10 results on '"Munjanja S"'
Search Results
2. A framework for healthcare interventions to address maternal morbidity
- Author
-
Firoz, T, McCaw-Binns, A, Filippi, V, Magee, LA, Costa, ML, Cecatti, JG, Barreix, M, Adanu, R, Chou, D, Say, L, Barbour, K, Cottler, S, Fawole, O, Gadama, L, Ghérissi, A, Gyte, G, Hindin, M, Jayathilaka, A, Kalamar, A, Kone, Y, Kostanjsek, N, Lange, I, Mathur, A, Morgan, M, Munjanja, S, Gichuhi, GN, Petzold, M, Sullivan, E, Taulo, F, Tunçalp, Ö, Vanderkruik, R, and von Dadelszen, P
- Subjects
Pregnancy Complications ,Pregnancy ,Humans ,Women's Health ,Maternal Health Services ,Female ,Morbidity ,Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine ,Delivery of Health Care - Abstract
© 2018 World Health Organization; licensed by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics. The maternal health agenda is undergoing a paradigm shift from preventing maternal deaths to promoting women's health and wellness. A critical focus of this trajectory includes addressing maternal morbidity and the increasing burden of chronic and noncommunicable diseases (NCD) among pregnant women. The WHO convened the Maternal Morbidity Working Group (MMWG) to improve the scientific basis for defining, measuring, and monitoring maternal morbidity. Based on the MMWG's work, we propose paradigms for conceptualizing maternal health and related interventions, and call for greater integration between maternal health and NCD programs. This integration can be synergistic, given the links between chronic conditions, morbidity in pregnancy, and long-term health. Pregnancy should be viewed as a window of opportunity into the current and future health of women, and offers critical entry points for women who may otherwise not seek or have access to care for chronic conditions. Maternal health services should move beyond the focus on emergency obstetric care, to a broader approach that encompasses preventive and early interventions, and integration with existing services. Health systems need to respond by prioritizing funding for developing integrated health programs, and workforce strengthening. The MMWG's efforts have highlighted the changing landscape of maternal health, and the need to expand the narrow focus of maternal health, moving beyond surviving to thriving.
- Published
- 2018
3. Validation of the WHO Disability Assessment Schedule (WHODAS 2.0) 12-item tool against the 36-item version for measuring functioning and disability associated with pregnancy and history of severe maternal morbidity
- Author
-
Silveira, C, Souza, RT, Costa, ML, Parpinelli, MA, Pacagnella, RC, Ferreira, EC, Mayrink, J, Guida, JP, Sousa, MH, Say, L, Chou, D, Filippi, V, Barreix, M, Barbour, K, Firoz, T, von Dadelszen, P, Cecatti, JG, Andreucci, CB, Angelini, CR, Ferraz, JP, Zanardi, DM, Camargo, RS, Cottler, S, Fawole, O, Gadama, L, Ghérissi, A, Gyte, G, Hindin, M, Jayathilaka, A, Kalamar, A, Kone, Y, Kostanjsek, N, Lange, I, Magee, LA, Mathur, A, McCaw-Binns, A, Morgan, M, Munjanja, S, Gichuhi, GN, Petzold, M, Sullivan, E, Taulo, F, Tunçalp, Ö, and Vanderkruik, R
- Subjects
Pregnancy Complications ,Disability Evaluation ,Pregnancy ,Postpartum Period ,Humans ,Reproducibility of Results ,Female ,Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine ,World Health Organization ,Brazil ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
© 2018 World Health Organization; licensed by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics. Objective: To validate the WHO Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0 (WHODAS 2.0) 12-item tool against the 36-item version for measuring functioning and disability associated with pregnancy and the occurrence of maternal morbidity. Methods: This is a secondary analysis of the Brazilian retrospective cohort study on long-term repercussions of severe maternal morbidity (SMM) among women who delivered at a tertiary facility (COMMAG study). We compared WHODAS-12 and WHODAS-36 scores of women with and without SMM using measures of central tendency and variability, tests for instruments’ agreement (Bland-Altman plot), confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), and Cronbach alpha coefficient for internal consistency. Results: The COMMAG study enrolled 638 women up to 5 years postpartum. Although the median WHODAS-36 and -12 scores for all women were statistically different (13.04 and 11.76, respectively; P
- Published
- 2018
4. Standardizing the measurement of maternal morbidity: Pilot study results
- Author
-
