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Maternal death

Maternal death or maternal mortality is defined in slightly different ways by several different health organizations. The World Health Organization (WHO) defines maternal death as the death of a pregnant mother due to complications related to pregnancy, underlying conditions worsened by the pregnancy or management of these conditions. This can occur either while she is pregnant or within six weeks of resolution of the pregnancy.[1] The CDC definition of pregnancy-related deaths extends the period of consideration to include one year from the resolution of the pregnancy.[2][3] Pregnancy associated death, as defined by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), are all deaths occurring within one year of a pregnancy resolution.[4] Identification of pregnancy associated deaths is important for deciding whether or not the pregnancy was a direct or indirect contributing cause of the death.

Maternal death
Other namesMaternal mortality
A mother dies and is taken by angels as her new child is taken away, A grave from 1863 in Striesener Friedhof in Dresden.
SpecialtyObstetrics 

There are two main measures used when talking about the rates of maternal mortality in a community or country. These are the maternal mortality ratio and maternal mortality rate, both abbreviated as "MMR".[5] By 2017, the world maternal mortality rate had declined 44% since 1990; however, every day 808 women die from pregnancy or childbirth related causes.[6] According to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) 2017 report, about every 2 minutes a woman dies because of complications due to child birth or pregnancy. For every woman who dies, there are about 20 to 30 women who experience injury, infection, or other birth or pregnancy related complication.[6]

UNFPA estimated that 303,000 women died of pregnancy or childbirth related causes in 2015.[6][7] The WHO divides causes of maternal deaths into two categories: direct obstetric deaths and indirect obstetric deaths. Direct obstetric deaths are causes of death due to complications of pregnancy, birth or termination. For example, these could range from severe bleeding to obstructed labor, for which there are highly effective interventions.[8][1] Indirect obstetric deaths are caused by pregnancy interfering or worsening an existing condition, like a heart problem.[1]

As women have gained access to family planning and skilled birth attendant with backup emergency obstetric care, the global maternal mortality ratio has fallen from 385 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births in 1990 to 216 deaths per 100,000 live births in 2015.[6][7] Many countries halved their maternal death rates in the last 10 years.[6] Although attempts have been made to reduce maternal mortality, there is much room for improvement, particularly in low-resource regions. Over 85% of maternal deaths are in low-resource communities in Africa and Asia.[6] In higher resource regions, there are still significant areas with room for growth, particularly as they relate to racial and ethnic disparities and inequities in maternal mortality and morbidity rates.[4][7]

Overall, maternal mortality is an important marker of the health of the country and reflects on its health infrastructure.[4] Lowering the amount of maternal death is an important goal of many health organizations world-wide.

Causes edit

Direct obstetric deaths edit

Overview edit

Direct obstetric deaths are due to complications of pregnancy, birth, termination or complications arising from their management.[1]

The causes of maternal death vary by region and level of access. According to a study published in the Lancet which covered the period from 1990 to 2013, the most common causes of maternal death world-wide are postpartum bleeding (15%), complications from unsafe abortion (15%), hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (10%), postpartum infections (8%), and obstructed labor (6%).[8] Other causes include blood clots (3%) and pre-existing conditions (28%).[9]

Descriptions by condition edit

Postpartum bleeding happens when there is uncontrollable bleeding from the uterus, cervix or vaginal wall after birth. This can happen when the uterus does not contract correctly after birth, there is left over placenta in the uterus, or there are cuts in the cervix or vagina from birth.[10]

Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy happen when the body does not regulate blood pressure correctly. In pregnancy, this is due to changes at the level of the blood vessels, likely because of the placenta.[11] This includes medical conditions like gestational hypertension and pre-eclampsia.

Postpartum infections are infections of the uterus or other parts of the reproductive tract after the resolution of a pregnancy. They are usually bacterial and cause fever, increased pain, and foul-smelling discharge.[12]

Obstructed labor happens when the baby does not properly move into the pelvis and out of the body during labor. The most common cause of obstructed labor is when the baby's head is too big or angled at a way that does not allow it to pass through the pelvis and birth canal.[13]

Blood clots can occur in different vessels in the body, including vessels in the arms, legs, and lungs. They can cause problems in the lung, as well as travel to the heart or brain, leading to complications.[14]

Unsafe abortion edit

When abortion is legal and accessible, it is widely regarded as safer than carrying a pregnancy to term and delivery. In fact, a study published in the journal Obstetrics & Gynecology reported that in the United States, carrying a pregnancy to term and delivering a baby comes with 14 times increased risk of death as compared to a legal abortion.[15] However, in many regions of the world, abortion is not legal and can be unsafe.[15][16][17] Maternal deaths caused by improperly performed procedures are preventable and contribute 13% to the maternal mortality rate worldwide. This number is increased to 25% in countries where other causes of maternal mortality are low, such as in Eastern European and South American countries. This makes unsafe abortion practices the leading cause of maternal death worldwide.[18]

Unsafe abortion is another major cause of maternal death worldwide. In regions where abortion is legal and accessible, abortion is safe and does not contribute greatly to overall rates of maternal death.[7][16][15] However, in regions where abortions are not legal, available, or regulated, unsafe abortion practices can cause significant rates of maternal death.[19] According to the World Health Organization in 2009, every eight minutes a woman died from complications arising from unsafe abortions.[20]

Unsafe abortion practices are defined by the WHO as procedures that are performed by someone without the appropriate training and/or ones that are performed in an environment that is not considered safe or clean.[18][21] Using this definition, the WHO estimates that out of the 45 million abortions that are performed each year globally, 19 million of these are considered unsafe, and 97% of these unsafe abortions occur in developing countries.[18] Complications include hemorrhage, infection, sepsis and genital trauma.[22]

Rates edit

 
Infographic - History of Maternal Mortality in India

There are four primary types of data sources that are used to collect abortion-related maternal mortality rates: confidential enquiries, registration data, verbal autopsy, and facility-based data sources. A verbal autopsy is a systematic tool that is used to collect information on the cause of death from laypeople and not medical professionals.[23]

Confidential enquires for maternal deaths do not occur very often on a national level in most countries. Registration systems are usually considered the "gold-standard" method for mortality measurements. However, they have been shown to miss anywhere between 30 and 50% of all maternal deaths.[23] Another concern for registration systems is that 75% of all global births occur in countries where vital registration systems do not exist, meaning that many maternal deaths occurring during these pregnancies and deliveries may not be properly record through these methods. There are also issues with using verbal autopsies and other forms of survey in recording maternal death rates. For example, the family's willingness to participate after the loss of a loved one, misclassification of the cause of death, and under-reporting all present obstacles to the proper reporting of maternal mortality causes. Finally, an potential issue with facility-based data collection on maternal mortality is the likelihood that women who experience abortion-related complications to seek care in medical facilities. This is due to fear of social repercussions or legal activity in countries where unsafe abortion is common since it is more likely to be legally restrictive and/or more highly stigmatizing.[23] Another concern for issues related to errors in proper reporting for accurate understanding of maternal mortality is the fact that global estimates of maternal deaths related to a specific cause present those related to abortion as a proportion of the total mortality rate. Therefore, any change, whether positive or negative, in the abortion-related mortality rate is only compared relative to other causes, and this does not allow for proper implications of whether abortions are becoming more safe or less safe with respect to the overall mortality of women.[23]

Prevention edit

The prevention and reduction of maternity death is one of the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals, specifically Goal 3, "Good health and well being". Promoting effective contraceptive use and information distributed to a wider population, with access to high-quality care, can make steps towards reducing the number of unsafe abortions. For nations that allow contraceptives, programs should be instituted to allow the easier accessibility of these medications.[22] However, this alone will not eliminate the demand for safe services, awareness on safe abortion services, health education on prenatal check ups and proper implementation of diets during pregnancy and lactation also contributes to its prevention.[24]

Indirect obstetric deaths edit

Indirect obstetric deaths are caused by preexisting health problem worsened by pregnancy or newly developed health problem unrelated to pregnancy .[25][1] Fatalities during but unrelated to a pregnancy are termed accidental, incidental, or non-obstetrical maternal deaths.

Indirect causes include malaria, anemia,[26] HIV/AIDS, and cardiovascular disease, all of which may complicate pregnancy or be aggravated by it.[27] Risk factors associated with increased maternal death include the age of the mother, obesity before becoming pregnant, other pre-existing chronic medical conditions, and cesarean delivery.[28][29]

Risk factors edit

According to a 2004 WHO publication, sociodemographic factors such as age, access to resources and income level are significant indicators of maternal outcomes. Young mothers face higher risks of complications and death during pregnancy than older mothers,[30] especially adolescents aged 15 years or younger.[31] Adolescents have higher risks for postpartum hemorrhage, endometritis, operative vaginal delivery, episiotomy, low birth weight, preterm delivery, and small-for-gestational-age infants, all of which can lead to maternal death.[31] The leading cause of death for girls at the age of 15 in developing countries is complication through pregnancy and childbirth. They have more pregnancies, on average, than women in developed countries, and it has been shown that 1 in 180 15-year-old girls in developing countries who become pregnant will die due to complications during pregnancy or childbirth. This is compared to women in developed countries, where the likelihood is 1 in 4900 live births.[30] However, in the United States, as many women of older age continue to have children, the maternal mortality rate has risen in some states, especially among women over 40 years old.[28]

Structural support and family support influences maternal outcomes.[32] Furthermore, social disadvantage and social isolation adversely affects maternal health which can lead to increases in maternal death.[33] Additionally, lack of access to skilled medical care during childbirth, the travel distance to the nearest clinic to receive proper care, number of prior births, barriers to accessing prenatal medical care and poor infrastructure all increase maternal deaths.[30]

Causes of maternal death in the US edit

Pregnancy-related deaths between 2011 and 2014 in the United States have been shown to have major contributions from non-communicable diseases and conditions, and the following are some of the more common causes related to maternal death:[2] cardiovascular diseases (15.2%.), non-cardiovascular diseases (14.7%), infection or sepsis (12.8%), hemorrhage (11.5%), cardiomyopathy (10.3%), pulmonary embolism (9.1%), cerebrovascular accidents (7.4%), hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (6.8%), amniotic fluid embolism (5.5%), and anesthesia complications (0.3%).

