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There were 37 maternal deaths among the 109,221 livebirths registered during the period 1977-86 in Bahrain, Arabian Gulf. The maternal mortality rate was 33.9/100,000 for the 10-year study period; however, disaggregation reveals a decline in this rate from 42.3/100,000 in 1977-81 to 26.9/100,000 in 1982-86. This decline presumably reflects streamlining of the Ministry of Health's maternity services, including a central maternity hospital with all modern facilities that serves as a referral center for all of Bahrain, 2 peripheral hospitals with provision for blood transfusion and surgical deliveries, and 3 maternity units managed by fully qualified midwives. About 80% of deliveries are covered by these maternity services; only 2.5% of deliveries occur in the home. Despite this highly developed maternity care system, 18 of the maternal deaths were due to direct obstetric cause: hemorrhage, 7; pre-eclampsia and eclampsia, 5; abortion septicemia, 2; bowel perforation during cesarean section, 1; thromboembolism, 2; and amniotic fluid embolism, 1. The causes of the 19 indirect maternal deaths were: pulmonary embolism, 5; infection, 7; cardiac failure, 2; cerebrovascular accident, 2; pulmonary hypertension, 1; and uncertain, 2. Of interest is the finding that sickle cell disease was the underlying cause of maternal death in 12 of the 37 deaths in this series. Sickle cell disease was implicated in 3 of the deaths from hemorrhage, all 5 deaths from pulmonary embolism, 2 deaths from septicemia, and the 2 cases of cardiac failure. In this series, 50% of the patients with sickle cell disease had thromboembolic crises following treatment of anemia with packed cell transfusion. Blood transfusion, especially of packed cells, should be given with caution to these patients since it may precipitate vaso-occlusive crisis by increasing blood viscosity. Since sickle cell disease represents a high risk during pregnancy in this Arab population, such patients should have frequent prenatal check-ups and deliver in a well-equipped hospital.
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PMID:Maternal mortality in Bahrain with special reference to sickle cell disease. 321 81

Of a total of 1037 women of reproductive age who died during the period 1976-85 in the Matlab area that was under demographic surveillance, 387 (37%) were maternal deaths. The mean maternal mortality over the 10-year period was 5.5 per 1000 live births (101 per 100 000 women of reproductive age). Major causes of maternal death, which were assessed using a combination of record review and field interviews, included postpartum haemorrhage (20%), complications of abortion (18%), eclampsia (12%), violence and injuries (9%), concomitant medical causes (9%), postpartum sepsis (7%), and obstructed labour (6.5%). Deaths caused by postpartum haemorrhage were positively associated with both maternal age and parity, whereas those caused by eclampsia and injuries were more common among young and low-parity women. If maternal deaths arising from complications of abortion are disregarded, 20% of all maternal deaths occurred during pregnancy, 44% during labour and the two days following delivery, and 36% during the remaining postpartum period.These findings support the need to develop a service strategy to address the risks of childbearing and childbirth in areas such as rural Bangladesh, where almost all deliveries take place at home. This strategy must be based not only on preventive and educational interventions, including family planning and antenatal care, but also on systematic attendance at home deliveries by trained professional midwives, backed up by an effective chain of referral.
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PMID:Causes of maternal mortality in rural Bangladesh, 1976-85. 326 66

After a general discussion of the factors contributing to maternal mortality and morbidity, a solution to both of these problems is suggested for India: an initiative at the district level to improve support, supervision, training, essential midwifery and obstetric care. The general causes of the 200 or more times higher maternal morality risks in developing countries act throughout the woman's lifetime: powerlessness, illiteracy, malnutrition, deficiency of calcium, vitamin D and iron, heavy physical labor, unchecked fertility, lack of prenatal and obstetric care and illegal abortion. The most common causes of maternal morality and morbidity, eclampsia, obstructed labor, hemorrhage and sepsis, have been prevented in developed countries and in China. We know how to prevent them, by technical support and management at the district level. 4 elements are required: 1) adequate primary health care, food and universal family planning; 2) prenatal care and nutrition with referral if needed; 3) assistance of a trained person at every childbirth; 4) access to obstetric care for those at high risk. Rather than spend money or urban specialized hospital centers, half to 2/3 of all fatal complications of childbirth can be eliminated by local hospitals with the ability to do basic obstetrics such as caesareans and blood transfusions. There is a need for further health systems research in the given locale, but what we need now is an initiative on making pregnancy and childbirth safe for all women.
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PMID:On safe motherhood. 342

