| Literature DB >> 23421792 |
Jeffrey Michael Smith1, Rehana Gubin, Martine M Holston, Judith Fullerton, Ndola Prata.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hemorrhage continues to be a leading cause of maternal death in developing countries. The 2012 World Health Organization guidelines for the prevention and management of postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) recommend oral administration of misoprostol by community health workers (CHWs). However, there are several outstanding questions about distribution of misoprostol for PPH prevention at home births.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23421792 PMCID: PMC3598986 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2393-13-44
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Figure 1Screening and Inclusion Process.
Definitions
| Distribution Timing | The time during pregnancy when misoprostol was given to study or program participants. |
| Distributing Cadre | The cadre(s) of health workers responsible for giving misoprostol to women. This includes health care providers, community health workers and other community health agents, such as traditional birth attendants or community drug keepers. |
| Administration Method | The method by which misoprostol was administered to the women at the time of use. Typically this was administration by a health worker, administration by a community provider or self-administration by the woman or a family member. |
| Home Birth Rate | The national or catchment-area rate of home births as reported in the publication or written report, or the calculated proportion of home births in comparison study sites. |
| Administration Before Birth | Misoprostol administration while the woman is still pregnant or prior to delivery. |
| Adverse Maternal Outcomes | Adverse outcomes, including Maternal Death and Perceived PPH/Excessive Bleeding, that are severe and relevant to misoprostol use and that are reported as occurring in a study or program participant who delivered at home and used misoprostol. |
| Maternal Death | Death within 24 hours of delivery reported as occurring in a study or program participant who delivered at home and used misoprostol. Both total deaths and deaths attributed to PPH or excessive bleeding are reported. |
| Distribution Rate | The proportion of pregnant women in the catchment area who received misoprostol for the prevention of PPH. |
| Coverage Rate | The proportion of women who delivered at home in the catchment area (actual or estimated) who used misoprostol for the prevention of PPH. |
| Perceived PPH/Excessive Bleeding | Women’s perception of excessive postpartum bleeding or measured postpartum blood loss. A specified tool was used in some programs to measure blood loss and inform the threshold for referral. |
Characteristics of included programs
| Afghanistan [ | Study using nonrandomized experimental control design in 2 districts | 80.1% | 2039 | 13501 | Self |
| Bangladesh [ | Operations research project in 6 districts | 87% | 118,594 enrolled; 77,337 delivered, of whom 53,897 received CDK2 | 46,561a 1893b | Self and TBA |
| Bangladesh [ | Study using quasi-experimental design in 2 districts | 85%** | 1009 | 884 | CHW |
| Bangladesh [ | Pilot project in 1 district | 85%** | 19,497 | 9228 | Self |
| Ethiopia [ | Study using quasi-experimental design in 1 area | 97% | 500 | 485 | TBA |
| Gambia [ | Study using randomized controlled design in 1 district | 72% | 630 | 630 | TBA |
| Ghana [ | Pilot project in 4 districts | 37.5% | 5345 | 1261b | Self |
| India [ | Study using randomized controlled design in 1 district | 45.2% | 812 | 809 | SBA |
| Indonesia [ | Study using nonrandomized experimental design in 2 districts | 48% | 1322 | 999 | Self |
| Kenya [ | Pilot project in 2 districts | 38.7% | 3844 | 1084b | Self and SBA |
| Mozambique [ | Operations research project in 4 districts, with each of 3 sites using a different distribution strategy: 1) late ANC only, 2) TBA at birth, 3) a combination of late ANC and TBA at birth | 35.3% | 11,927 | 4781b | Self and/or TBA |
| Nepal [ | Operations research project in 1 district | 89.1% | 18,761 | 13,969a 435b | Self |
| Nigeria [ | Operations research project in 1 state | 95% | 1875 | 1421b | TBA |
| Pakistan [ | Study using randomized controlled design in 1 province | 65%** | 534 | 533 | TBA |
| Pakistan [ | Study using quasi-experimental design in 2 districts | 61% | 872 | 678 | TBA |
| Tanzania [ | Operations research project in 4 districts | 30.8% | 12,511 | 1826b | Self |
| Zambia [ | Pilot project in 5 districts | 59.9% | 5574 | 233b | Self |
| Zambia [ | Pilot project in 10 districts | 71% (for rural areas)** | 31,315 | Not reported | Self and TBA |
Administration Before Birth and Adverse Maternal Outcomes were reported for all 1421 women in the intervention group who took misoprostol, regardless of the place of delivery, but for consistency with other studies and programs (and because there was no indication to the contrary), we have assumed, particularly for the adverse outcomes reported in Table 6, that any such outcomes occurred only in those 1350 women taking misoprostol for home births.