Barreix, M, Barbour, K, McCaw-Binns, A, Chou, D, Petzold, M, Gichuhi, GN, Gadama, L, Taulo, F, Tunçalp, Ö, Say, L, Cecatti, JG, Costa, ML, Cottler, S, Fawole, O, Firoz, T, Filippi, V, Ghérissi, A, Gyte, G, Hindin, M, Jayathilaka, A, Kalamar, A, Kone, Y, Kostanjsek, N, Lange, I, Magee, LA, Mathur, A, Morgan, M, Munjanja, S, Sullivan, E, Vanderkruik, R, and von Dadelszen, P
- Subjects
Adult ,Malawi ,Jamaica ,Postpartum Period ,Prenatal Care ,Pilot Projects ,Kenya ,Young Adult ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Mental Health ,Pregnancy ,Humans ,Female ,Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine - Abstract
© 2018 World Health Organization; licensed by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics. Objective: To field test a standardized instrument to measure nonsevere morbidity among antenatal and postpartum women. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted in Jamaica, Kenya, and Malawi (2015–2016). Women presenting for antenatal care (ANC) or postpartum care (PPC) were recruited if they were at least 28 weeks into pregnancy or 6 weeks after delivery. They were interviewed and examined by a doctor, midwife, or nurse. Data were collected and securely stored electronically on a WHO server. Diagnosed conditions were coded and summarized using ICD-MM. Results: A total of 1490 women (750 ANC; 740 PPC) averaging 26 years of age participated. Most women (61.6% ANC, 79.1% PPC) were healthy (no diagnosed medical or obstetric conditions). Among ANC women with clinical diagnoses, 18.3% had direct (obstetric) conditions and 18.0% indirect (medical) problems. Prevalences among PPC women were lower (12.7% and 8.6%, respectively). When screening for factors in the expanded morbidity definition, 12.8% (ANC) and 11.0% (PPC) self-reported exposure to violence. Conclusion: Nonsevere conditions are distinct from the leading causes of maternal death and may vary across pregnancy and the puerperium. This effort to identify and measure nonsevere morbidity promotes a comprehensive understanding of morbidity, incorporating maternal self-reporting of exposure to violence, and mental health. Further validation is needed.
- Published
- 2018
5. The impact of hypertension, hemorrhage, and other maternal morbidities on functioning in the postpartum period as assessed by the WHODAS 2.0 36-item tool
- Author
-
Guida, JP, Costa, ML, Parpinelli, MA, Pacagnella, RC, Ferreira, EC, Mayrink, J, Silveira, C, Souza, RT, Sousa, MH, Say, L, Chou, D, Filippi, V, Barreix, M, Barbour, K, McCaw-Binns, A, von Dadelszen, P, Cecatti, JG, Andreucci, CB, Angelini, CR, Ferraz, JP, Zanardi, DM, Camargo, RS, Cottler, S, Fawole, O, Firoz, T, Gadama, L, Ghérissi, A, Gyte, G, Hindin, M, Jayathilaka, A, Kalamar, A, Kone, Y, Kostanjsek, N, Lange, I, Magee, LA, Mathur, A, Morgan, M, Munjanja, S, Gichuhi, GN, Petzold, M, Sullivan, E, Taulo, F, Tunçalp, Ö, and Vanderkruik, R
- Subjects
Pregnancy Complications ,Pregnancy ,Postpartum Hemorrhage ,Hypertension ,Postpartum Period ,Parturition ,Humans ,Female ,Morbidity ,Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine ,Delivery, Obstetric ,Brazil ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
© 2018 World Health Organization; licensed by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics. Objective: To assess the scores of postpartum women using the WHO Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0 36-item tool (WHODAS-36), considering different morbidities. Methods: Secondary analysis of a retrospective cohort of women who delivered at a referral maternity in Brazil and were classified with and without severe maternal morbidity (SMM). WHODAS-36 was used to assess functioning in postpartum women. Percentile distribution of total WHODAS score was compared across three groups: Percentile (P)90. Cases of SMM were categorized and WHODAS-36 score was assessed according to hypertension, hemorrhage, or other conditions. Results: A total of 638 women were enrolled: 64 had mean scores below P90 (41.3). Of women scoring above P>90, those with morbidity had a higher mean score than those without (44.6% vs 36.8%, P=0.879). Women with higher WHODAS-36 scores presented more complications during pregnancy, especially hypertension (47.0% vs 37.5%, P=0.09). Mean scores among women with any complication were higher than those with no morbidity (19.0 vs 14.2, P=0.01). WHODAS-36 scores were higher among women with hypertensive complications (19.9 vs 16.0, P=0.004), but lower among those with hemorrhagic complications (13.8 vs 17.7, P=0.09). Conclusions: Complications during pregnancy, childbirth, and the puerperium increase long-term WHODAS-36 scores, demonstrating a persistent impact on functioning among women, up to 5 years postpartum.