Microflora of pathological biosubstrates from 25 patients aged from 18 to 41 years with criminal abortion complications such as sepsis, septic shock, septicemia, and septic pyemia, peritonitis and endometritis of various severity was studied. Obligate anaerobic organisms in association with facultative anaerobes were detected in 84 per cent of the patients. Bacteroids were isolated from operation materials of 36 per cent of the patients. Bacteroids in association with Staphylococcus aureus, peptostreptococci and enterococci were recorded in 16, 8 and 24 per cent of the patients, respectively. Composition of the anaerobic and facultative anaerobic microflora was analyzed in the patients with local and general infections. Antibiotic sensitivity assay of the bacteroids showed that rifampicin, metronidazole, levomycetin (chloramphenicol) and clindamycin were the most active drugs. The use of anaerobic techniques enabled to demonstrate that in patients with purulent septic complications of criminal abortion there prevailed anaerobic-aerobic associations. The results should be considered in treatment of gynecological patients with purulent septic infections.
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PMID:[Anaerobic microflora of patients with suppurative and septic complications after non-hospital abortions]. 343 93

56 cases of pregnant women with a positive HIV serology were reported in 20 months at the Maternity of the Nice Hospital Center. In 10 cases, there were clinical signs of the disease (9 ARC-Syndrome, one case of AIDS). The predisposing factor was most of the time drug addiction, 53 cases (94.5%) and one case occurred after a blood transfusion. In the majority of the cases (52%) the pregnancy was pursued because of the late term or the patient's decision. A therapeutic abortion was performed in 12 instances (25%) and an interruption before 12 weeks of amenorrhea in 15 cases. 24 women delivered. The obstetrical complications were frequent with especially a fetal death in utero, five premature deliveries and fifteen hypotrophies. A severe infectious complication (septicemia, pneumopathy secondary to Pneumocystis carinii) was observed in 9 cases, a marked thrombopenia causing profuse post-partum haemorrhages in one case. Finally, one woman died 35 days after delivery. The study of the consequences on the child is incomplete because of insufficient follow-up: all children were sero-positive at birth and among thirteen children aged between 12 to 20 months, there were one death, one AIDS syndrome, 4 ARC-syndrome, 4 sero-positive and 3 sero-negative. The notion of HIV sero-positivity in a pregnant woman presents serious problems for the obstetrician. Decompensation of the disease during the pregnancy is uncertain but it is now confirmed that the child is affected, and this is a well established fact. These important consequences lead to propose, at this time a therapeutic interruption of pregnancy when possible, depending on the term, and when accepted by the patient.
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PMID:[Positive HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) serology in the pregnant woman: current data on its management. Apropos of a continuous series of 56 cases]. 347 87

A study was conducted in the Tangail district of Bangladesh from Sept. 1982 to Aug. 1983 to estimate the maternal mortality level there and identify its causes and correlates. 3 questionnaires: 1 for maternal deaths, 1 for deaths other than maternal deaths, and 1 for live births were used to collect data. A rate of 56.6/10,000 live births was found, with abortion related deaths contributing nearly 10 deaths/10,000 live births. The major causes of maternal mortality were found to be obstructed labor and sepsis caused by improperly performed abortion. Those at high risk were mothers below age 20 and above age 30 and those above parity 4. No inverse relationship was found between maternal mortality and socioeconomic status. Community level pregnancy monitoring programs, increased attention on the part of family planning workers toward teenaged, older, and high parity mothers, and nutrition supplement programs for anemic mothers are recommended. This study was faced with a number of methodological limitations that have implications for future research on maternal mortallity in Bangladesh. The number of live births was underestimated, and some types of maternal deaths might not have been detected. These methodological limitations could be corrected by following a 2-step data collection procedure.
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PMID:Maternal mortality in rural Bangladesh: the Tangail District. 348 41

