• In 1935, she and her colleague Dr Peter L. McKinlay published the Report on Maternal Mortality and Morbidity in Scotland, a comprehensive investigation into maternal death in Scotland. (wikipedia.org)
  • The Italian Obstetric Surveillance System (ItOSS) collects and disseminates information on severe maternal morbidity and mortality. (iss.it)
  • Severe maternal morbidity and mortality during pregnancy, labour and childbirth have become increasingly rare in socially advanced countries, but cannot be considered a thing of the past and continue to be a public health priority. (iss.it)
  • The severe maternal morbidity research projects collect data on the most important severe maternal morbidity conditions for the purpose of improving their treatment and overcoming possible organizational problems identified along the clinical pathways. (iss.it)
  • In 2012, the Italian Obstetric Surveillance (ItOSS) joined the International Network of Obstetric Survey Systems (INOSS), which conducts population-based studies of low-prevalence severe maternal morbidity events. (iss.it)
  • Speaking at an Axios virtual event on maternal health disparities, Dr. Janice Huckaby , chief medical officer of Maternal-Child Health, Optum Population Health Services, discussed how UnitedHealth Group is improving the health of mothers and newborns and reducing the occurrence of avoidable maternal and infant morbidity and mortality. (unitedhealthgroup.com)
  • An especially important contemporary issue to consider within this topic is cesarean delivery ''on maternal request'', opponents of which cite concerns not only for immediate morbidity and mortality increased over that associated with a vaginal birth, but also for potential morbidity and mortality associated with future pregnancies. (moam.info)
  • It is second only to respiratory tract infection in developed countries as a cause of morbidity and mortality arising from microbial infections. (nigeriamedj.com)
  • Do income level and insurance status correlate to increased risk for maternal and infant morbidity? (growmidwives.com)
  • In this feature article, BBJ reporter Meera Raman shines a spotlight on the people behind the world's first pregnancy app for Inclusive Care™, Modelo Health, as well as the company's mission, unique approach to solving for today's national maternal morbidity and mortality healthcare crisis, and the company's early success securing pilots at some of the world's top hospitals in Boston. (modelohealth.com)
  • UnitedHealth Group is committed to improving the health of mothers and newborns, raising awareness for improved maternal health, and reducing the occurrence of avoidable maternal and infant morbidity and mortality. (femtechinsider.com)
  • Severe hypertension is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. (samj.org.za)
  • World leaders started to join their efforts together at the dawn of the millennium by the MDG through the safe motherhood initiative to decrease maternal morbidity and mortality globally [ 8 ]. (hindawi.com)
  • In spite of all national and global efforts, the maternal and newborn morbidity or mortality indices have shown no change or only marginal reductions in the last five years indicating that MDGs targets by 2015 are unachievable using only current strategies [ 9 ]. (hindawi.com)
  • Adolescent fertility rates are high in Kenya and increase the likelihood of maternal and infant morbidity and mortality. (bvsalud.org)
  • The active surveillance of maternal mortality is based on a network of professionals from over 350 public and private healthcare facilities with obstetric, intensive care, coronary care and stroke units across the participating regions. (iss.it)
  • Better access to coverage makes possible the continuum of care many women's health professional societies and community advocacy organizations recommend to increase women's use of preventive care, reduce avoidable adverse obstetric and gynecological health outcomes, increase early diagnosis of disease, and reduce maternal mortality. (amchp.org)
  • The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) recommends women have access to continuous health coverage in order to increase preventive care, reduce avoidable adverse obstetric and gynecologic health outcomes, increase early diagnosis of disease and reduce maternal mortality rates. (georgetown.edu)
  • Maternal mortality Postpartum haemorrhage and obstetric fistula are two avoidable conditions that continue to kill and maim women in sub-Saharan Africa every year Atim (not her real name), from Nigeria's southern state. (gga.org)
  • E73 Sounding the alarm on preventable maternal death, the loss of obstetric skills like vaginal breech birth, and reviewing the ARRIVE trial with Dr. Rohan D'Souza OBGYN, PhD. (podbean.com)
