Asma Khalil1, Peter von Dadelszen2, Erkan Kalafat3, Mercede Sebghati4, Shamez Ladhani5, Austin Ugwumadu4, Tim Draycott6, Pat O'Brien7, Laura Magee2. 1. Fetal Medicine Unit, St George's University of London, London SW17 0QT, UK. Electronic address: akhalil@sgul.ac.uk. 2. School of Life Course Sciences, King's College London, London, UK. 3. Department of Statistics, Faculty of Arts and Science, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey. 4. Fetal Medicine Unit, St George's University of London, London SW17 0QT, UK. 5. Immunisation and Countermeasures Division, Public Health England, London, UK. 6. Department of Women's Health, North Bristol NHS Trust, Westbury on Trym, UK. 7. Department of Women's Health, University College London Hospitals, London, UK.
We recently reported an increase in stillbirths during the COVID-19 pandemic, which was unlikely to be directly caused by viral infection since none of the women had COVID-19, a finding echoed in Nepal and India. Possible explanations for this observation include indirect effects, such as reluctance of pregnant women to attend hospital because of fear of contracting severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), or changes in obstetric services. We aimed to investigate changes in obstetric attendance and activities at a large London teaching hospital during the first peak of the COVID-19 pandemic in the UK.We compared the number of women booking for prenatal care, attendances at obstetric triage service for unscheduled care, and number of births at St George's University Hospital, London, UK, in two epochs: Feb 1–June 15, 2020, and Feb 1–June 15, 2019. The first case of COVID-19 in the UK was reported at the end of January; lockdown was implemented on March 23 and eased in mid-June.The change between the two epochs (2019 vs 2020) was modelled using mixed-effects Poisson regression with random intercepts. Intercepts were allowed to vary between the same weeks of 2019 and 2020 to account for the dependency structure. Results are reported as incidence rate ratios (IRRs) with 95% CIs. The numbers of events were plotted against weeks of the year (appendix). We also did subgroup analyses comparing pre-lockdown and lockdown weeks with the same period of the preceding year. We considered p values below 0·05 to be statistically significant. All analyses were done using R version 4.0.2. Ethics committee approval was not required as the data were collected as part of the service and no identifiable data were included.The mean number of pregnant women booking for antenatal care per week was 117·2 (95% CI 114·5 to 119·9) during the 2020 epoch compared with 119·6 (112·4 to 126·7) during the 2019 epoch (mean difference −2·4, 95% CI −2·5 to −2·3). The mean number of women attending obstetric triage per week was 96·6 (95% CI 88·9 to 104·3) for 2020 and 119·4 (117·0 to 121·6) for 2019 (mean difference −22·7, 95% CI −22·8 to −22·6). The number of births was 88·8 (95% CI 85·0 to 92·5) for 2020 versus 94·2 (89·7 to 98·6) for 2019 (mean difference −5·4, 95% CI −5·4 to −5·3).The number of prenatal bookings did not differ between the two epochs (IRR 0·98, 95% CI 0·93–1·05, p=0·704; appendix). There were significantly fewer obstetric triage visits in the 2020 epoch than in the 2019 epoch (0·81, 0·75–0·86, p<0·0001); this difference was significant for both the pre-lockdown (0·82, 0·74–0·91, p=0·0001) and lockdown (0·79, 0·72–0·86, p<0·0001) periods. There were fewer births during the 2020 epoch than during the 2019 epoch (0·94, 0·88–1·00, p=0·050); however, this difference was significant only for the lockdown period (0·89, 0·81–0·98, p=0·020 for lockdown vs 0·99, 0·90–1·09, p=0·883 for pre-lockdown).Our findings suggest that the observed rise in stillbirths could be due to reduced care-seeking. A possible explanation for the greater fall in triage attendance (19%) than in births (6%) is that women might have perceived triage attendance as avoidable, whereas obviously labour and birth are not. However, it is possible that a small percentage of women opted for home deliveries or delivery in a private health-care setting, which would explain the slight decrease in birth rates.Our findings are consistent with the increase in deaths and reduction in care-seeking observed in the general UK population during the COVID-19 pandemic.5, 6 However, the absence of data from years before 2019 limits the model's capability to capture seasonality. We cannot rule out that the observed trend was present before the beginning of the pandemic.We believe there is an urgent need to evaluate maternity service delivery, care-seeking, and pregnancy outcomes nationally, so as to plan for both immediate post-pandemic care and future health system shocks.
Authors: Asma Khalil; Peter von Dadelszen; Tim Draycott; Austin Ugwumadu; Pat O'Brien; Laura Magee Journal: JAMA Date: 2020-07-10 Impact factor: 56.272
Authors: Barbara Chmielewska; Imogen Barratt; Rosemary Townsend; Erkan Kalafat; Jan van der Meulen; Ipek Gurol-Urganci; Pat O'Brien; Edward Morris; Tim Draycott; Shakila Thangaratinam; Kirsty Le Doare; Shamez Ladhani; Peter von Dadelszen; Laura Magee; Asma Khalil Journal: Lancet Glob Health Date: 2021-03-31 Impact factor: 26.763
Authors: Luigi Carbone; Antonio Raffone; Antonio Travaglino; Laura Sarno; Alessandro Conforti; Olimpia Gabrielli; Valentino De Vivo; Martina De Rosa; Sonia Migliorini; Gabriele Saccone; Mariavittoria Locci; Carlo Alviggi; Antonio Mollo; Maurizio Guida; Fulvio Zullo; Giuseppe Maria Maruotti Journal: Arch Gynecol Obstet Date: 2021-08-29 Impact factor: 2.344
Authors: Rupsa C Boelig; Kjersti M Aagaard; Michelle P Debbink; Alireza A Shamshirsaz Journal: Am J Obstet Gynecol Date: 2021-09-03 Impact factor: 8.661
Authors: Mehreen Zaigham; David Gisselsson; Anna Sand; Anna-Karin Wikström; Emma von Wowern; David A Schwartz; Linda Iorizzo; Maria Nelander; Marie Blomberg; Nikos Papadogiannakis; Sandra Holmström; Åsa Leijonhfvud; Verena Sengpiel Journal: BJOG Date: 2022-04-22 Impact factor: 7.331
Authors: Lisa Hui; Melvin Barrientos Marzan; Stephanie Potenza; Daniel L Rolnik; Natasha Pritchard; Joanne M Said; Kirsten R Palmer; Clare L Whitehead; Penelope M Sheehan; Jolyon Ford; Ben W Mol; Susan P Walker Journal: Am J Obstet Gynecol Date: 2022-04-19 Impact factor: 10.693
Authors: Rosemary Townsend; Barbara Chmielewska; Imogen Barratt; Erkan Kalafat; Jan van der Meulen; Ipek Gurol-Urganci; Pat O'Brien; Edward Morris; Tim Draycott; Shakila Thangaratinam; Kirsty Le Doare; Shamez Ladhani; Peter von Dadelszen; Laura A Magee; Asma Khalil Journal: EClinicalMedicine Date: 2021-06-19