Misoprostol included in CDK. The kits used by these programs included gloves, soap, a blood loss measurement mat [31,32,45] and other materials recommended for use by women who delivered at home.
Dose of misoprostol used was 400 μg (two tablets).
Misoprostol 600 μg was included in CDK.
Adverse outcomes
| Administration before birth | 73 (12,615) | 0.06% (0%–0.23%) |
| Maternal deaths | | |
| Total | 51 (86,732) | 0.06% (0%–1.72%) |
| Deaths due to PPH/excessive bleeding | 24 (86,732) | 0.03% (0.00%–0.16%) |
| Perceived PPH/excessive bleeding | 194 (72,534) | 0.3% (0%–8.9%) |
| Other adverse outcomes requiring hospital referral4 | 27 (86,732) | 0.03% (0%–0.3%) |
1 For Administration Before Birth and Perceived PPH/Excessive Bleeding, only those programs reporting comparable data for the specific category have been included in the calculation. For Maternal Deaths and other adverse outcomes requiring hospital referral, because of the severity of these outcomes, it has been assumed that if a study or program reported data on at least one of these outcomes and did not mention other outcomes, the other outcomes did not occur.
2 Some programs only collected data on these outcomes for a subsample of women taking misoprostol for home births, as noted in Table 2. The Administration Before Birth total includes subsample numbers if both overall and subsample numbers are available. The Adverse Maternal Outcomes data, however, includes overall numbers wherever available because the presence of community information sources makes it likely that such outcomes would be known and noted for the entire home-birth misoprostol population.
3 This includes one inferred occurrence from information that one woman in the Ghana program took misoprostol at the incorrect time and not after delivery of the placenta.
4 Such outcomes were enumerated in 2 programs. In one program, the outcomes were reported as including “retained placenta, postpartum eclampsia, severe lower abdominal pain, and lack of typical postpartum bleeding.” In the other program, the outcome enumerated was “severe postpartum anaemia.”
Types of misoprostol distribution and administration
| | | |
| Any ANC visit (>12 weeks) | 4 | 22.2 |
| Late pregnancy ANC visit (>28 weeks) | 3 | 16.7 |
| Late pregnancy home visit (28–32 weeks) | 5 | 27.8 |
| At home birth | 9 | 50.0 |
| | | |
| CHW1 | 6 | 33.3 |
| TBA | 73 | 38.9 |
| Health workers2/ANC providers | 7 | 38.9 |
| Other (family planning field worker, community drug keeper) | 2 | 11.1 |
| | | |
| Self | 11 | 61.1 |
| TBA | 8 | 44.4 |
| CHW | 1 | 5.6 |
| SBA4 | 2 | 16.7 |
1 Includes female community health volunteers in Nepal and community-based lady health workers in Population Council’s Pakistan program.
2 Includes auxiliary nurse midwives in India.
3 One program with 99.6% CHW distribution and only 0.4% TBA distribution was considered to be CHW distribution only.
4 This category also includes two types of semi-skilled health workers: auxiliary nurse midwives in India and community midwives in Kenya.
Distribution and coverage rates or rate ranges by distribution timing, distributing cadres and administration method (for programs for which rates were calculable)
| 22.5–49.1% | 16.8–65.9% | ||
| 21.0–26.7% | 16.2-35.9% | ||
| 54.5-96.6% | 55.7-93.8% | ||
| 22.5-83.6% | 16.8-73.5% | ||
| 54.5-96.6% | 87.9-93.8% | ||
| 25.9-86.5% | 35.9-73.5% | ||
| 21.0-49.1% | 16.2-65.9% | ||
| 66.5-83.6% | 55.7% | ||
| 21.0-96.6% | 16.2-93.8% | ||
| 25.9-86.5% | 35.9-73.5% | ||
| N/A | N/A | ||
| 22.5% | 16.8% | ||
Misoprostol distribution and coverage rates (for programs reporting)
| Afghanistan [ | 96.6 | 93.8 |
| Bangladesh [ | 66.5 | 55.7 |
| Ghana [ | 49.1 | 65.9 |
| Indonesia [ | 54.5 | 87.9 |
| Kenya [ | 22.5 | 16.8 |
| Mozambique [ | | |
| TBA only | 25.9 | 73.5 |
| ANC only | 21.0 | 16.2 |
| TBA and ANC | 26.7 | 35.9 |
| Nepal [ | 72.2 | Insufficient information |
| Nigeria [ | 83.6 | Insufficient information |
| Pakistan [ | 86.5 | Insufficient information |
| Tanzania [ | 26.3 | 29.3 |
| Zambia [ | 40.3 | Insufficient information |
1 This program had a different distribution strategy at each of three different sites. To distinguish among approaches, results are presented for each strategy separately.