  • The descriptive process of facilitators and barriers of obstetric guidelines development and maternal death committee implementation can contribute to more efficient and effective interventions in Suriname and in other countries. (uu.nl)
  • Mrs. Ambode noted that refusal by expectant mothers for various reasons to access obstetric services, was a major contributor to the maternal mortality rate in the State. (akinwunmiambode.com)
  • Non-use of essential obstetric services is a crucial factor that contributes to high maternal mortality. (akinwunmiambode.com)
  • The deaths proportion by indirect obstetric causes, hemorrhages and abortion was bigger between the multigestas and around 90% of the deaths of this group was considered avoidable. (bvsalud.org)
  • It concluded that monitoring of the multigestas with advanced age and in social disadvantage, as well as effective actions of family planning, and obstetric service qualified for high risk gestation are measures that can contribute for reduction of the maternal mortality in Paraná. (bvsalud.org)
  • Many researchers documented that more than three-fourths of maternal deaths are related to direct obstetric causes, such as haemorrhage, sepsis, abortion, ruptured uterus, and hypertensive diseases of pregnancy which are easily preventable and treatable, and 77% of deaths occur during or soon after childbirth (within 24 hours) [ 3 , 5 ]. (hindawi.com)
  • Quality maternal care is assured by obstetric practitioners (OPs) implementing guidelines specific for management of hypertension in pregnancy. (bvsalud.org)
  • Nearly one half are potentially avoidable with recognition and anticipation of obstetric risk factors. (medscape.com)
  • This is the most visceral human achievement there is, preventing avoidable deaths of mothers and children," Mr Suzman said. (thenationalnews.com)
  • To help address disparities and improve maternal health outcomes, UnitedHealth Group is leveraging partnerships with community-based organizations to support programs that meet patients where they are. (unitedhealthgroup.com)
  • The United Health Foundation recently announced a partnership with Touro University Nevada to help reduce maternal health disparities and increase the state's OB-GYN and family medicine physician workforce. (unitedhealthgroup.com)
  • States that do not expand Medicaid are missing a powerful opportunity to address stark racial disparities in maternal health. (amchp.org)
  • These are regional disparities: 1 out of every 7 maternal deaths occurs in the French overseas departments (DOMs), and the number of maternal deaths reported per live births in the DOMs is 4 times higher than in Metropolitan France (40 compared to 9 deaths/100,000 live births). (inserm.fr)
  • And social disparities: mortality among migrant women remains 2.5 times higher than among women born in France. (inserm.fr)
  • I always heard that story growing up and sadly, have heard it around our own country and the world today - avoidable maternal death and racial disparities in mortality is something on which many of our faculty focus. (yale.edu)
  • While more must be done, Medicaid expansion is an important means of addressing persistent racial disparities in maternal health and maternal mortality. (georgetown.edu)
  • 4 Research also finds that Medicaid expansion has an important role in reducing the significant and persistent racial disparities in maternal and infant health. (georgetown.edu)
  • The three-year, $2.6 million partnership will help reduce maternal health disparities and increase the state's OB-GYN and family medicine physician workforce. (femtechinsider.com)
  • Nevada clearly needs more providers who specialize in women's health to help expand access to prenatal care in underserved communities and address the racial and ethnic disparities in maternal care," said Dr. Laurine Tibaldi, chief medical officer, Health Plan of Nevada, a UnitedHealth Group company. (femtechinsider.com)
  • Together, we will better meet the critical health care needs of expectant mothers, reduce maternal health disparities and improve access to prenatal care in southern Nevada. (femtechinsider.com)
  • The company is also actively addressing disparities in maternal health outcomes by providing coursework in partnership with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Morehouse School of Medicine, and the March of Dimes. (femtechinsider.com)
  • In the 1920s and 1930s, there was concern regarding the high and rising maternal mortality rates, and Douglas made a significant contribution to their reduction. (wikipedia.org)
