Hypertensive Mothers, Obstetric Hemorrhage, and Infections: Biomedical Aspects of Maternal Death Among Indigenous Women in Mexico and Central America

Author(s):  
David A. Schwartz
Author(s):  
Diana Bueno‐Guitérrez ◽  
Mercedes Campiglia Calveiro ◽  
Carlye Chaney ◽  
Aimé López González ◽  
Alejandra Núñez‐de la Mora ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-11
Author(s):  
Naireen Sultana ◽  
Nahid Sultana ◽  
Rabeya Sultana ◽  
Rowshan Ara Begum

Bangladesh is a developing country where maternal death due to obstetric haemorrhage is very high. This study was carried out at Dhaka medical college hospital from January 2013 to December 2013. The aim of this study was to identify the different life threatening complications due to obstetric haemorrhage and also to identify the major causes of maternal death due to obstetric haemorrhage. From total 8500 obstetric admissions during 2013, 597 cases were of obstetric haemorrhage, giving the incidence of 7.02%. PPH was the most common cause of maternal death (75%). Those who survived among them (49.50%) women had PPH. The women who experienced several severe morbidities were in the age group between 20-24year (61.38%). Those who died their age group was 25-29 years (39.28%). Both in morbid cases and death cases most of the women belonged to lower middle class (62.37% and 60.71%). In both groups those who had life threatening complications and those who died most of them came from sub urban area (52.47% and 53.57%). About 42.85% in morbid cases had no regular antenatal check up and those who died among them 42.85% patient also did not take any antenatal checkup . 67.85 % of the death cases had circulatory failure and 59.40% of the severely morbid women also had circulating failure . Next to circulatory failure other morbidities were pulmonary edema ( 29.70%), septicemia ( 4.95%) & DIC (1.98%). Hence the result of the study clearly indicated that low socioeconomic states, irregular antenatal cheek up influence the outcome of obstetric hemorrhage. All death from obstetric hemorrhage are not preventable but regular antenatal check up by well trained health personals can recognize the high risk group or any complications at an early stage and appropriate measures can be taken.Medicine Today 2016 Vol.28(1): 9-11


2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lachmi R. Kodan ◽  
Kim J. C. Verschueren ◽  
Affette M. McCaw-Binns ◽  
Ray Tjon Kon Fat ◽  
Joyce L. Browne ◽  
...  

Abstract Plain English summary The World Health Organization (WHO) provides a framework (ICD-MM) to classify pregnancy-related deaths systematically, which enables global comparison among countries. We compared the classification of pregnancy-related deaths in Suriname by the attending physician and by the national maternal death review (MDR) committee and among the MDR committees of Suriname, Jamaica and the Netherlands. There were 89 possible pregnancy-related deaths in Suriname between 2010 and 2014. Nearly half (47%) were classified differently by the Surinamese MDR committee as compared to the classification of the attending physicians. All three MDR committees agreed that 18% (n = 16/89) of the cases were no maternal deaths. Out of the remaining 73 cases, there was disagreement regarding whether 15% (n = 11) were maternal deaths. The Surinamese and Jamaican MDR committees achieved greater consensus in classification than the Surinamese and the Netherlands MDR committees. The Netherlands MDR committee classified more deaths as unspecified than Surinamese and the Jamaican MDR committees. Underlying causes that achieved a high level of agreement among the three committees were abortive outcomes and obstetric hemorrhage, while little agreement was reported for unspecified and other direct causes. The issues encountered during maternal death classification using the ICD-MM guidelines included classification of suicide during early pregnancy; when to assume pregnancy without objective evidence; how to count maternal deaths occurring outside the country of residence; the relevance of direct or indirect cause attribution; and how to select the underlying cause when direct and indirect conditions or multiple comorbidities co-occur. Addressing these classification barriers in future revisions of the ICD-MM guidelines could enhance the feasibility of maternal death classification and facilitate global comparison. Background Insight into the underlying causes of pregnancy-related deaths is essential to develop policies to avert preventable deaths. The WHO International Classification of Diseases-Maternal Mortality (ICD-MM) guidelines provide a framework to standardize maternal death classifications and enable comparison in and among countries over time. However, despite the implementation of these guidelines, differences in classification remain. We evaluated consensus on maternal death classification using the ICD-MM guidelines. Methods The classification of pregnancy-related deaths in Suriname during 2010–2014 was compared in the country (between the attending physician and the national maternal death review (MDR) committee), and among the MDR committees from Suriname, Jamaica and the Netherlands. All reviewers applied the ICD-MM guidelines. The inter-rater reliability (Fleiss kappa [κ]) was used to measure agreement. Results Out of the 89 cases certified by attending physicians, 47% (n = 42) were classified differently by the Surinamese MDR committee. The three MDR committees agreed that 18% (n = 16/89) of these cases were no maternal deaths, and, therefore, excluded from further analyses. However, opinions differed whether 15% (n = 11) of the remaining 73 cases were maternal deaths. The MDR committees achieved moderate agreement classifying the deaths into type (direct, indirect and unspecified) (κ = 0.53) and underlying cause group (κ = 0.52). The Netherlands MDR committee classified more maternal deaths as unspecified (19%), than the Jamaican (7%) and Surinamese (4%) committees did. The mutual agreement between the Surinamese and Jamaican MDR committees (κ = 0.69 vs κ = 0.63) was better than between the Surinamese and the Netherlands MDR committees (κ = 0.48 vs κ = 0.49) for classification into type and underlying cause group, respectively. Agreement on the underlying cause category was excellent for abortive outcomes (κ = 0.85) and obstetric hemorrhage (κ = 0.74) and fair for unspecified (κ = 0.29) and other direct causes (κ = 0.32). Conclusions Maternal death classification differs in Suriname and among MDR committees from different countries, despite using the ICD-MM guidelines on similar cases. Specific challenges in applying these guidelines included attribution of underlying cause when comorbidities occurred, the inclusion of deaths from suicides, and maternal deaths that occurred outside the country of residence.