Three delays model edit

The three delays model addresses three critical factors that inhibit women from receiving appropriate maternal health care.[34] These factors include:

  1. Delay in seeking care
  2. Delay in reaching care
  3. Delay in receiving adequate and appropriate care[35]

Delays in seeking care are due to the decisions made by the women who are pregnant and/or other decision-making individuals. Decision-making individuals can include a spouse and family members.[35] Examples of reasons for delays in seeking care include lack of knowledge about when to seek care, inability to afford health care, and women needing permission from family members.[34][35]

Delays in reaching care include factors such as limitations in transportation to a medical facility, lack of adequate medical facilities in the area, and lack in confidence in medicine.[36]

Delays in receiving adequate and appropriate care may result from an inadequate number of trained providers, lack of appropriate supplies, and the lack of urgency or understanding of an emergency.[34][35]

The three delays model illustrates that there are a multitude of complex factors, both socioeconomic and cultural, that can result in maternal death.[34]

Measurement edit

The four measures of maternal death are the maternal mortality ratio (MMR), maternal mortality rate, lifetime risk of maternal death and proportion of maternal deaths among deaths of women of reproductive years (PM).

Maternal mortality ratio (MMR) is the ratio of the number of maternal deaths during a given time period per 100,000 live births during the same time-period.[37] The MMR is used as a measure of the quality of a health care system.

Maternal mortality rate (MMRate) is the number of maternal deaths in a population divided by the number of women of reproductive age, usually expressed per 1,000 women.[37]

Lifetime risk of maternal death is a calculated prediction of a woman's risk of death after each consecutive pregnancy.[38] The calculation pertains to women during their reproductive years.[38] The adult lifetime risk of maternal mortality can be derived using either the maternal mortality ratio (MMR), or the maternal mortality rate (MMRate).[37]

Proportion of maternal deaths among deaths of women of reproductive age (PM) is the number of maternal deaths in a given time period divided by the total deaths among women aged 15–49 years.[39]

Approaches to measuring maternal mortality include civil registration system, household surveys, census, reproductive age mortality studies (RAMOS) and verbal autopsies.[39] The most common household survey method, recommended by the WHO as time- and cost-effective, is the sisterhood method.[40]

Trends edit

The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA; formerly known as the United Nations Fund for Population Activities) have established programs that support efforts in reducing maternal death. These efforts include education and training for midwives, supporting access to emergency services in obstetric and newborn care networks, and providing essential drugs and family planning services to pregnant women or those planning to become pregnant.[6] They also support efforts for review and response systems regarding maternal deaths.

According to the 2010 United Nations Population Fund report, low-resource nations account for ninety-nine percent of maternal deaths with the majority of those deaths occurring in Sub-Saharan Africa and Southern Asia.[39] Globally, high and middle income countries experience lower maternal deaths than low income countries. The Human Development Index (HDI) accounts for between 82 and 85 percent of the maternal mortality rates among countries.[41] In most cases, high rates of maternal deaths occur in the same countries that have high rates of infant mortality. These trends are a reflection that higher income countries have stronger healthcare infrastructure, more doctors, use more advanced medical technologies and have fewer barriers to accessing care than low income countries. In low income countries, the most common cause of maternal death is obstetrical hemorrhage, followed by hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. This is contrast to high income countries, for which the most common cause is thromboembolism.[42]

Between 1990 and 2015, the maternal mortality ratio has decreased from 385 deaths per 100,000 live births to 216 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births.[6][43] Some factors that have been attributed to the decreased maternal deaths seen between this period are in part to the access that women have gained to family planning services and skilled birth attendance, meaning a midwife, doctor, or trained nurse), with back-up obstetric care for emergency situations that may occur during the process of labor.[6] This can be examined further by looking at statistics in some areas of the world where inequities in access to health care services reflect an increased number of maternal deaths. The high maternal death rates also reflect disparate access to health services between resource communities and those that are high-resource or affluent.[30]

The disparities in maternal health outcomes are also present among racial groups. In the United States, black women are 3-4 times more likely to die from maternal mortality than white women. Unequal access to quality medical care, socioeconomic disparities, and systemic racism by health care providers are factors that have contributed to the high maternal mortality rates among black women.[44] Discounting factors such as pre-existing conditions, do not impact the rate of this disparity.[45] In 2019, Black maternal health advocate and Parents writer Christine Michel Carter interviewed Vice President Kamala Harris. As a senator, in 2019 Harris reintroduced the Maternal Care Access and Reducing Emergencies (CARE) Act which aimed to address the maternal mortality disparity faced by women of color by training providers on recognizing implicit racial bias and its impact on care. Harris stated:

"We need to speak the uncomfortable truth that women—and especially Black women—are too often not listened to or taken seriously by the health care system, and therefore they are denied the dignity that they deserve. And we need to speak this truth because today, the United States is 1 of only 13 countries in the world where the rate of maternal mortality is worse than it was 25 years ago. That risk is even higher for Black women, who are three to four times more likely than white women to die from pregnancy-related causes. These numbers are simply outrageous."

The Covid-19 pandemic heightened maternal mortality rates, disproportionately impacting communities of color. Multiple factors contribute to this widening disparity, notably, social factors such as implicit bias, repeated racial discrimination, and limited access to healthcare. All issues are further exacerbated for people of color who face systemic barriers to adequate medical care.[46] Overall, the maternal mortality rate increased from 23.8 deaths per 100,000 live births in 2020, to 32.9 deaths per 100,000 live births in 2021.[47] An apparent spike in this rate can be noted in 2021.[48] For non-hispanic black women the rate of maternal deaths per 100,00 live births increased from 44.0 in 2019 to 69.9 in 2021.[49]

Prevention edit

According to UNFPA, there are four essential elements for prevention of maternal death.[6] These include, prenatal care, assistance with birth, access to emergency obstetric care and adequate postnatal care. It is recommended that expectant mothers receive at least four antenatal visits to check and monitor the health of mother and fetus. Second, skilled birth attendance with emergency backup such as doctors, nurses and midwives who have the skills to manage normal deliveries and recognize the onset of complications. Third, emergency obstetric care to address the major causes of maternal death which are hemorrhage, sepsis, unsafe abortion, hypertensive disorders and obstructed labor. Lastly, postnatal care which is the six weeks following delivery. During this time, bleeding, sepsis and hypertensive disorders can occur, and newborns are extremely vulnerable in the immediate aftermath of birth. Therefore, follow-up visits by a health worker to assess the health of both mother and child in the postnatal period is strongly recommended.

Additionally, reliable access to information, compassionate counseling and quality services for the management of any issues that arise from abortions (whether safe or unsafe) can be beneficial in reducing the number of maternal deaths.[18] In regions where abortion is legal, abortion practices need to be safe in order to effectively reduce the number of maternal deaths related to abortion.

Maternal Death Surveillance and Response is another strategy that has been used to prevent maternal death. This is one of the interventions proposed to reduce maternal mortality where maternal deaths are continuously reviewed to learn the causes and factors that led to the death. The information from the reviews is used to make recommendations for action to prevent future similar deaths.[50] Maternal and perinatal death reviews have been in practice for a long time worldwide, and the World Health Organization (WHO) introduced the Maternal and Perinatal Death Surveillance and Response (MPDSR) with a guideline in 2013. Studies have shown that acting on recommendations from MPDSR can reduce maternal and perinatal mortality by improving quality of care in the community and health facilities.

Prenatal care edit

It was estimated that in 2015, a total of 303,000 women died due to causes related to pregnancy or childbirth.[6] The majority of these were due to severe bleeding, sepsis or infections, eclampsia, obstructed labor, and consequences from unsafe abortions. Most of these causes are either preventable or have highly effective interventions.[6] An important factor that contributes to the maternal mortality rate is access and opportunity to receive prenatal care. Women who do not receive prenatal care are between three and four times more likely to die from complications resulting from pregnancy or delivery than those who receive prenatal care. Even in high-resource countries, many women do not receive the appropriate preventative or prenatal care. For example, 25% of women in the United States do not receive the recommended number of prenatal visits. This number increases for women among traditionally marginalized populations—32% of African American women and 41% for American Indian and Alaska Native women do not receive the recommended preventative health services prior to delivery.[51]

In 2023, a study reported that deaths among Native American women was three-and-a-half times that of white women. The report attributed the high rate in part to the fact that Native American women are cared for under a poorly funded Federal Health Care System that is so stretched that the average monthly visit lasts only from three to seven minutes. Such a short visit allows neither time for performing an adequate health assessment nor time for the patient to discuss any problems she may be experiencing.[52]

Medical technologies edit

The decline in maternal deaths has been due largely to improved aseptic techniques, better fluid management and quicker access to blood transfusions, and better prenatal care.