  • The maternal and perinatal sepsis project is part of the multicentre study promoted by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 58 countries for the purpose of: validating criteria for the identification of maternal sepsis, assessing the frequency and outcomes of maternal sepsis, and identifying good practices for prevention and management of maternal and neonatal sepsis. (iss.it)
  • To make sure we're meeting people in a culturally sensitive and appropriate way, we've had training that we've partnered with the CDC and Morehouse School of Medicine on around implicit bias, especially as it relates to improving maternal outcomes. (unitedhealthgroup.com)
  • New research shows states that expand Medicaid improve the health of women of childbearing age: increasing access to preventive care, reducing adverse health outcomes before, during and after pregnancies, and reducing maternal mortality rates. (georgetown.edu)
  • PART I of the thesis describes the importance of maternal death and perinatal data surveillance and how surveillance contributes to developing adequate strategies and recommendations to reduce severe maternal and perinatal outcomes. (uu.nl)
  • Do local hospitals publicly report data on maternal health outcomes related to quality and safety for increased transparency and consumer awareness? (growmidwives.com)
  • We have a long way to go for hospitals to be willing to report maternal health outcomes related to safety and quality. (growmidwives.com)
  • Supplemental analyses of recent reproductive health, maternal health, and perinatal outcomes. (readkong.com)
  • Modelo Health Cofounders Nic & Trish Encina sit down with MEternal podcast hosts Kenya Gibson + Jaye Wilson to tackle how we can improve maternal health outcomes in communities of color. (modelohealth.com)
  • As of 2021, maternal mortality rates hovered close to 159 for every 100,000 births, a number that has a cascading effect on the health and well-being of infants and families. (thenationalnews.com)
  • In Italy, ItOSS estimated the maternal mortality ratio at 9 deaths per 100,000 live births, one of the lowest in Europe. (iss.it)
  • Among the many objectives was reducing maternal mortality rates to fewer than 70 out of every 100,000 births and to end all preventable child deaths by 2030. (thenationalnews.com)
  • The countries with the lowest maternal mortality rates in the region are Uruguay (14 per 100,000 live births) and Chile (22 per 100,000 live births). (ipsnews.net)
  • This figure corresponds to around 10 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births. (inserm.fr)
  • Our rate of preventable mortality is 177 deaths per 100,000 population -preventable , meaning that the key reason for these deaths was lack of medical treatment. (communityhealth.org)
  • Our maternal mortality rate is more than double the country with the next-highest maternal mortality rate (compare or 17.4 deaths per 100,000 births to France's 7.6 deaths per 100,000 births). (communityhealth.org)
  • In 2020, the United States had 336 avoidable deaths per 100,000 people, which was significantly higher than any other country. (advisory.com)
  • The U.S. maternal mortality rate was 23.8 deaths per 100,000 live births-substantially higher than the OECD average of 9.8 deaths per 100,000 live births. (advisory.com)
  • Maternal mortality in Ethiopia is the highest in the World with an estimated maternal mortality ratio of 676 deaths per 100,000 live births in 2011 which slightly increased from the 2005 maternal mortality ratio (MMR) level of 673 deaths per 100,000 live births [ 6 , 7 ]. (hindawi.com)
  • The U.S. rate of preventable mortality (177 deaths per 100,000 population) is more than double the best-performing country, Switzerland (83 deaths per 100,000). (healthsystemsfacts.org)
  • Maternal mortality is one: the U.S. rate of 17.4 deaths per 100,000 live births is twice that of France, the country with the next-highest rate (7.6 deaths per 100,000 live births). (healthsystemsfacts.org)
  • In your interview, you cited the importance of better maternal health monitoring systems to prevent avoidable deaths. (podbean.com)
  • 1 - 3 In addition to counting maternal deaths, it is essential to identify underlying causes and contributing factors to gain more insight into the gaps in care to prevent avoidable deaths. (ghspjournal.org)
  • Most maternal deaths in CAR are related to unsafe abortions, but also to pregnancies that occur too early (when the girl is too physically immature to give birth safely) or to giving birth at home. (msf.org.uk)
  • According to PAHO, complications of pregnancy and childbirth are the main cause of death among women aged 20 to 34, and half of all maternal deaths are due to unsafe abortions, in a region where voluntary termination of pregnancy is illegal in the majority of countries. (ipsnews.net)
