all women presenting for maternity care were eligible for inclusion.Methods: Pregnancy-related deaths were collected prospectively from routine data sources and active case searching.Main Outcome Measures: Pregnancy-related death, place, timing and age of maternal death, and neonatal outcomes in women with this outcome.Results: Over 20 months, in 536 233 deliveries there were 998 maternal deaths (18.6/10 000, range 28/10 000-630/10 000). The leading causes of death were obstetric haemorrhage (36.0%, n = 359), hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (20.6%, n = 206), sepsis (14.1%, n = 141) and other (26.5%, n = 264). Approximately a quarter of deaths occurred prior to delivery (28.4%, n = 283), 35.7% (n = 356) occurred on the day of delivery and 35.9% (n = 359) occurred after delivery. Half of maternal deaths (50.6%; n = 505) occurred in women aged 20-29 years, 10.3% (n = 103) occurred in women aged under 20 years, 34.5% (n = 344) occurred in women aged 30-39 years and 4.6% (n = 46) occurred in women aged ≥40 years. There was no measured association between the availability of key obstetric resources and the rate of pregnancy-related death.Conclusions: The large variation in the rate of pregnancy-related death, irrespective of resource availability, emphasises that inequality and inequity in health care persists.Tweetable Abstract: Inequality and inequity in pregnancy-related death persists globally, irrespective of resource availability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]