Technologies have been designed for resource poor settings that have been effective in reducing maternal deaths as well. The non-pneumatic anti-shock garment is a low-technology pressure device that decreases blood loss, restores vital signs and helps buy time in delay of women receiving adequate emergency care during obstetric hemorrhage.[53] It has proven to be a valuable resource. Condoms used as uterine tamponades have also been effective in stopping post-partum hemorrhage.[54]

Medications and surgical management edit

Some maternal deaths can be prevented through medication use. Injectable oxytocin can be used to prevent death due to postpartum bleeding.[9] Additionally, postpartum infections can be treated using antibiotics. In fact, the use of broad-spectrum antibiotics both for the prevention and treatment of maternal infection is common in low-income countries.[55] Maternal death due to eclampsia can also be prevented through the use of medications such as magnesium sulfate.[9]

Many complications can be managed with procedures and/or surgery if there is access to a qualified surgeon and appropriate facilities and supplies. For example, the contents of the uterus can be cleaned if there is concern for remaining pregnancy tissue or infection. If there is concern for excess bleeding, special ties, stitches or tools (Bakri Balloon) can be placed if there is concern for excess bleeding.[56]

Public health edit

 
In April 2010 Sierra Leone launched free healthcare for pregnant and breastfeeding women.

A public health approach to addressing maternal mortality includes gathering information on the scope of the problem, identifying key causes, and implementing interventions, both prior to pregnancy and during pregnancy, to combat those causes and prevent maternal mortality.[57]

Public health has a role to play in the analysis of maternal death. One important aspect in the review of maternal death and its causes are Maternal Mortality Review Committees or Boards. The goal of these review committees are to analyze each maternal death and determine its cause. After this analysis, the information can be combined in order to determine specific interventions that could lead to preventing future maternal deaths. These review boards are generally comprehensive in their analysis of maternal deaths, examining details that include mental health factors, public transportation, chronic illnesses, and substance use disorders. All of this information can be combined to give a detailed picture of what is causing maternal mortality and help to determine recommendations to reduce their impact.[58]

Many states within the US are taking Maternal Mortality Review Committees a step further and are collaborating with various professional organizations to improve quality of perinatal care. These teams of organizations form a "perinatal quality collaborative" (PQC) and include state health departments, the state hospital association and clinical professionals such as doctors and nurses. These PQCs can also involve community health organizations, Medicaid representatives, Maternal Mortality Review Committees and patient advocacy groups. By involving all of these major players within maternal health, the goal is to collaborate and determine opportunities to improve quality of care. Through this collaborative effort, PQCs can aim to make impacts on quality both at the direct patient care level and through larger system devices like policy. It is thought that the institution of PQCs in California was the main contributor to the maternal mortality rate decreasing by 50% in the years following. The PQC developed review guides and quality improvement initiatives aimed at the most preventable and prevalent maternal deaths: those due to bleeding and high blood pressure. Success has also been observed with PQCs in Illinois and Florida.[59]

Several interventions prior to pregnancy have been recommended in efforts to reduce maternal mortality. Increasing access to reproductive healthcare services, such as family planning services and safe abortion practices, is recommended in order to prevent unintended pregnancies.[57] Several countries, including India, Brazil, and Mexico, have seen some success in efforts to promote the use of reproductive healthcare services.[60] Other interventions include high quality sex education, which includes pregnancy prevention and sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevention and treatment. By addressing STIs, this not only reduces perinatal infections, but can also help reduce ectopic pregnancy caused by STIs.[61] Adolescent mothers are between two and five times more likely to die than a female twenty years or older. Access to reproductive services and sex education could make a large impact, specifically on adolescents, who are generally uneducated in regards to carrying a healthy pregnancy. Education level is a strong predictor of maternal health as it gives women the knowledge to seek care when it is needed.[57] Public health efforts can also intervene during pregnancy to improve maternal outcomes. Areas for intervention have been identified in access to care, public knowledge, awareness about signs and symptoms of pregnancy complications, and improving relationships between healthcare professionals and expecting mothers.[61]

Access to care during pregnancy is a significant issue in the face of maternal mortality. "Access" encompasses a wide range of potential difficulties including costs, location of healthcare services, availability of appointments, availability of trained health care workers, transportation services, and cultural or language barriers that could inhibit a woman from receiving proper care.[61] For women carrying a pregnancy to term, access to necessary antenatal (prior to delivery) healthcare visits is crucial to ensuring healthy outcomes. These antenatal visits allow for early recognition and treatment of complications, treatment of infections and the opportunity to educate the expecting mother on how to manage her current pregnancy and the health advantages of spacing pregnancies apart.[57]

Access to birth at a facility with a skilled healthcare provider present has been associated with safer deliveries and better outcomes.[57] The two areas bearing the largest burden of maternal mortality, Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, also had the lowest percentage of births attended by a skilled provider, at just 45% and 41% respectively.[62] Emergency obstetric care is also crucial in preventing maternal mortality by offering services like emergency cesarean sections, blood transfusions, antibiotics for infections and assisted vaginal delivery with forceps or vacuum.[57] In addition to physical barriers that restrict access to healthcare, financial barriers also exist. Close to one out of seven women of child-bearing age have no health insurance. This lack of insurance impacts access to pregnancy prevention, treatment of complications, as well as perinatal care visits contributing to maternal mortality.[63]

By increasing public knowledge and awareness through health education programs about pregnancy, including signs of complications that need addressed by a healthcare provider, this will increase the likelihood of an expecting mother to seek help when it is necessary.[61] Higher levels of education have been associated with increased use of contraception and family planning services as well as antenatal care.[64] Addressing complications at the earliest sign of a problem can improve outcomes for expecting mothers, which makes it extremely important for a pregnant woman to be knowledgeable enough to seek healthcare for potential complications.[57] Improving the relationships between patients and the healthcare system as a whole will make it easier for a pregnant woman to feel comfortable seeking help. Good communication between patients and providers, as well as cultural competence of the providers, could also assist in increasing compliance with recommended treatments.[61]

Another important preventive measure being implemented is specialized education for mothers. Doctors and medical professionals providing simple information to women, especially women in lower socioeconomic areas will decrease the miscommunication that often occurs between doctors and patients.[65] Training health care professionals will be another important aspect in decreasing the rate of maternal death,[66] "The study found that white medical students and residents often believed incorrect and sometimes 'fantastical' biological fallacies about racial differences in patients. For these assumptions, researchers blamed not individual prejudice but deeply ingrained unconscious stereotypes about people of color, as well as physicians' difficulty in empathizing with patients whose experiences differ from their own."[67]

Policy edit

The biggest global policy initiative for maternal health came from the United Nations' Millennium Declaration which created the Millennium Development Goals. In 2012, this evolved at the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development to become the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) with a target year of 2030. The SDGs are 17 goals that call for global collaboration to tackle a wide variety of recognized problems. Goal 3 is focused on ensuring health and well-being for women of all ages.[68] A specific target is to achieve a global maternal mortality ratio of less than 70 per 100,000 live births. So far, specific progress has been made in births attended by a skilled provider, now at 80% of births worldwide compared with 62% in 2005.[69]

Countries and local governments have taken political steps in reducing maternal deaths. Researchers at the Overseas Development Institute studied maternal health systems in four apparently similar countries: Rwanda, Malawi, Niger, and Uganda.[70] In comparison to the other three countries, Rwanda has an excellent record of improving maternal death rates. Based on their investigation of these varying country case studies, the researchers conclude that improving maternal health depends on three key factors:

  1. reviewing all maternal health-related policies frequently to ensure that they are internally coherent;
  2. enforcing standards on providers of maternal health services;
  3. any local solutions to problems discovered should be promoted, not discouraged.

In terms of aid policy, proportionally, aid given to improve maternal mortality rates has shrunken as other public health issues, such as HIV/AIDS and malaria have become major international concerns.[71] Maternal health aid contributions tend to be lumped together with newborn and child health, so it is difficult to assess how much aid is given directly to maternal health to help lower the rates of maternal mortality. Regardless, there has been progress in reducing maternal mortality rates internationally.[72]

In countries where abortion practices are not considered legal, it is necessary to look at the access that women have to high-quality family planning services, since some of the restrictive policies around abortion could impede access to these services. These policies may also affect the proper collection of information for monitoring maternal health around the world.[18]

Epidemiology edit

 
Maternal mortality ratio per 100,000 live births.[73]

Maternal mortality and morbidity are leading contributors in women's health. It is estimated that 303,000 women are killed each year in childbirth and pregnancy worldwide.[74] The global rate in 2017 is 211 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births and 45% of postpartum deaths occur within 24 hours.[75] Whereas in 2020, the global rate was 223 deaths per 100,000 live births.[76][73] Ninety-nine percent of maternal deaths occur in low-resource countries.[9]

Prevalence by country edit

India (19% or 56,000) and Nigeria (14% or 40,000) accounted for roughly one third of the maternal deaths in 2010.[77] Democratic Republic of the Congo, Pakistan, Sudan, Indonesia, Ethiopia, United Republic of Tanzania, Bangladesh and Afghanistan accounted for between 3 and 5 percent of maternal deaths each.[39] These ten countries combined accounted for 60% of all the maternal deaths in 2010 according to the United Nations Population Fund report. Countries with the lowest maternal deaths were Greece, Iceland, Poland, and Finland.[78]

In 2017, countries in Southeast Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa account for approximately 86% of all maternal deaths worldwide. As of 2020, Sub-Saharan African countries such as South Sudan, Chad, and Nigeria had the highest maternal deaths per 100,000 live births.[79] Since 2000, Southeast Asian countries have seen a significant decrease in maternal mortality of almost 60%.[80] Sub-Saharan Africa also saw an almost 40% decrease in maternal mortality between 2000 and 2017.