  • Later, Carcedo expanded the notion of femicide to include in the definition situations of avoidable maternal mortality through unsafe abortions, little or poorly treated diseases, and gender selective malnutrition. (uc.pt)
  • According to Bremen De Mucio, of PAHO's Latin American Centre for Perinatology, Women and Reproductive Health (CLAP), "relevant and valuable" progress has been made, but the maternal mortality ratio remains at an "unacceptable" level. (ipsnews.net)
  • The fifth Millennium Development Goal (MDG) for improving maternal health calls for reducing the 1990 maternal mortality ratio by three-quarters by the end of 2015, as well as providing universal access to reproductive health. (ipsnews.net)
  • Despite a significant improvement in the US maternal mortality ratio since the early 1900s, it still represents a substantial and frustrating burden, particularly given the fact that - essentially - no progress has been made in most US States since 1982. (moam.info)
  • Also, when maternal mortality is viewed as an indicator of either national or women's health care, one discovers some alarming findings: First, since 1982, the maternal mortality ratio has in essence remained unchanged, despite advances in diagnosis and acute critical care. (moam.info)
  • Little wonder, Uttarakhand is cursed with a higher Maternal Mortality Ratio at 440 in 2006, which is significantly higher than the National average of 254. (kractivist.org)
  • Maternal mortality is on the rise in Nigeria with the North- East having the highest ratio, and Borno state records one of the highest maternal mortality ratios in the country. (nigeriamedj.com)
  • 5). It describes the tendency of the Total Fertility Rate (TFT) and of the Maternal Mortality Ratio (RMM) between 1998 to 2004 in Paraná. (bvsalud.org)
  • It presents an 822 maternal deaths analysis in this period, the calculation of the Specific Maternal Mortality Ratio, the Relative Risk, the frequency and the Odds Ratio for some variables, according to number of gestations. (bvsalud.org)
  • The country's maternal and child mortality rates are among the highest in the world. (msf.org.uk)
  • In the paper, we reviewed the growing body of evidence emphasizing that increasing coverage through Medicaid expansion can bridge gaps in women's health care and provide a crucial strategy for addressing this country's abysmal record on maternal mortality. (amchp.org)
  • Considered internationally as a reflection of the overall quality of a country's health care system, maternal mortality rate constitutes a key indicator of public health. (inserm.fr)
  • According to the researchers, a high rate of C-sections, inadequate prenatal care, and socioeconomic inequalities may contribute the country's high infant and maternal mortality rates. (advisory.com)
  • Maternal mortality is when a woman dies from pregnancy-related causes or within 42 days of the end of the pregnancy termination. (thenationalnews.com)
  • The hard truth is that every year, in this region, around 39,000 women die as a result of pregnancy-related complications and around 923,000 children under five die of avoidable causes. (who.int)
  • Pregnancy-related mortality is largely accounted for by thromboembolic disease, hemorrhage, hypertension and its associated complications, and infection. (moam.info)
  • However, since the inclusion of maternal deaths occurring after 42 days post-delivery as pregnancy related, traumatic injuries - including homicides and suicides - are an alarming source of maternal mortality. (moam.info)
  • Second, it is likely that, to this day, maternal mortality is underestimated, although the improved surveillance embodied by the Pregnancy-Related Mortality Surveillance System (PMSS) introduced in 1987 by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has increased detection. (moam.info)
  • The CDC Maternal Mortality Review Committees studied data from 2017 to 2019 and concluded that 84.2 percent of recorded pregnancy-related deaths were avoidable. (consumers4qualitycare.org)
  • Another solution the report highlights is providing azithromycin, an antibiotic that treats sepsis, which is also a leading cause of maternal mortality. (thenationalnews.com)
  • However, almost all the deaths from hemorrhage were judged to be avoidable, and it remains the leading cause of maternal mortality in France (11% of deaths), although it has become rare in other countries. (inserm.fr)
  • She gave the charge on Tuesday at a town hall meeting on reduction of maternal and child mortality, in Epe local government, organized by the State's Ministry of Health. (akinwunmiambode.com)
