1. Examining the potential preventability of adverse fetal/neonatal outcomes associated with severe maternal morbidity.
- Author
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Lawton, Beverley, MacDonald, Evelyn Jane, Filoche, Sara, Stanley, James, Meeks, Maggie, Stone, Peter, Storey, Francesca, and Geller, Stacie E.
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MATERNAL health services , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DISEASES , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *FISHER exact test , *PREGNANCY outcomes , *RISK assessment , *PERINATAL death , *PREGNANCY complications , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *PRENATAL care , *DATA analysis software , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PREGNANCY - Abstract
Background: Severe maternal morbidity (SMM) occurs in 1–2% of pregnancies. Despite the knowledge that a SMM event can contribute to poor fetal/neonatal outcomes, little is known about the preventability of these adverse outcomes. Aims: To examine adverse fetal/neonatal outcomes associated with SMM to determine if these outcomes were potentially preventable. Materials and Methods: A New Zealand national retrospective cohort study examining cases of SMM with an adverse fetal/neonatal outcome. Maternity and initial neonatal care were explored by multidisciplinary panels utilising a preventability tool to assess whether the fetal/neonatal harm was potentially preventable. Adverse fetal/neonatal outcomes were defined as fetal or early neonatal death, Apgar score <7 at five minutes, admission to neonatal intensive care unit or special care baby unit and neonatal encephalopathy. Results: Of 85 cases reviewed, adverse fetal/neonatal outcome was deemed potentially preventable in 55.3% of cases (n = 47/85). Preventability was related to maternal antenatal/peripartum care (in utero) in 39% (n = 33/85), to initial neonatal care (ex utero) in 36% (n = 29/80), and to both maternal and neonatal care in 20% (16/80) of cases. Main contributors to potential preventability were factors related to healthcare providers, particularly lack of recognition of high risk, delayed or failure to diagnose, and delayed or inappropriate treatment. Conclusions: Multidisciplinary panels found that over half of adverse fetal/neonatal harm associated with SMM was potentially preventable. The novel approach of examining both maternal and neonatal care identifies opportunities to improve fetal/neonatal outcomes associated with SMM at multiple points on the perinatal continuum of care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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