Literature DB >> 26392969

Severe acute maternal morbidity and associated deaths in conflict and post-conflict settings in Africa.

M Tamura1, S G Hinderaker2, M Manzi3, R Van Den Bergh3, R Zachariah3.   

Abstract

SETTING: Five hospitals in four conflict and post-conflict countries (Democratic Republic of Congo, Somaliland, Sierra Leone and Burundi).
OBJECTIVES: To report among hospital deliveries: 1) the proportion of severe acute maternal morbidity (SAMM), 2) the pattern of SAMM, and 3) maternal deaths according to type of SAMM.
METHODS: An audit of data from a standardised database implemented in all the sites in the study.
RESULTS: Of the 18 675 deliveries, there were 6314 (34%) known SAMM cases with 63 associated deaths, implying that for every 100 SAMM cases there was one maternal death. In descending order, the death-to-SAMM ratios per 1000 deliveries were: 1:7 for sepsis, 6 for haemorrhage 1:70 for hypertensive disorder and 1:398 for obstructed labour. A substantial proportion of deaths (38%) that occurred in hospitals could not be categorised into the standardised SAMM conditions available in the database.
CONCLUSION: As this is the first study using multi-centre data from conflict and post-conflict countries, these findings are relevant to improving maternal health in such settings. Findings, implications and possible ways forward in addressing various challenges are discussed.

Entities:  

Keywords:  conflict; maternal morbidity; mortality; operational research; post-conflict

Year:  2012        PMID: 26392969      PMCID: PMC4463057          DOI: 10.5588/pha.12.0036

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Public Health Action        ISSN: 2220-8372


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