| Literature DB >> 26415952 |
Angela Hancock1, Andrew D Weeks2, Dame Tina Lavender3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Postpartum haemorrhage (PPH) is the leading cause of maternal mortality in low-income countries and severe maternal morbidity in many high-income countries. Poor outcomes following PPH are often attributed to delays in the recognition and treatment of PPH. Experts have suggested that improving the accuracy and reliability of blood loss estimation is the crucial step in preventing death and morbidity from PPH. However, there is little guidance on how this can be achieved. The aim of this integrative review was to evaluate the various methods of assessing maternal blood loss during childbirth.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26415952 PMCID: PMC4587838 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-015-0653-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Fig. 1Screening and Inclusion Process
Types of research methodology in the 36 included papers
| Type of Research | Number of Studies | Name of Lead Researcher |
|---|---|---|
| Observational Studies | 22 | Al Kadri, Audureau, Bose, Brant, Brant, Buckland, Dildy, Duthie, Duthie, Gharoro, Glover, Kavle, Larsson, Maslovitz, Newton, Razvi, Stafford, Tixier, Toledo, Toledo, Wangwe, Yoong |
| Randomised controlled trial | 4 | Denaux-Tharaux, Patel, Toledo, Zhang, |
| Audit | 3 | Dupont, Dupont, Rizvi |
| Qualitative – no specified perspective | 4 | Jangsten, Kalim, Vaate, Sibley |
| Naturalistic Inquiry | 1 | Elmir |
| Husserlian phenomenology | 1 | Mapp |
| Grounded theory | 1 | Matsuyama |
Blood loss evaluation methods tested in the 29 quantitative studies
| Methods | Number of Studies | Name of Lead Researcher |
|---|---|---|
| Visual estimation | 9 | Bose, Buckland, Dildy, Glover, Maslovitz, Toledo, Toledo, Toledo, Yoong |
| Visual estimation and spectrophotometry | 7 | Brant, Brant, Duthie, Duthie, Larsson, Newton, Razvi |
| Weighed blood loss and spectrophotometry | 1 | Kavle |
| Visual estimation and gravimetric (weighed) | 1 | Al Kadri |
| Visual estimation, blood collection bag and spectrophotometry | 1 | Patel |
| Visual estimation and maternal haematocrit | 3 | Gharoro, Stafford, Wangwe |
| Blood collection bag and maternal haematocrit | 1 | Tixier |
| Clinical diagnosis and haemoglobin | 1 | Dupont |
| Clinical diagnosis and blood collection bags | 1 | Audureau |
| Visual estimation and blood collection bag | 1 | Zhang |
| Mulitfaceted – audit, protocol and training | 1 | Denaux-Tharaux |
| Audit and training | 2 | Dupont, Rizvi |
Phenomena of interest in the 7 qualitative studies
| Phenomena of Interest | Number of studies | Name of Lead Researcher |
|---|---|---|
| Knowledge, attitudes and practices of birth attendants and community members related to bleeding, PPH and care-seeking behaviour | 4 | Vaate, Sibley, Matsuyama, Kalim |
| Women’s experiences of PPH | 2 | Mapp, Elmir |
| Midwives experiences and rationale for third stage management | 1 | Jangsten |