  • The reduction of maternal deaths was the focus of Millennium Development Goal 5 in 2000, and it remained a priority in the Sustainable Development Goals established in 2015. (ghspjournal.org)
  • However, 56% of these deaths were considered "avoidable" or "potentially avoidable", and in 59% of cases optimal care was not provided, demonstrating clear room for improvement. (inserm.fr)
  • Access to good-quality health care and social protection for all, the reduction of infant and maternal mortality, resilience to climate change, these are all major challenges of the 21st century. (afd.fr)
  • In a previous Medscape commentary , I asserted that having health insurance improves health and lowers mortality because it provides people with access to primary care. (medscape.com)
  • The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation wants maternal health back in the spotlight. (thenationalnews.com)
  • BUENOS AIRES, May 14 2015 (IPS) - In spite of strides in social progress, Latin America's maternal mortality rates remain unacceptable, and many of the deaths are avoidable, occurring partly because of neglect of the prescriptions provided by experts: preventive action and health promotion. (ipsnews.net)
  • Juan Reichenbach, a regionally renowned Argentine expert on maternal and child health , has hands-on experience of the problem with mothers and their infants, as a paediatrician and the national director of Motherhood and Infancy (2008-2009). (ipsnews.net)
  • When you look at the basic causes of maternal deaths you don't have to be highly intelligent to see that they are related to lack of access (to the health system) and to abortions, which are the main cause of maternal deaths in Argentina and in Latin America. (ipsnews.net)
  • The number of abortions goes unrecognised and unexamined by the health system, and is the tip of the iceberg of maternal mortality," Reichenbach said. (ipsnews.net)
  • Maternal mental health and well-being is critical for mothers and foundational for healthy child development. (scmp.com)
  • There is an urgent need for maternal mental health to be fully integrated into standard prenatal and post-partum care. (scmp.com)
  • So it was no surprise to me to learn that mortality among mothers and children is particularly high among malnourished children, among pregnant adolescents, and in poor areas, rural areas and areas that lack proper, or even adequate, health care. (who.int)
  • The mortality rate for expectant Black mothers in America is twice as high as white mothers, according to America's Health Rankings data . (unitedhealthgroup.com)
  • Through the United Health Foundation's partnership with Any Baby Can , a Texas-based organization, we are helping expand at-home maternal care services and improve the health of at-risk prenatal women and their children in Austin, Texas, and its surrounding communities. (unitedhealthgroup.com)
  • These findings and others are highlighted in a new paper , Medicaid Expansion Fills Gaps in Maternal Health Coverage Leading to Healthier Mothers and Babies , issued by the Center for Children and Families at Georgetown University's McCourt School of Public Policy. (amchp.org)
  • AMCHP members will find the issues raised in this paper central to their ongoing efforts to improve maternal and child health. (amchp.org)
  • Medicaid expansion is an important means for making progress on several Title V Maternal and Child Health Block Grant performance measures, particularly improving access to adequate insurance, well-woman visits, and risk-appropriate perinatal care. (amchp.org)
  • This analysis, led by the National Expert Committee on Maternal Mortality (part of Santé Publique France, the French public health agency, since 2014), allows for any failings in the health care system to be brought to light, and is also responsible for considering non-fatal complications, which are more common but more difficult to study. (inserm.fr)
  • . According to the general principle of the inquiry, 'better understanding for better prevention', we have targeted specific elements to be improved within the provision and organization of health care in order to avoid patient deaths, but also in all likelihood serious maternal complications, which do not lead to death but result from the same failings " concludes Catherine Deneux-Tharaux, who led the inquiry. (inserm.fr)
  • In 2009, the Ministry of Health of Morocco launched a national confidential enquiry around maternal deaths based on the newly implemented routine maternal death surveillance system (MDSS). (bvsalud.org)
  • The auditors found that 54.3% of all maternal deaths could have been avoided if appropriate action had been taken at the health facilities . (bvsalud.org)