Ethnicity edit

Ethnicity plays a big role in access to healthcare. Women who are black and non-Hispanic experience pregnancy-related death at a significantly higher rate. They are three to four times as likely to succumb to maternal mortality than non-Hispanic white women.[81] Between the years of 2007 and 2014, women who identify as non-Hispanic and black had a significant increase in death related to pregnancy.[81] This can be seen throughout different countries. In Brazil, women who are not white were 3.5 times as likely to die because of obstetric mortality compared to white women.[44][82] The maternal mortality ratio is larger in women who are from Sub-Saharan African in France.[44]

In the United States, according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the maternal mortality rate in 2021 was 32.9 deaths per 100,000 live births.[83] This is significantly higher than the rates in 2020 defined as 23.8 deaths per 100,000 live births and 20.1 in 2019.[84] In 2021, the maternal mortality rate for non-Hispanic Black women was 69.9 deaths per 100,000 live births, which is 2.6 times higher than non-Hispanic White women.[85] The mortality rate for women over the age of 40 was 6.8 times higher than the rate for women under the age of 25.[86]

COVID-19 effects edit

Global maternal mortality and fetal outcomes have worsened during the COVID-19 pandemic. Increases in maternal deaths, stillbirths, ruptured ectopic pregnancies, and maternal depression occurred globally during this time.[87] According to The Lancet Global Health, their search, which included over 40 studies, identified significant increases in stillbirth and maternal death during the pandemic versus before the pandemic.[87] According to the United Nations Population Fund, UNFPA, a proportion of total COVID-19 deaths were indirect obstetric deaths where a woman's death was due to the aggravation between the disease and the state of pregnancy. Some outcomes show considerable disparity between low- and high-resource settings.[88] This drives the urgent global need to prioritize safe, equitable, and accessible maternal care in future healthcare crises.[87]

Progression of policy edit

Significant progress has been made since the United Nations made the reduction of maternal mortality part of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in 2000.[89]: 1066  Bangladesh, for example, cut the number of deaths per live births by almost two-thirds from 1990 to 2015. A further reduction of maternal mortality is now part of the Agenda 2030 for sustainable development. The United Nations recently developed a list of goals termed the Sustainable Development Goals. Some of the specific aims of the Sustainable Development Goals are to prevent unintended pregnancies by ensuring more women have access to contraceptives, as well as providing women who become pregnant with a safe environment for delivery with respectful and skilled care. This initiative also included access to emergency services for women who developed complications during delivery.[6]

Prevention strategies edit

The World Health Organization (WHO) has developed a global goal to end preventable death related to maternal mortality.[30] A major goal of this strategy is to identify and address the causes of maternal and reproductive morbidities and mortalities. This strategy aims to address inequalities in access to reproductive, maternal, and newborn services, as well as the quality of care with universal health coverage. Maternal mortality is difficult to measure. Health information systems, such as the CRVS (Civil registration and Vital Statistics), in most low-income countries are weak. Therefore, these systems cannot provide accurate assessments of maternal mortality. Even estimates derived from complete system such as the CRVs, suffer misclassification, and underreporting statistics of maternal death. The WHO strategy also aims to ensure quality data collection in order to better respond to the needs of women and girls while improving the equity and quality of care provided to women.[90]

Variation within countries edit

There are significant maternal mortality intra-country variations, especially in nations with large equality gaps in income and education and high healthcare disparities. Women living in rural areas experience higher maternal mortality than women living in urban and sub-urban centers because[91] those living in wealthier households, having higher education, or living in urban areas, have higher use of healthcare services than their poorer, less-educated, or rural counterparts.[92] There are also racial and ethnic disparities in maternal health outcomes which increases maternal mortality in marginalized groups.[93]

Maternal mortality ratio by country edit

The maternal mortality ratio (MMR) is the annual number of female deaths per 100,000 live births from any cause related to or aggravated by pregnancy or its management (excluding accidental or incidental causes).

Country Maternal Mortality Ratio (2017) by Country All data is from the World Bank.[94][95]
Italy 2
Spain 4
Sweden 4
Japan 5
Australia 6
Germany 7
UK 7
France 8
New Zealand 9
Canada 10
South Korea 11
Russia 17
US 19
Mexico 33
China 29
South Africa 119
India 145
Ghana 308

In the year 2017, 810 women died from preventable causes related to pregnancy and birth per day which totaled to approximately 295,000 maternal deaths that year alone. It was also estimated that 94% of maternal deaths occurred in low-resource countries in the same year.[96]

In a retrospective study done across several countries in 2007, the cause of death and causal relationship to the mode of delivery in pregnant women was examined from the years 2000 to 2006. It was discovered that the excess maternal death rate of women who experienced a pulmonary embolism was casually related to undergoing a cesarean delivery. There was also an association found between neuraxial anesthesia, more commonly known as an epidural, and an increased risk for an epidural hematoma. Both of these risks could be reduced by the institution of graduated compression, whether by compression stockings or a compression device. There is also speculation that eliminating the concept of elective cesarean sections in the United States would significantly lower the maternal death rate.

Related terms edit

Severe maternal morbidity edit

Severe maternal morbidity (SMM) is an unanticipated acute or chronic health outcome after labor and delivery that detrimentally affects a woman's health. Severe Maternal Morbidity (SMM) includes any unexpected outcomes from labor or delivery that cause both short and long-term consequences to the mother's overall health.[97] There are nineteen total indicators used by the CDC to help identify SMM, with the most prevalent indicator being a blood transfusion.[98] Other indicators include an acute myocardial infarction ("heart attack"), aneurysm, and kidney failure. All of this identification is done by using ICD-10 codes, which are disease identification codes found in hospital discharge data.[99] Using these definitions that rely on these codes should be used with careful consideration since some may miss some cases, have a low predictive value, or may be difficult for different facilities to operationalize.[29] There are certain screening criteria that may be helpful and are recommended through the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists as well as the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine (SMFM). These screening criteria for SMM are for transfusions of four or more units of blood and admission of a pregnant woman or a postpartum woman to an ICU facility or unit.[29]

The greatest proportion of women with SMM are those who require a blood transfusion during delivery, mostly due to excessive bleeding. Blood transfusions given during delivery due to excessive bleeding has increased the rate of mothers with SMM.[97] The rate of SMM has increased almost 200% between 1993 (49.5 per 100,000 live births) and 2014 (144.0 per 100,000 live births). This can be seen with the increased rate of blood transfusions given during delivery, which increased from 1993 (24.5 per 100,000 live births) to 2014 (122.3 per 100,000 live births).[97]

In the United States, severe maternal morbidity has increased over the last several years, impacting greater than 50,000 women in 2014 alone. There is no conclusive reason for this dramatic increase. It is thought that the overall state of health for pregnant women is impacting these rates. For example, complications can derive from underlying chronic medical conditions like diabetes, obesity, HIV/AIDS, and high blood pressure. These underlying conditions are also thought to lead to increased risk of maternal mortality.[100]

The increased rate for SMM can also be indicative of potentially increased rates for maternal mortality, since without identification and treatment of SMM, these conditions would lead to increased maternal death rates. Therefore, diagnosis of SMM can be considered a "near miss" for maternal mortality.[29] With this consideration, several different expert groups have urged obstetric hospitals to review SMM cases for opportunities that can lead to improved care, which in turn would lead to improvements with maternal health and a decrease in the number of maternal deaths.

See also edit

References edit

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Bibliography edit

  • World Health Organization (2014). Trends in maternal mortality: 1990 to 2013 (PDF). WHO. ISBN 978-92-4-150722-6. Retrieved 2 August 2016.
  • Jashnani, Kusum D., ed. (27 September 2022). Maternal Mortality - Lessons Learnt from Autopsy. Springer. ISBN 9789811934209.
  • Drife, James Owen; Lewis, Gwyneth; Neilson, James P; Knight, Marian; Cooper, Griselda; Cantwell, Roch (2023-01-31). Why Mothers Died and How their Lives are Saved. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-009-21880-1.