2012 ◽  
Vol 41 (4) ◽  
pp. 531-539 ◽  
Author(s):  
Debra Bingham ◽  
Reneé Jones

2018 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Joyce N. Bennett

Previous scholarship highlights migration from the Global South to the Global North. This paper focuses on South-South migration using a case study of a Kaqchikel Maya woman, Brenda, migrating from Guatemala to El Salvador. Her life history and participant-observation data were gathered over the course of 18 months between 2010 and 2015. In her case, migration within Central America encouraged ethnic revitalization, particularly through her investment in Kaqchikel language and clothing. Such revitalization might be a common occurrence among indigenous women and is a significant consequence for indigenous women because of the reinforcement of gendered ethnic work as women are responsible for reproducing indigenous language and the use of ethnically marked clothing.


2021 ◽  
Vol 81 (04) ◽  
pp. 342-353
Author(s):  
Carlos Cabrera ◽  
◽  
Jeiv Gómez ◽  
Pedro Faneite ◽  
Ofelia Uzcátegui

Objective: To analyze maternal mortality in the Maternidad “Concepción Palacios” Hospital between January 2014 and December 2020. Methods: A descriptive, analytical, and retrospective study of maternal deaths occurred in the 2013-2018 period was carried out. Results: There were 73 maternal deaths, and a ratio of 135.96 per 100,000 live births. Direct maternal deaths were 60, 82.19% of the population and 13 indirect maternal deaths, 17.80%. The causes of direct maternal death were hypertensive disorders of pregnancy 48.33%, sepsis 26.66%, and obstetric hemorrhage 23.33%, with a 1: 3 ratios of maternal deaths at extreme ages of reproductive life. Conclusions: The maternal death ratio in the Maternidad “Concepción Palacios” Hospital duplicates the goals of the sustainable development goals of the 2016-2030 agenda; there is an increase in hypertensive disorders of pregnancy as a direct cause of maternal mortality. Primiparity, the absence or lack of data from prenatal control, cesarean sections, and admission-death time of less than 24 hours prevailed. Recommendations: Advances are needed in sexual and reproductive health education, education and training of health personnel in extreme maternal morbidity, analysis by theoretical premises identifying the social determinants of maternal mortality and the health reality related to its management, implementing preventive public policies with specific care guidelines. Keywords: Maternal mortality, Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, Maternal sepsis, Obstetric hemorrhage.


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