  • 99% of maternal deaths occur in the developing world, making maternal mortality the health statistic with the largest disparity between developed and developing countries. (obsandgynae.net)
  • A clear correlation exists between countries' gross domestic product and their health indicators, such as mortality rates in children less than 5 years of age (highest in low-income countries) or life expectancy (highest in high-income countries). (cdc.gov)
  • Although family planning and maternal and child health remain high on the development agenda, demographic trends are changing rapidly. (cdc.gov)
  • PART II increases the understanding of how women and baby die or nearly die by applying the World Health Organization classification tools for maternal mortality, near-miss and perinatal mortality. (uu.nl)
  • Wife of the Governor of Lagos State, Mrs. Bolanle Ambode, has again called on expectant mothers in the state, to utilise Primary Health Centres (PHCs) and skilled birth attendants, to reduce the incidence of maternal and infant mortality. (akinwunmiambode.com)
  • Commissioner for Health, Dr. Jide Idris (2nd left) and member, House of Representatives, Epe Federal Constituency, Hon. Olawale Raji (left) during the Town Hall Meeting on Maternal and Child Mortality Reduction program, in Epe Local Government, on Monday, 20th November 2017. (akinwunmiambode.com)
  • Majority of these maternal deaths are avoidable if expectant mothers access quality reproductive health care, including skilled attendance at birth. (akinwunmiambode.com)
  • Chairman, House Committee on Health, Hon. Olusegun Olulade (2nd right) and Special Adviser to the Governor on Primary Healthcare, Dr. Olufemi Onanuga (right) during the Town Hall Meeting on Maternal and Child Mortality Reduction program, in Epe Local Government, on Monday, 20th November 2017. (akinwunmiambode.com)
  • We describe the process of MDSR implementation in Suriname and share the "lessons learned," as experienced by the health care providers, national maternal death review committee members, and public health experts. (ghspjournal.org)
  • Therefore, the Maternal Health Steering Committee was recently installed as a direct working arm of MOH to guide MDSR implementation. (ghspjournal.org)
  • CQC applauds efforts in raising awareness about the maternal mortality crisis, particularly in minority communities, and urges Congress and the Biden administration to work together to end America's maternal health crisis once and for all. (consumers4qualitycare.org)
  • It is unimaginable and, frankly, unacceptable that some avoidable health predicaments such as maternal mortality should continue to be an albatross around the neck of the Ghanaian health sector. (primenewsghana.com)
  • Avoidable deaths refer to those that are preventable and treatable, such as through effective public health measures and timely care. (advisory.com)
  • Considering the magnitude of this public health crisis, it's astounding how few seem to be aware that thousands of mothers are dying every year for reasons that are largely avoidable. (growmidwives.com)
  • Why then, when we acknowledge that social injustice, health care inequity, and institutional racism all correlate with the highest rate of maternal and infant death in the developed world, do we typically do little more than share social media posts? (growmidwives.com)
  • Why has no one acted on the mounting evidence displayed in maternal health publications and at Continuing Education events? (growmidwives.com)
  • If you want to improve maternal, infant, and family health in the United States and in your local community, you need to do more than observe from afar, you need to grow a movement. (growmidwives.com)
  • Ed) Maternal and Child Health: Programs, Problems, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (readkong.com)
  • Modelo Health™, the world's first pregnancy app for Inclusive Care™, is a ground-breaking solution to this escalating maternal health crisis. (modelohealth.com)
  • Methods: As a retrospective quantitative research design was used, 173 maternal records of pregnant teenagers from 13 to 19 years were sampled from six district hospitals and Community Health Centres (CHCs) between 01 January 2017 and 31 December 2019 to undergo systematic random sampling. (bvsalud.org)
  • Conclusion: Public health institutions (PHIs) compromised provision of quality maternal care among teenagers, evidenced by incomplete intrapartum and postpartum assessment, diagnosis and management of hypertensive disorders in pregnancy (HDP). (bvsalud.org)
  • The South African Saving Mothers report (2011 - 2013) indicates that cerebral injury due to severe hypertension is resulting in avoidable maternal deaths. (samj.org.za)