External links edit

  • The World Health Report 2005 – Make Every Mother and Child Count

maternal, death, maternal, mortality, defined, slightly, different, ways, several, different, health, organizations, world, health, organization, defines, maternal, death, death, pregnant, mother, complications, related, pregnancy, underlying, conditions, wors. Maternal death or maternal mortality is defined in slightly different ways by several different health organizations The World Health Organization WHO defines maternal death as the death of a pregnant mother due to complications related to pregnancy underlying conditions worsened by the pregnancy or management of these conditions This can occur either while she is pregnant or within six weeks of resolution of the pregnancy 1 The CDC definition of pregnancy related deaths extends the period of consideration to include one year from the resolution of the pregnancy 2 3 Pregnancy associated death as defined by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists ACOG are all deaths occurring within one year of a pregnancy resolution 4 Identification of pregnancy associated deaths is important for deciding whether or not the pregnancy was a direct or indirect contributing cause of the death Maternal deathOther namesMaternal mortalityA mother dies and is taken by angels as her new child is taken away A grave from 1863 in Striesener Friedhof in Dresden SpecialtyObstetrics There are two main measures used when talking about the rates of maternal mortality in a community or country These are the maternal mortality ratio and maternal mortality rate both abbreviated as MMR 5 By 2017 the world maternal mortality rate had declined 44 since 1990 however every day 808 women die from pregnancy or childbirth related causes 6 According to the United Nations Population Fund UNFPA 2017 report about every 2 minutes a woman dies because of complications due to child birth or pregnancy For every woman who dies there are about 20 to 30 women who experience injury infection or other birth or pregnancy related complication 6 UNFPA estimated that 303 000 women died of pregnancy or childbirth related causes in 2015 6 7 The WHO divides causes of maternal deaths into two categories direct obstetric deaths and indirect obstetric deaths Direct obstetric deaths are causes of death due to complications of pregnancy birth or termination For example these could range from severe bleeding to obstructed labor for which there are highly effective interventions 8 1 Indirect obstetric deaths are caused by pregnancy interfering or worsening an existing condition like a heart problem 1 As women have gained access to family planning and skilled birth attendant with backup emergency obstetric care the global maternal mortality ratio has fallen from 385 maternal deaths per 100 000 live births in 1990 to 216 deaths per 100 000 live births in 2015 6 7 Many countries halved their maternal death rates in the last 10 years 6 Although attempts have been made to reduce maternal mortality there is much room for improvement particularly in low resource regions Over 85 of maternal deaths are in low resource communities in Africa and Asia 6 In higher resource regions there are still significant areas with room for growth particularly as they relate to racial and ethnic disparities and inequities in maternal mortality and morbidity rates 4 7 Overall maternal mortality is an important marker of the health of the country and reflects on its health infrastructure 4 Lowering the amount of maternal death is an important goal of many health organizations world wide Contents 1 Causes 1 1 Direct obstetric deaths 1 1 1 Overview 1 1 2 Descriptions by condition 1 1 3 Unsafe abortion 1 1 4 Rates 1 1 5 Prevention 1 2 Indirect obstetric deaths 1 3 Risk factors 1 4 Causes of maternal death in the US 1 5 Three delays model 2 Measurement 2 1 Trends 3 Prevention 3 1 Prenatal care 3 2 Medical technologies 3 3 Medications and surgical management 3 4 Public health 3 5 Policy 4 Epidemiology 4 1 Prevalence by country 4 2 Ethnicity 4 3 COVID 19 effects 4 4 Progression of policy 4 5 Prevention strategies 4 6 Variation within countries 4 7 Maternal mortality ratio by country 5 Related terms 5 1 Severe maternal morbidity 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksCauses editDirect obstetric deaths edit Overview edit Direct obstetric deaths are due to complications of pregnancy birth termination or complications arising from their management 1 The causes of maternal death vary by region and level of access According to a study published in the Lancet which covered the period from 1990 to 2013 the most common causes of maternal death world wide are postpartum bleeding 15 complications from unsafe abortion 15 hypertensive disorders of pregnancy 10 postpartum infections 8 and obstructed labor 6 8 Other causes include blood clots 3 and pre existing conditions 28 9 Descriptions by condition edit Postpartum bleeding happens when there is uncontrollable bleeding from the uterus cervix or vaginal wall after birth This can happen when the uterus does not contract correctly after birth there is left over placenta in the uterus or there are cuts in the cervix or vagina from birth 10 Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy happen when the body does not regulate blood pressure correctly In pregnancy this is due to changes at the level of the blood vessels likely because of the placenta 11 This includes medical conditions like gestational hypertension and pre eclampsia Postpartum infections are infections of the uterus or other parts of the reproductive tract after the resolution of a pregnancy They are usually bacterial and cause fever increased pain and foul smelling discharge 12 Obstructed labor happens when the baby does not properly move into the pelvis and out of the body during labor The most common cause of obstructed labor is when the baby s head is too big or angled at a way that does not allow it to pass through the pelvis and birth canal 13 Blood clots can occur in different vessels in the body including vessels in the arms legs and lungs They can cause problems in the lung as well as travel to the heart or brain leading to complications 14 Unsafe abortion edit Main article Unsafe abortion When abortion is legal and accessible it is widely regarded as safer than carrying a pregnancy to term and delivery In fact a study published in the journal Obstetrics amp Gynecology reported that in the United States carrying a pregnancy to term and delivering a baby comes with 14 times increased risk of death as compared to a legal abortion 15 However in many regions of the world abortion is not legal and can be unsafe 15 16 17 Maternal deaths caused by improperly performed procedures are preventable and contribute 13 to the maternal mortality rate worldwide This number is increased to 25 in countries where other causes of maternal mortality are low such as in Eastern European and South American countries This makes unsafe abortion practices the leading cause of maternal death worldwide 18 Unsafe abortion is another major cause of maternal death worldwide In regions where abortion is legal and accessible abortion is safe and does not contribute greatly to overall rates of maternal death 7 16 15 However in regions where abortions are not legal available or regulated unsafe abortion practices can cause significant rates of maternal death 19 According to the World Health Organization in 2009 every eight minutes a woman died from complications arising from unsafe abortions 20 Unsafe abortion practices are defined by the WHO as procedures that are performed by someone without the appropriate training and or ones that are performed in an environment that is not considered safe or clean 18 21 Using this definition the WHO estimates that out of the 45 million abortions that are performed each year globally 19 million of these are considered unsafe and 97 of these unsafe abortions occur in developing countries 18 Complications include hemorrhage infection sepsis and genital trauma 22 Rates edit nbsp Infographic History of Maternal Mortality in IndiaThere are four primary types of data sources that are used to collect abortion related maternal mortality rates confidential enquiries registration data verbal autopsy and facility based data sources A verbal autopsy is a systematic tool that is used to collect information on the cause of death from laypeople and not medical professionals 23 Confidential enquires for maternal deaths do not occur very often on a national level in most countries Registration systems are usually considered the gold standard method for mortality measurements However they have been shown to miss anywhere between 30 and 50 of all maternal deaths 23 Another concern for registration systems is that 75 of all global births occur in countries where vital registration systems do not exist meaning that many maternal deaths occurring during these pregnancies and deliveries may not be properly record through these methods There are also issues with using verbal autopsies and other forms of survey in recording maternal death rates For example the family s willingness to participate after the loss of a loved one misclassification of the cause of death and under reporting all present obstacles to the proper reporting of maternal mortality causes Finally an potential issue with facility based data collection on maternal mortality is the likelihood that women who experience abortion related complications to seek care in medical facilities This is due to fear of social repercussions or legal activity in countries where unsafe abortion is common since it is more likely to be legally restrictive and or more highly stigmatizing 23 Another concern for issues related to errors in proper reporting for accurate understanding of maternal mortality is the fact that global estimates of maternal deaths related to a specific cause present those related to abortion as a proportion of the total mortality rate Therefore any change whether positive or negative in the abortion related mortality rate is only compared relative to other causes and this does not allow for proper implications of whether abortions are becoming more safe or less safe with respect to the overall mortality of women 23 Prevention edit The prevention and reduction of maternity death is one of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals specifically Goal 3 Good health and well being Promoting effective contraceptive use and information distributed to a wider population with access to high quality care can make steps towards reducing the number of unsafe abortions For nations that allow contraceptives programs should be instituted to allow the easier accessibility of these medications 22 However this alone will not eliminate the demand for safe services awareness on safe abortion services health education on prenatal check ups and proper implementation of diets during pregnancy and lactation also contributes to its prevention 24 Indirect obstetric deaths edit Indirect obstetric deaths are caused by preexisting health problem worsened by pregnancy or newly developed health problem unrelated to pregnancy 25 1 Fatalities during but unrelated to a pregnancy are termed accidental incidental or non obstetrical maternal deaths Indirect causes include malaria anemia 26 HIV AIDS and cardiovascular disease all of which may complicate pregnancy or be aggravated by it 27 Risk factors associated with increased maternal death include the age of the mother obesity before becoming pregnant other pre existing chronic medical conditions and cesarean delivery 28 29 Risk factors edit According to a 2004 WHO publication sociodemographic factors such as age access to resources and income level are significant indicators of maternal outcomes Young mothers face higher risks of complications and death during pregnancy than older mothers 30 especially adolescents aged 15 years or younger 31 Adolescents have higher risks for postpartum hemorrhage endometritis operative vaginal delivery episiotomy low birth weight preterm delivery and small for gestational age infants all of which can lead to maternal death 31 The leading cause of death for girls at the age of 15 in developing countries is