- Published
- 2018
6. The global prevalence of postpartum psychosis: A systematic review
- Author
-
VanderKruik, R, Barreix, M, Chou, D, Allen, T, Say, L, Cohen, LS, Barbour, K, Cecatti, JG, Cottler, S, Fawole, O, Firoz, T, Gadama, L, Ghérissi, A, Gyte, G, Hindin, M, Jayathilaka, A, Kalamar, A, Kone, Y, Lange, I, Magee, LA, Mathur, A, Binns, AMC, Morgan, M, Munjanja, S, Gichuhi, GN, Petzold, M, Sullivan, E, Taulo, F, Tunçalp, Ö, and von Dadelszen, P
- Subjects
Psychiatry ,Psychotic Disorders ,Pregnancy ,Incidence ,Postpartum Period ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Female ,Puerperal Disorders ,Global Health - Abstract
© 2017 The Author(s). Background: Mental health is a significant contributor to global burden of disease and the consequences of perinatal psychiatric morbidity can be substantial. We aimed to obtain global estimates of puerperal psychosis prevalence based on population-based samples and to understand how postpartum psychosis is assessed and captured among included studies. Methods: In June 2014, we searched PubMed, CiNAHL, EMBASE, PsycINFO, Sociological Collections, and Global Index Medicus for publications since the year 1990. Criteria for inclusion in the systematic review were: use of primary data relevant to pre-defined mental health conditions, specified dates of data collection, limited to data from 1990 onwards, sample size >200 and a clear description of methodology. Data were extracted from published peer reviewed articles. Results: The search yielded 24,273 publications, of which six studies met the criteria. Five studies reported incidence of puerperal psychosis (ranging from 0.89 to 2.6 in 1000 women) and one reported prevalence of psychosis (5 in 1000). Due to the heterogeneity of methodologies used across studies in definitions and assessments used to identify cases, data was not pooled to calculate a global estimate of risk. Conclusions: This review confirms the relatively low rate of puerperal psychosis; yet given the potential for serious consequences, this morbidity is significant from a global public health perspective. Further attention to consistent detection of puerperal psychosis can help provide appropriate treatment to prevent harmful consequences for both mother and baby.
- Published
- 2017
7. Screening For Small For Dates Fetuses: A Controlled Trial
- Author
-
Neilson, J. P., Munjanja, S. P., and Whitfield, C. R.
- Published
- 1984
8. Sexual life and dysfunction after maternal morbidity: A systematic review
- Author
-
Andreucci, CB, Bussadori, JC, Pacagnella, RC, Chou, D, Filippi, V, Say, L, Cecatti, JG, Parpinelli, MA, Costa, ML, Silveira, C, Angelini, CR, Ferreira, EC, Zanardi, DM, Santos, JP, Souza, RT, Cecchini, GN, Firoz, T, von Dadelszen, P, Magee, LA, Agrawal, P, Vanderkruik, R, Tuncalp, O, Gülmezoglu, AM, van Den Broek, N, Hirose, A, Donnay, F, Ferguson, R, Fawole, O, Ghérissi, A, Gyte, G, Jayathilaka, A, Kone, Y, Foundation, AK, Lange, MI, McCaw-Binns, A, Morgan, M, Munjanja, S, Öztopcu, C, and Sullivan, E
- Subjects
Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological ,Dyspareunia ,Pregnancy ,Postpartum Period ,Parturition ,Humans ,Female ,Maternal Health Services ,Morbidity ,Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine ,Perineum ,Obstetric Labor Complications - Abstract
© 2015 Andreucci et al. Background: Because there is a lack of knowledge on the long-term consequences of maternal morbidity/near miss episodes on women's sexual life and function we conducted a systematic review with the purpose of identifying the available evidence on any sexual impairment associated with complications from pregnancy and childbirth. Methods: Systematic review on aspects of women sexual life after any maternal morbidity and/or maternal near miss, during different time periods after delivery. The search was carried out until May 22nd, 2015 including studies published from 1995 to 2015. No language or study design restrictions were applied. Maternal morbidity as exposure was split into general or severe/near miss. Female sexual outcomes evaluated were dyspareunia, Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI) scores and time to resume sexual activity after childbirth. Qualitative syntheses for outcomes were provided whenever possible. Results: A total of 2,573 studies were initially identified, and 14 were included for analysis after standard selection procedures for systematic review. General morbidity was mainly related to major perineal injury (3rd or 4th degree laceration, 12 studies). A clear pattern for severity evaluation of maternal morbidity could not be distinguished, unless when a maternal near miss concept was used. Women experiencing maternal morbidity had more frequently dyspareunia and resumed sexual activity later, when compared to women without morbidity. There were no differences in FSFI scores between groups. Meta-analysis could not be performed, since included studies were too heterogeneous regarding study design, evaluation of exposure and/or outcome and time span. Conclusion: Investigation of long-term repercussions on women's sexual life aspects after maternal morbidity has been scarcely performed, however indicating worse outcomes for those experiencing morbidity. Further standardized evaluation of these conditions among maternal morbidity survivors may provide relevant information for clinical follow-up and reproductive planning for women.