  • The report used data from the Maternal Mortality Review Committee, which researched such deaths in 36 states between 2017 to 2019. (wfsb.com)
  • The objective of this paper is to show the importance of substandard care among the factors associated with maternal deaths . (bvsalud.org)
  • The Moroccan National Expert Committee (NEC) organised an audit of maternal deaths identified by the MDSS to determine the medical cause, the preventability of the deaths and the type of substandard care involved. (bvsalud.org)
  • The audit of maternal deaths in Morocco enabled a better understanding of the circumstances contributing to maternal deaths and pinpointed that more than half of maternal deaths were associated with substandard care in hospitals . (bvsalud.org)
  • In spite of this drop in the maternal mortality rate, 9,300 women lost their lives in the region in 2013 due to complications of pregnancy and childbirth, the report said. (ipsnews.net)
  • Explanations for the plateau in maternal mortality include the recent trend of delayed childbearing, with the potential accompanying complications associated with older reproductive age (particularly over 35 years) and multiparity. (moam.info)
  • Two disheartening issues within this topic include a gross underestimation of the magnitude of maternal mortality - particularly before 1987, but which likely persists to a lesser degree today - and the continued significant racial disparity in maternal mortality. (moam.info)
  • Based on the recommendations from a 2010-2014 Reproductive Age Mortality Survey in Suriname, a maternal death review committee has improved the identification of maternal deaths and has audited every death since 2015. (ghspjournal.org)
  • 5), the maternal death relative risk was six times higher than for the women with to two gestations, and the profiles sociodemographic and the reproductive one were more unfavorable for that group of women. (bvsalud.org)
  • Each maternal death is reported and, for each case, a multi-professional audit is performed at the facility where the death occurred and a confidential enquiry is carried out by a multi-professional committee appointed by the Regions. (iss.it)
  • Unless one has firsthand experience with a maternal death, or takes a moment to review the maternal mortality literature, the burden it represents is easily neglected. (moam.info)
  • While ratio's and classifications provide us numbers (such as Part I and II of this thesis), they often fail to explain why events, such as maternal death, near-miss or stillbirth, occur and what we can do to prevent these events from happening. (uu.nl)
  • Crucial elements for a successful maternal death surveillance and response (MDSR) implementation are the 5 Cs: commitment, "no blame, no shame" culture, coordination, collaboration, and communication. (ghspjournal.org)
  • Essential steps to achieve sustainable MDSR in Suriname are: (1) improving the identification and notification of maternal deaths and (2) introducing and continuing systematic facility-based and national maternal death reviews. (ghspjournal.org)
  • Implementation of maternal death surveillance and response (MDSR) is crucial to reduce maternal deaths. (ghspjournal.org)
  • Before 2015, maternal deaths were identified using death certificates and by active surveillance in the hospitals. (ghspjournal.org)
  • Explaining the 2001-2002 infant mortality increase in the United http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/hp2000/hp2k01.pdf States: Data from the linked birth/infant death data set. (readkong.com)
  • 99% of maternal deaths occur in low-income countries and almost 75% are avoidable with proper medical treatment. (thetowerlight.com)
  • Results: Research results indicated that teenagers who suffered from hypertension intrapartum and postpartum did not receive maternal care according to the guidelines for maternity care in South Africa. (bvsalud.org)
  • In the countries that have not yet started their demographic transition , especially in the Sahel where the population is expected to double by 2040, AFD's priority is to work to reduce maternal and child mortality. (afd.fr)
  • And, although maternal and child healthcare is officially free, too often it is only available to those who can pay. (msf.org.uk)
  • My midwifery interest was influenced by the fact that my maternal great grandmother died post-partum in Slovakia after her third child. (yale.edu)
  • The CIIR Yemen programme tried to reduce maternal and child mortality. (ianlinden.com)
  • meaning an average hill woman bears a child in her foetus 3.6 times in her life, facing avoidable risks every time she becomes a mother. (kractivist.org)