complication through pregnancy and childbirth They have more pregnancies on average than women in developed countries and it has been shown that 1 in 180 15 year old girls in developing countries who become pregnant will die due to complications during pregnancy or childbirth This is compared to women in developed countries where the likelihood is 1 in 4900 live births 30 However in the United States as many women of older age continue to have children the maternal mortality rate has risen in some states especially among women over 40 years old 28 Structural support and family support influences maternal outcomes 32 Furthermore social disadvantage and social isolation adversely affects maternal health which can lead to increases in maternal death 33 Additionally lack of access to skilled medical care during childbirth the travel distance to the nearest clinic to receive proper care number of prior births barriers to accessing prenatal medical care and poor infrastructure all increase maternal deaths 30 Causes of maternal death in the US edit Pregnancy related deaths between 2011 and 2014 in the United States have been shown to have major contributions from non communicable diseases and conditions and the following are some of the more common causes related to maternal death 2 cardiovascular diseases 15 2 non cardiovascular diseases 14 7 infection or sepsis 12 8 hemorrhage 11 5 cardiomyopathy 10 3 pulmonary embolism 9 1 cerebrovascular accidents 7 4 hypertensive disorders of pregnancy 6 8 amniotic fluid embolism 5 5 and anesthesia complications 0 3 Three delays model edit The three delays model addresses three critical factors that inhibit women from receiving appropriate maternal health care 34 These factors include Delay in seeking care Delay in reaching care Delay in receiving adequate and appropriate care 35 Delays in seeking care are due to the decisions made by the women who are pregnant and or other decision making individuals Decision making individuals can include a spouse and family members 35 Examples of reasons for delays in seeking care include lack of knowledge about when to seek care inability to afford health care and women needing permission from family members 34 35 Delays in reaching care include factors such as limitations in transportation to a medical facility lack of adequate medical facilities in the area and lack in confidence in medicine 36 Delays in receiving adequate and appropriate care may result from an inadequate number of trained providers lack of appropriate supplies and the lack of urgency or understanding of an emergency 34 35 The three delays model illustrates that there are a multitude of complex factors both socioeconomic and cultural that can result in maternal death 34 Measurement editThe four measures of maternal death are the maternal mortality ratio MMR maternal mortality rate lifetime risk of maternal death and proportion of maternal deaths among deaths of women of reproductive years PM Maternal mortality ratio MMR is the ratio of the number of maternal deaths during a given time period per 100 000 live births during the same time period 37 The MMR is used as a measure of the quality of a health care system Maternal mortality rate MMRate is the number of maternal deaths in a population divided by the number of women of reproductive age usually expressed per 1 000 women 37 Lifetime risk of maternal death is a calculated prediction of a woman s risk of death after each consecutive pregnancy 38 The calculation pertains to women during their reproductive years 38 The adult lifetime risk of maternal mortality can be derived using either the maternal mortality ratio MMR or the maternal mortality rate MMRate 37 Proportion of maternal deaths among deaths of women of reproductive age PM is the number of maternal deaths in a given time period divided by the total deaths among women aged 15 49 years 39 Approaches to measuring maternal mortality include civil registration system household surveys census reproductive age mortality studies RAMOS and verbal autopsies 39 The most common household survey method recommended by the WHO as time and cost effective is the sisterhood method 40 Trends edit The United Nations Population Fund UNFPA formerly known as the United Nations Fund for Population Activities have established programs that support efforts in reducing maternal death These efforts include education and training for midwives supporting access to emergency services in obstetric and newborn care networks and providing essential drugs and family planning services to pregnant women or those planning to become pregnant 6 They also support efforts for review and response systems regarding maternal deaths According to the 2010 United Nations Population Fund report low resource nations account for ninety nine percent of maternal deaths with the majority of those deaths occurring in Sub Saharan Africa and Southern Asia 39 Globally high and middle income countries experience lower maternal deaths than low income countries The Human Development Index HDI accounts for between 82 and 85 percent of the maternal mortality rates among countries 41 In most cases high rates of maternal deaths occur in the same countries that have high rates of infant mortality These trends are a reflection that higher income countries have stronger healthcare infrastructure more doctors use more advanced medical technologies and have fewer barriers to accessing care than low income countries In low income countries the most common cause of maternal death is obstetrical hemorrhage followed by hypertensive disorders of pregnancy This is contrast to high income countries for which the most common cause is thromboembolism 42 Between 1990 and 2015 the maternal mortality ratio has decreased from 385 deaths per 100 000 live births to 216 maternal deaths per 100 000 live births 6 43 Some factors that have been attributed to the decreased maternal deaths seen between this period are in part to the access that women have gained to family planning services and skilled birth attendance meaning a midwife doctor or trained nurse with back up obstetric care for emergency situations that may occur during the process of labor 6 This can be examined further by looking at statistics in some areas of the world where inequities in access to health care services reflect an increased number of maternal deaths The high maternal death rates also reflect disparate access to health services between resource communities and those that are high resource or affluent 30 The disparities in maternal health outcomes are also present among racial groups In the United States black women are 3 4 times more likely to die from maternal mortality than white women Unequal access to quality medical care socioeconomic disparities and systemic racism by health care providers are factors that have contributed to the high maternal mortality rates among black women 44 Discounting factors such as pre existing conditions do not impact the rate of this disparity 45 In 2019 Black maternal health advocate and Parents writer Christine Michel Carter interviewed Vice President Kamala Harris As a senator in 2019 Harris reintroduced the Maternal Care Access and Reducing Emergencies CARE Act which aimed to address the maternal mortality disparity faced by women of color by training providers on recognizing implicit racial bias and its impact on care Harris stated We need to speak the uncomfortable truth that women and especially Black women are too often not listened to or taken seriously by the health care system and therefore they are denied the dignity that they deserve And we need to speak this truth because today the United States is 1 of only 13 countries in the world where the rate of maternal mortality is worse than it was 25 years ago That risk is even higher for Black women who are three to four times more likely than white women to die from pregnancy related causes These numbers are simply outrageous The Covid 19 pandemic heightened maternal mortality rates disproportionately impacting communities of color Multiple factors contribute to this widening disparity notably social factors such as implicit bias repeated racial discrimination and limited access to healthcare All issues are further exacerbated for people of color who face systemic barriers to adequate medical care 46 Overall the maternal mortality rate increased from 23 8 deaths per 100 000 live births in 2020 to 32 9 deaths per 100 000 live births in 2021 47 An apparent spike in this rate can be noted in 2021 48 For non hispanic black women the rate of maternal deaths per 100 00 live births increased from 44 0 in 2019 to 69 9 in 2021 49 Prevention editAccording to UNFPA there are four essential elements for prevention of maternal death 6 These include prenatal care assistance with birth access to emergency obstetric care and adequate postnatal care It is recommended that expectant mothers receive at least four antenatal visits to check and monitor the health of mother and fetus Second skilled birth attendance with emergency backup such as doctors nurses and midwives who have the skills to manage normal deliveries and recognize the onset of complications Third emergency obstetric care to address the major causes of maternal death which are hemorrhage sepsis unsafe abortion hypertensive disorders and obstructed labor Lastly postnatal care which is the six weeks following delivery During this time bleeding sepsis and hypertensive disorders can occur and newborns are extremely vulnerable in the immediate aftermath of birth Therefore follow up visits by a health worker to assess the health of both mother and child in the postnatal period is strongly recommended Additionally reliable access to information compassionate counseling and quality services for the management of any issues that arise from abortions whether safe or unsafe can be beneficial in reducing the number of maternal deaths 18 In regions where abortion is legal abortion practices need to be safe in order to effectively reduce the number of maternal deaths related to abortion Maternal Death Surveillance and Response is another strategy that has been used to prevent maternal death This is one of the interventions proposed to reduce maternal mortality where maternal deaths are continuously reviewed to learn the causes and factors that led to the death The information from the reviews is used to make recommendations for action to prevent future similar deaths 50 Maternal and perinatal death reviews have been in practice for a long time worldwide and the World Health Organization WHO introduced the Maternal and Perinatal Death Surveillance and Response MPDSR with a guideline in 2013 Studies have shown that acting on recommendations from MPDSR can reduce maternal and perinatal mortality by improving quality of care in the community and health facilities Prenatal care edit It was estimated that in 2015 a total of 303 000 women died due to causes related to pregnancy or childbirth 6 The majority of these were due to severe bleeding sepsis or infections eclampsia obstructed labor and consequences from unsafe abortions Most of these causes are either preventable or have highly effective interventions 6 An important factor that contributes to the maternal mortality rate is access and opportunity to receive prenatal care Women who do not receive prenatal care are between three and four times more likely to die from complications resulting from pregnancy or delivery than those who receive prenatal care Even in high resource countries many women do not receive the appropriate preventative or prenatal care For example 25 of women in the United States do not receive the recommended number of prenatal visits This number increases for women among traditionally marginalized populations 32 of African American women and 41 for American Indian and Alaska Native women do not receive the recommended preventative health services prior to delivery 51 In 2023 a study reported that deaths among Native American women was three and a half times that of white women The report attributed the high rate in part to the fact that Native American women are cared for under a poorly funded Federal Health Care System that is so stretched that the average monthly visit