1. Incidence and characteristics of pregnancy-related death across ten low- and middle-income geographical regions: secondary analysis of a cluster randomised controlled trial.
- Author
-
Vousden, N, Holmes, E, Seed, PT, Gidiri, MF, Goudar, S, Sandall, J, Chinkoyo, S, Kumsa, LY, Brown, A, Charantimath, U, Bellad, M, Nakimuli, A, Vwalika, B, Chappell, LC, Shennan, AH, Bukani, Doreen, Makonyola, Grace, Toussaint, Paul, Vixama, Adeline, and Greene, Grace
- Subjects
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 ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEMOGRAPHY ,MATERNAL mortality ,STATISTICAL sampling - 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]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF