5 results on '"pregnancy-related death"'
Search Results
2. Pregnancy-related and maternal deaths in Hamburg, Germany: an autopsy study from 1984 – 2018.
- Author
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Edler, Carolin, Sperhake, Jan Peter, Püschel, Klaus, and Schröder, Ann Sophie
- Subjects
- *
AUTOPSY , *FORENSIC pathology , *FORENSIC medicine , *CAUSES of death , *QUALITY of service , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Maternal deaths are rare events in industrial nations due to high quality medical services. These are often unexpected deaths occurring during pregnancy and labor, thus often requiring forensic autopsies. Our analysis will provide an overview of the expected range of causes of death. A retrospective analysis was carried out on all autopsies performed at the Department of Legal Medicine in Hamburg, Germany, over the last 34 years. Autopsies were carried out on 57 cases of maternal death over the 34- year period, i.e. 1 or 2 cases per year. The average age of women was 30 years. Approximately two thirds of deaths occurred during pregnancy. Cardiovascular events accounted for the leading causes of death from natural causes, suicides were the leading causes of non-natural death. Maternal deaths remained consistently rare over the examination period. There was a wide range of causes of death involving natural and non-natural causes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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- View/download PDF
3. Effects of the West African Ebola Epidemic on Health Care of Pregnant Women: Stigmatization With and Without Infection
- Author
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Strong, Adrienne E. and Schwartz, David A.
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Health care workers ,viruses ,Neonatal death ,Doctors ,Ebola virus disease ,Maternal death ,Nurses ,Ebola treatment center ,Infant mortality ,Stigmatization ,Article ,Hospitals ,Midwives ,Stigma ,Pregnancy complications ,Pregnancy ,Pregnancy-related death ,Survivors ,Maternal morbidity - Abstract
Following the end of the Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa in March 2016, the lingering effects of stigma on Ebola survivors, as well as children orphaned by the disease, have become evident. However, there was little scholarly attention paid to stigma while the outbreak was still active. This chapter explores the effects of stigmatization on the health care services that pregnant women, both with and without Ebola, were able to access and receive during the outbreak. We propose three primary ways in which stigma operated to reduce pregnant women’s access to health care services during the outbreak: (1) Women and their relatives were afraid to go to health facilities for fear of being infected with Ebola while there, i.e., stigmatization of health care facilities; (2) Health care workers frequently died due to their occupational exposure to EVD while caring for others, i.e., they were stigmatized as carriers or transmitters of Ebola; and (3) Pregnant women themselves were refused services at health facilities due to fears that they were infected with Ebola, i.e., the physiological processes of birth, which involve high levels of potential for exposure to bodily fluids, led to health care workers’ stigmatization of these women when they sought services during pregnancy or, particularly, at the time of giving birth. In several of the countries that experienced the worst of the outbreak, women already faced some of the world’s highest rates of pregnancy-related death even prior to the advent of the epidemic. We argue that the high fatality rate for pregnant women with Ebola, the drastic effects of the epidemic on countries’ health care workforce, and the inherent messiness of birth, all coalesced to create heightened discrimination and stigma around seeking care during pregnancy and birth.
- Published
- 2018
4. Urban-rural differences in pregnancy-related deaths, United States, 2011-2016.
- Author
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Merkt, Peter T., Kramer, Michael R., Goodman, David A., Brantley, Mary D., Barrera, Chloe M., Eckhaus, Lindsay, and Petersen, Emily E.