lasts only from three to seven minutes Such a short visit allows neither time for performing an adequate health assessment nor time for the patient to discuss any problems she may be experiencing 52 Medical technologies edit The decline in maternal deaths has been due largely to improved aseptic techniques better fluid management and quicker access to blood transfusions and better prenatal care Technologies have been designed for resource poor settings that have been effective in reducing maternal deaths as well The non pneumatic anti shock garment is a low technology pressure device that decreases blood loss restores vital signs and helps buy time in delay of women receiving adequate emergency care during obstetric hemorrhage 53 It has proven to be a valuable resource Condoms used as uterine tamponades have also been effective in stopping post partum hemorrhage 54 Medications and surgical management edit Some maternal deaths can be prevented through medication use Injectable oxytocin can be used to prevent death due to postpartum bleeding 9 Additionally postpartum infections can be treated using antibiotics In fact the use of broad spectrum antibiotics both for the prevention and treatment of maternal infection is common in low income countries 55 Maternal death due to eclampsia can also be prevented through the use of medications such as magnesium sulfate 9 Many complications can be managed with procedures and or surgery if there is access to a qualified surgeon and appropriate facilities and supplies For example the contents of the uterus can be cleaned if there is concern for remaining pregnancy tissue or infection If there is concern for excess bleeding special ties stitches or tools Bakri Balloon can be placed if there is concern for excess bleeding 56 Public health edit nbsp In April 2010 Sierra Leone launched free healthcare for pregnant and breastfeeding women A public health approach to addressing maternal mortality includes gathering information on the scope of the problem identifying key causes and implementing interventions both prior to pregnancy and during pregnancy to combat those causes and prevent maternal mortality 57 Public health has a role to play in the analysis of maternal death One important aspect in the review of maternal death and its causes are Maternal Mortality Review Committees or Boards The goal of these review committees are to analyze each maternal death and determine its cause After this analysis the information can be combined in order to determine specific interventions that could lead to preventing future maternal deaths These review boards are generally comprehensive in their analysis of maternal deaths examining details that include mental health factors public transportation chronic illnesses and substance use disorders All of this information can be combined to give a detailed picture of what is causing maternal mortality and help to determine recommendations to reduce their impact 58 Many states within the US are taking Maternal Mortality Review Committees a step further and are collaborating with various professional organizations to improve quality of perinatal care These teams of organizations form a perinatal quality collaborative PQC and include state health departments the state hospital association and clinical professionals such as doctors and nurses These PQCs can also involve community health organizations Medicaid representatives Maternal Mortality Review Committees and patient advocacy groups By involving all of these major players within maternal health the goal is to collaborate and determine opportunities to improve quality of care Through this collaborative effort PQCs can aim to make impacts on quality both at the direct patient care level and through larger system devices like policy It is thought that the institution of PQCs in California was the main contributor to the maternal mortality rate decreasing by 50 in the years following The PQC developed review guides and quality improvement initiatives aimed at the most preventable and prevalent maternal deaths those due to bleeding and high blood pressure Success has also been observed with PQCs in Illinois and Florida 59 Several interventions prior to pregnancy have been recommended in efforts to reduce maternal mortality Increasing access to reproductive healthcare services such as family planning services and safe abortion practices is recommended in order to prevent unintended pregnancies 57 Several countries including India Brazil and Mexico have seen some success in efforts to promote the use of reproductive healthcare services 60 Other interventions include high quality sex education which includes pregnancy prevention and sexually transmitted infection STI prevention and treatment By addressing STIs this not only reduces perinatal infections but can also help reduce ectopic pregnancy caused by STIs 61 Adolescent mothers are between two and five times more likely to die than a female twenty years or older Access to reproductive services and sex education could make a large impact specifically on adolescents who are generally uneducated in regards to carrying a healthy pregnancy Education level is a strong predictor of maternal health as it gives women the knowledge to seek care when it is needed 57 Public health efforts can also intervene during pregnancy to improve maternal outcomes Areas for intervention have been identified in access to care public knowledge awareness about signs and symptoms of pregnancy complications and improving relationships between healthcare professionals and expecting mothers 61 Access to care during pregnancy is a significant issue in the face of maternal mortality Access encompasses a wide range of potential difficulties including costs location of healthcare services availability of appointments availability of trained health care workers transportation services and cultural or language barriers that could inhibit a woman from receiving proper care 61 For women carrying a pregnancy to term access to necessary antenatal prior to delivery healthcare visits is crucial to ensuring healthy outcomes These antenatal visits allow for early recognition and treatment of complications treatment of infections and the opportunity to educate the expecting mother on how to manage her current pregnancy and the health advantages of spacing pregnancies apart 57 Access to birth at a facility with a skilled healthcare provider present has been associated with safer deliveries and better outcomes 57 The two areas bearing the largest burden of maternal mortality Sub Saharan Africa and South Asia also had the lowest percentage of births attended by a skilled provider at just 45 and 41 respectively 62 Emergency obstetric care is also crucial in preventing maternal mortality by offering services like emergency cesarean sections blood transfusions antibiotics for infections and assisted vaginal delivery with forceps or vacuum 57 In addition to physical barriers that restrict access to healthcare financial barriers also exist Close to one out of seven women of child bearing age have no health insurance This lack of insurance impacts access to pregnancy prevention treatment of complications as well as perinatal care visits contributing to maternal mortality 63 By increasing public knowledge and awareness through health education programs about pregnancy including signs of complications that need addressed by a healthcare provider this will increase the likelihood of an expecting mother to seek help when it is necessary 61 Higher levels of education have been associated with increased use of contraception and family planning services as well as antenatal care 64 Addressing complications at the earliest sign of a problem can improve outcomes for expecting mothers which makes it extremely important for a pregnant woman to be knowledgeable enough to seek healthcare for potential complications 57 Improving the relationships between patients and the healthcare system as a whole will make it easier for a pregnant woman to feel comfortable seeking help Good communication between patients and providers as well as cultural competence of the providers could also assist in increasing compliance with recommended treatments 61 Another important preventive measure being implemented is specialized education for mothers Doctors and medical professionals providing simple information to women especially women in lower socioeconomic areas will decrease the miscommunication that often occurs between doctors and patients 65 Training health care professionals will be another important aspect in decreasing the rate of maternal death 66 The study found that white medical students and residents often believed incorrect and sometimes fantastical biological fallacies about racial differences in patients For these assumptions researchers blamed not individual prejudice but deeply ingrained unconscious stereotypes about people of color as well as physicians difficulty in empathizing with patients whose experiences differ from their own 67 Policy edit The biggest global policy initiative for maternal health came from the United Nations Millennium Declaration which created the Millennium Development Goals In 2012 this evolved at the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development to become the Sustainable Development Goals SDGs with a target year of 2030 The SDGs are 17 goals that call for global collaboration to tackle a wide variety of recognized problems Goal 3 is focused on ensuring health and well being for women of all ages 68 A specific target is to achieve a global maternal mortality ratio of less than 70 per 100 000 live births So far specific progress has been made in births attended by a skilled provider now at 80 of births worldwide compared with 62 in 2005 69 Countries and local governments have taken political steps in reducing maternal deaths Researchers at the Overseas Development Institute studied maternal health systems in four apparently similar countries Rwanda Malawi Niger and Uganda 70 In comparison to the other three countries Rwanda has an excellent record of improving maternal death rates Based on their investigation of these varying country case studies the researchers conclude that improving maternal health depends on three key factors reviewing all maternal health related policies frequently to ensure that they are internally coherent enforcing standards on providers of maternal health services any local solutions to problems discovered should be promoted not discouraged In terms of aid policy proportionally aid given to improve maternal mortality rates has shrunken as other public health issues such as HIV AIDS and malaria have become major international concerns 71 Maternal health aid contributions tend to be lumped together with newborn and child health so it is difficult to assess how much aid is given directly to maternal health to help lower the rates of maternal mortality Regardless there has been progress in reducing maternal mortality rates internationally 72 In countries where abortion practices are not considered legal it is necessary to look at the access that women have to high quality family planning services since some of the restrictive policies around abortion could impede access to these services These policies may also affect the proper collection of information for monitoring maternal health around the world 18 Epidemiology editThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information September 2019 nbsp Maternal mortality ratio per 100 000 live births 73 Maternal mortality and morbidity are leading contributors in women s health It is estimated that 303 000 women are killed each year in childbirth and pregnancy worldwide 74 The global rate in 2017 is 211 maternal deaths per 100 000 live births and 45 of postpartum deaths occur within 24 hours 75 Whereas in 2020 the global rate was 223 deaths per 100 000 live births 76 73 Ninety nine percent of maternal deaths occur in low resource countries 9 Prevalence by country edit See also List of countries by maternal mortality ratio India 19 or 56 000 and Nigeria 14 or 40 000 accounted for roughly one third of the maternal deaths in 2010 77 Democratic Republic of the Congo Pakistan Sudan Indonesia Ethiopia