- Published
- 2015
9. Effectiveness of referral system for antenatal and intra-partum problems in Gutu district, Zimbabwe.
- Author
-
Majoko, F., Nyström, L., Munjanja, S. P., and Lindmark, G.
- Subjects
PRENATAL diagnosis ,PRENATAL care ,PREGNANCY ,MEDICAL referrals ,MATERNAL health services ,OBSTETRICS - Abstract
We conducted a population-based cohort study to determine the prevalence of antenatal and intra-partum referrals, compliance with advice and perinatal outcomes in referred pregnant women in Gutu district, Zimbabwe. The cohort was composed of 10,572 women who received antenatal care in 23 rural health centres (RHC) in Gutu district between January 1995 and June 1998. Pregnancy records of women with antenatal or intra-partum referral were analysed for indication, compliance and perinatal outcomes. Using women who had no antenatal referral or those who complied as referents, the association of referral with perinatal outcome was expressed as relative risk (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI). A total of 30% of women (3,094/10,572) had an antenatal referral. Among women attending RHC in labour, 13% (694/5,338) were referred intra-partum. Nulliparous and women younger than 20 years were more likely to be referred. Nurse – midwives' compliance with referral recommendations was low as 59% women with historical risk factors and 52% with raised blood pressure (>140/90 mmHg) were not referred. Women complied with referral advice except when indication was high parity. Women with antenatal referral were more likely to have hospital delivery, 70% vs 18% ( p [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Does maternity care improve pregnancy outcomes in women with previous complications? A study from Zimbabwe.
- Author
-
Majoko, F., Nystrom, L., Munjanja, S., Mason, E., and Lindmark, G.
- Subjects
MATERNAL health services ,PREGNANCY ,WOMEN'S health ,PREGNANCY complications ,OBSTETRICAL emergencies ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
To determine the utilization of maternal health care services and pregnancy outcomes for women with a history of complications in previous pregnancy, we analysed the pregnancy records of multiparous women (parity ≥1) who booked and completed follow-up in Gutu district, Zimbabwe between January 1995 and June 1998. Women with previous uncomplicated pregnancies (n = 6140) were classified as low risk, whereas those with complications of previous pregnancy (n = 1077) were classified high risk. At enrolment, there was no difference in maternal age and parity between low- and high-risk women. A higher proportion of high-risk women had more than five antenatal visits (32% versus 21%; P<0.001) and gave birth in hospital (47% versus 18%; P<0.001). The risk of antenatal (relative risk [RR] 1.57; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.32–1.88), labour/delivery (RR 1.98; 95% CI 1.75–2.25) and neonatal (RR 1.83; 95% CI 1.44–2.34) complications was elevated in high-risk women. There was increased risk for perinatal death in high-risk women, but this did not reach statistical significance (RR 1.56; 95% CI 0.98–2.49). The recurrence ratio for most complications was low and the sensitivity of historical risk markers in predicting women likely to develop further complicated pregnancies was only 23%. Most women with previous pregnancy complications can safely give birth in the rural health centre. We concluded that high-risk women had an elevated risk of complications in the index pregnancy and that better utilization of maternal health care, especially for delivery, reduced adverse perinatal outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.