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RURAL-urban differences ,AGE groups ,ALASKA Natives ,POISSON distribution ,STATISTICAL software - Abstract
Background: The US pregnancy-related mortality ratio has not improved over the past decade and includes striking disparities by race and ethnicity and by state. Understanding differences in pregnancy-related mortality across and within urban and rural areas can guide the development of interventions for preventing future pregnancy-related deaths.Objective: We sought to compare pregnancy-related mortality across and within urban and rural counties by race and ethnicity and age.Study Design: We conducted a descriptive analysis of 3747 pregnancy-related deaths during 2011-2016 (the most recent available data) with available zone improvement plan code or county data in the Pregnancy Mortality Surveillance System, among Hispanic and non-Hispanic White, Black, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Asian or Pacific Islander women aged 15 to 44 years. We aggregated data by US county and grouped counties per the National Center for Health Statistics Urban-Rural Classification Scheme for Counties. We used R statistical software, epitools, to calculate the pregnancy-related mortality ratio (number of pregnancy-related deaths per 100,000 live births) for each urban-rural grouping, obtain 95% confidence intervals, and perform exact tests of ratio comparisons using the Poisson distribution.Results: Of the total 3747 pregnancy-related deaths analyzed, 52% occurred in large metro counties, and 7% occurred in noncore (rural) counties. Large metro counties had the lowest pregnancy-related mortality ratio (14.8; 95% confidence interval, 14.2-15.5), whereas noncore counties had the highest (24.1; 95% confidence interval, 21.4-27.1), including race and ethnicity and age groups. Pregnancy-related mortality ratio age disparities increased with rurality. Women aged 25 to 34 years and 35 to 44 years living in noncore counties had pregnancy-related mortality ratios 1.5 and 3 times higher, respectively, than women of the same age groups in large metro counties. Within each urban-rural category, pregnancy-related mortality ratios were higher among non-Hispanic Black women than non-Hispanic White women. Non-Hispanic American Indian or Alaska Native pregnancy-related mortality ratios in small metro, micropolitan, and noncore counties were 2 to 3 times that of non-Hispanic White women in the same areas.Conclusion: Although more than half of pregnancy-related deaths occurred in large metro counties, the pregnancy-related mortality ratio rose with increasing rurality. Disparities existed in urban-rural categories, including by age group and race and ethnicity. Geographic location is an important context for initiatives to prevent future deaths and eliminate disparities. Further research is needed to better understand reasons for the observed urban-rural differences and to guide a multifactorial response to reduce pregnancy-related deaths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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5. MATERNAL DEATH IN INDONESIA: FOLLOW-UP STUDY OF THE 2010 INDONESIA POPULATION CENSUS
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Lamria Pangaribuan, Felly Philipus Senewe, Ika Saptarini, Teti Tejayanti, Anissa Rizkianti, Yuslely Usman, and Tin Afifah
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Pregnancy ,Government ,maternal mortality ,business.industry ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,lcsh:R ,lcsh:Medicine ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,General Medicine ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Census ,medicine.disease ,Verbal autopsy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Standardized mortality ratio ,pregnancy-related death ,medicine ,maternal health status ,Maternal death ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,Postpartum period ,Demography ,Cause of death - Abstract
Background: Among ASEAN countries, Indonesia is the country with high maternal mortality ratio (MMR) and unable to reach target of reduction of MMR. In order to reduce the MMR target, the government of Indonesia needs evidence to evaluate and design the maternal health program. Objective: The study aims to answers specific issues of who, when, where and why maternal death occurred in Indonesia in order to understand the effective policy and health program decisions. Methods: The 2010 Indonesia Population Census identified pregnancy-related deaths occurring in the household from 1 January 2009 until the date of census (May 2010). The follow-up study revisited almost half of households reporting pregnancy-related deaths to be accounted as samples (4167 of 8464). Basic information related to cause of death were collected by trained data collector using verbal autopsy approach. The information was converted to cause of death defined by medical doctor using WHO ICD-10 rules. The underlying cause of death was later analysed. Result: The highest risk of maternal death was adolescents who were pregnant under 15 years old. The maternal death mostly occurred at postpartum period (56%), 57 percent occurred at hospitals and 31.3 percent at home. Oedema, proteinuria and hypertensive disorder in pregnancy were at 27 percent, whereas complication during labour and delivery problems were accounted for 26 percent. The pattern of maternal causes of death varies between regions. Conclusion: Maternal health program has not been considered as general plan of intervention. It is imperative to consider considered by pattern of characteristics and cause of maternal death and region for effective interventions.
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- 2016
- Full Text
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