United Republic of Tanzania Bangladesh and Afghanistan accounted for between 3 and 5 percent of maternal deaths each 39 These ten countries combined accounted for 60 of all the maternal deaths in 2010 according to the United Nations Population Fund report Countries with the lowest maternal deaths were Greece Iceland Poland and Finland 78 In 2017 countries in Southeast Asia and Sub Saharan Africa account for approximately 86 of all maternal deaths worldwide As of 2020 Sub Saharan African countries such as South Sudan Chad and Nigeria had the highest maternal deaths per 100 000 live births 79 Since 2000 Southeast Asian countries have seen a significant decrease in maternal mortality of almost 60 80 Sub Saharan Africa also saw an almost 40 decrease in maternal mortality between 2000 and 2017 Ethnicity edit Ethnicity plays a big role in access to healthcare Women who are black and non Hispanic experience pregnancy related death at a significantly higher rate They are three to four times as likely to succumb to maternal mortality than non Hispanic white women 81 Between the years of 2007 and 2014 women who identify as non Hispanic and black had a significant increase in death related to pregnancy 81 This can be seen throughout different countries In Brazil women who are not white were 3 5 times as likely to die because of obstetric mortality compared to white women 44 82 The maternal mortality ratio is larger in women who are from Sub Saharan African in France 44 In the United States according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention CDC the maternal mortality rate in 2021 was 32 9 deaths per 100 000 live births 83 This is significantly higher than the rates in 2020 defined as 23 8 deaths per 100 000 live births and 20 1 in 2019 84 In 2021 the maternal mortality rate for non Hispanic Black women was 69 9 deaths per 100 000 live births which is 2 6 times higher than non Hispanic White women 85 The mortality rate for women over the age of 40 was 6 8 times higher than the rate for women under the age of 25 86 COVID 19 effects edit Global maternal mortality and fetal outcomes have worsened during the COVID 19 pandemic Increases in maternal deaths stillbirths ruptured ectopic pregnancies and maternal depression occurred globally during this time 87 According to The Lancet Global Health their search which included over 40 studies identified significant increases in stillbirth and maternal death during the pandemic versus before the pandemic 87 According to the United Nations Population Fund UNFPA a proportion of total COVID 19 deaths were indirect obstetric deaths where a woman s death was due to the aggravation between the disease and the state of pregnancy Some outcomes show considerable disparity between low and high resource settings 88 This drives the urgent global need to prioritize safe equitable and accessible maternal care in future healthcare crises 87 Progression of policy edit Significant progress has been made since the United Nations made the reduction of maternal mortality part of the Millennium Development Goals MDGs in 2000 89 1066 Bangladesh for example cut the number of deaths per live births by almost two thirds from 1990 to 2015 A further reduction of maternal mortality is now part of the Agenda 2030 for sustainable development The United Nations recently developed a list of goals termed the Sustainable Development Goals Some of the specific aims of the Sustainable Development Goals are to prevent unintended pregnancies by ensuring more women have access to contraceptives as well as providing women who become pregnant with a safe environment for delivery with respectful and skilled care This initiative also included access to emergency services for women who developed complications during delivery 6 Prevention strategies edit The World Health Organization WHO has developed a global goal to end preventable death related to maternal mortality 30 A major goal of this strategy is to identify and address the causes of maternal and reproductive morbidities and mortalities This strategy aims to address inequalities in access to reproductive maternal and newborn services as well as the quality of care with universal health coverage Maternal mortality is difficult to measure Health information systems such as the CRVS Civil registration and Vital Statistics in most low income countries are weak Therefore these systems cannot provide accurate assessments of maternal mortality Even estimates derived from complete system such as the CRVs suffer misclassification and underreporting statistics of maternal death The WHO strategy also aims to ensure quality data collection in order to better respond to the needs of women and girls while improving the equity and quality of care provided to women 90 Variation within countries edit There are significant maternal mortality intra country variations especially in nations with large equality gaps in income and education and high healthcare disparities Women living in rural areas experience higher maternal mortality than women living in urban and sub urban centers because 91 those living in wealthier households having higher education or living in urban areas have higher use of healthcare services than their poorer less educated or rural counterparts 92 There are also racial and ethnic disparities in maternal health outcomes which increases maternal mortality in marginalized groups 93 Maternal mortality ratio by country edit See also Maternal mortality ratio and Maternal mortality in the United States The maternal mortality ratio MMR is the annual number of female deaths per 100 000 live births from any cause related to or aggravated by pregnancy or its management excluding accidental or incidental causes Country Maternal Mortality Ratio 2017 by Country All data is from the World Bank 94 95 Italy 2Spain 4Sweden 4Japan 5Australia 6Germany 7UK 7France 8New Zealand 9Canada 10South Korea 11Russia 17US 19Mexico 33China 29South Africa 119India 145Ghana 308In the year 2017 810 women died from preventable causes related to pregnancy and birth per day which totaled to approximately 295 000 maternal deaths that year alone It was also estimated that 94 of maternal deaths occurred in low resource countries in the same year 96 In a retrospective study done across several countries in 2007 the cause of death and causal relationship to the mode of delivery in pregnant women was examined from the years 2000 to 2006 It was discovered that the excess maternal death rate of women who experienced a pulmonary embolism was casually related to undergoing a cesarean delivery There was also an association found between neuraxial anesthesia more commonly known as an epidural and an increased risk for an epidural hematoma Both of these risks could be reduced by the institution of graduated compression whether by compression stockings or a compression device There is also speculation that eliminating the concept of elective cesarean sections in the United States would significantly lower the maternal death rate Related terms editSevere maternal morbidity edit Severe maternal morbidity SMM is an unanticipated acute or chronic health outcome after labor and delivery that detrimentally affects a woman s health Severe Maternal Morbidity SMM includes any unexpected outcomes from labor or delivery that cause both short and long term consequences to the mother s overall health 97 There are nineteen total indicators used by the CDC to help identify SMM with the most prevalent indicator being a blood transfusion 98 Other indicators include an acute myocardial infarction heart attack aneurysm and kidney failure All of this identification is done by using ICD 10 codes which are disease identification codes found in hospital discharge data 99 Using these definitions that rely on these codes should be used with careful consideration since some may miss some cases have a low predictive value or may be difficult for different facilities to operationalize 29 There are certain screening criteria that may be helpful and are recommended through the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists as well as the Society for Maternal Fetal Medicine SMFM These screening criteria for SMM are for transfusions of four or more units of blood and admission of a pregnant woman or a postpartum woman to an ICU facility or unit 29 The greatest proportion of women with SMM are those who require a blood transfusion during delivery mostly due to excessive bleeding Blood transfusions given during delivery due to excessive bleeding has increased the rate of mothers with SMM 97 The rate of SMM has increased almost 200 between 1993 49 5 per 100 000 live births and 2014 144 0 per 100 000 live births This can be seen with the increased rate of blood transfusions given during delivery which increased from 1993 24 5 per 100 000 live births to 2014 122 3 per 100 000 live births 97 In the United States severe maternal morbidity has increased over the last several years impacting greater than 50 000 women in 2014 alone There is no conclusive reason for this dramatic increase It is thought that the overall state of health for pregnant women is impacting these rates For example complications can derive from underlying chronic medical conditions like diabetes obesity HIV AIDS and high blood pressure These underlying conditions are also thought to lead to increased risk of maternal mortality 100 The increased rate for SMM can also be indicative of potentially increased rates for maternal mortality since without identification and treatment of SMM these conditions would lead to increased maternal death rates Therefore diagnosis of SMM can be considered a near miss for maternal mortality 29 With this consideration several different expert groups have urged obstetric hospitals to review SMM cases for opportunities that can lead to improved care which in turn would lead to improvements with maternal health and a decrease in the number of maternal deaths See also editChild health Confidential Enquiry into Maternal Deaths in the UK Infant mortality List of women who died in childbirth Maternal mortality in fiction Maternal near miss 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Maternal and Child Health Journal 7 1 13 30 doi 10 1023 A 1022537516969 PMID 12710797 S2CID 19973932 Maternal mortality ratio modeled estimate per 100 000 live births Data Retrieved 2018 06 27 What s killing America s new mothers By Annalisa Merelli October 29 2017 Quartz The dire state of US data collection on maternal health and mortality is also distressing Until the early 1990s death certificates did not note if a woman was pregnant or had recently given birth when she died It took until 2017 for all US states to add that check box to their death certificates Clark SL Belfort MA Dildy GA Herbst MA Meyers JA Hankins GD July 2008 Maternal death in the 21st century causes prevention and relationship to cesarean delivery Am J Obstet Gynecol 199 1 36 e1 5 discussion 91 2 e7 11 doi 10 1016 j ajog 2008 03 007 PMID 18455140 a b c Severe Maternal Morbidity in the United States CDC 2017 11 27 Severe Maternal Morbidity in the United States Pregnancy Reproductive Health CDC www cdc gov 2017 11 27 Retrieved 2018 11 20 Severe Maternal Morbidity Indicators and Corresponding ICD Codes during Delivery Hospitalizations www cdc gov 2018 08 21 Retrieved 2018 11 20 Campbell KH Savitz D Werner EF Pettker CM Goffman D Chazotte C Lipkind HS September 2013 Maternal morbidity and risk of death at delivery hospitalization Obstetrics and Gynecology 122 3 627 33 doi 10 1097 aog 0b013e3182a06f4e PMID 23921870 S2CID 25347341 Bibliography editWorld Health Organization 2014 Trends in maternal mortality 1990 to 2013 PDF WHO ISBN 978 92 4 150722 6 Retrieved 2 August 2016 Jashnani Kusum D ed 27 September 2022 Maternal Mortality Lessons Learnt from Autopsy Springer ISBN 9789811934209 Drife James Owen Lewis Gwyneth Neilson James P Knight Marian Cooper Griselda Cantwell Roch 2023 01 31 Why Mothers Died and How their Lives are Saved Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 009 21880 1 External links editThe World Health Report 2005 Make Every Mother and Child Count Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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