This study was conducted to determine: the present rate, demographic correlates, and major causes of maternal mortality in rural Bangladesh; the pattern of health practices in relation to maternal mortality; the rate and pattern of neonatal mortality in rural areas; and the reliability of traditional birth attendants as reporters of maternal mortality-related data. During the 12-month period from September 1982 to August 1983, 9,317 live births and 58 maternal deaths were recorded in Melanda and Islampur upazilas in the Jamalpur district of rural Bangladesh, giving a maternal mortality rate of 62.3/10,000 live births. The age-specific maternal mortality rate is lowest in the 20-24 year old age group. Mortality risk increases with age after 29 years, particularly in the 35-39 and the 40-and-over groups. For all ages combined, mortality rates show a positive relation to parity. Although a positive relationship between parity and mortality is visible in the 25-34 group, the relationship is negative in the 35-and-over group. The single most common cause of death was septic abortion. Other causes include eclampsia (20.7%), delivery complications including obstructed labor, retained placenta (17.2%), postpartum sepsis (10.3%), and hemorrhage (10.3%). The classic triad of causes of infection--eclampsia--hemorrhage, accounted for 68.9% of all maternal deaths in the study area; direct obstetric causes accounted for 86.2% of all maternal deaths. The positive correlation between maternal age and maternal mortality risk found in the study indicates that childbearing in women aged above 35 years is significantly more hazardous than in younger women. A high mortality risk was also found among high parity (4) women. Family planning can reduce the risk of maternal mortality.
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PMID:Maternal mortality in rural Bangladesh: the Jamalpur District. 348 42

The history of maternal deaths in England from the earliest records in the 1700s to 1935, concentrating on the influence of medical practice, is recounted. The rate lay between 4 and 5 per 1000 until 1935, with the advent of sulfa antibiotics to prevent puerperal infections. The practice of midwifery by men began in the early 17th century in Britain, but attendance at normal labors by medical practitioners, that is, surgeon-apothecaries, did not become common, and then only in urban areas, until 1730. The use of forceps became widely known about that time, and lying-in hospitals were begun. Obstetrics was held in contempt by professionally educated and registered physicians and apothecaries, however, because of the immodesty and messiness of the work and the long hours involved. Estimates of maternal mortality, from the 1st recorded unselected series, in the late 18th century range from 5-29/1000. Some of the high figures are from specialists in obstetrics, who treated complicated cases. From these data the maternal death rate was estimated at about 25/1000 among unassisted women. Some institutions achieved results better than the national average in the 1920s, suggesting that by the end of the 18th century, a fairly good understanding of childbirth had been reached. At that time the overall forceps rate was conservative, less than 1% compared to 15% now. Use of the perforator, hook and crochet, and manual dilatation of the cervix had been abandoned. In the 19th century, lying-in hospitals became more common and their death rates were higher, probably due to less conservative methods, up to as high as 85/1000, until the advent of antisepsis in 1880. Nevertheless, hospital births were the minority, amounting to 15% in 1927, 54% in 1946, 87% in 1970, 98.8% in 1980. Sepsis, due to casual use of sterile technique, remained the cause of half the total deaths until 1937. It is difficult to assess the contribution of toxemia or obstructed labor in maternal deaths. Rickets was a common cause of obstructed labor, and there are recorded epidemics of both. Similarly, abortion-related deaths are even more difficult to estimate, because of poor reporting. In evaluating the undiminished maternal death rate before 1935, the author believes that maternal survival is remarkably resistant to the ill effects of socioeconomic deprivation, but is very sensitive to the good and bad effects of medical intervention. Hence, there is evidence that the rural and poor in some cases had better results that those given the best medical assistance, especially with regard to puerperal sepsis. The midwifery laws of 1902 provided for training of midwives, and slowly corrected quality of care, as well as hostility between midwives and physicians. The current maternal death rate is about 0.1/1000.
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PMID:Deaths in childbed from the eighteenth century to 1935. 351 35

Characteristic features of expert evaluation of temporary disability during pregnancy and after abortion and labor adopted in the USSR are outlined. At the earliest stages of pregnancy, women should be assigned to the work not associated with potential exposure to hazardous factors. Women with pregnancy complications should undergo comprehensive examination, preferably in a hospital setting: average length of stay is 20 days for threatened abortion, 21 days for premature labor (28-37-week pregnancy), 16 days for hypertension, 14 days for vomiting or nephropathy, 17 days for anemia, and 14 days for Rhesus-incompatibility. After abortion on demand or abortion for medical indications, a woman should be given a sick leave. The length of sick leave depends upon the pregnancy term (56 days for pregnancy longer than 28 weeks). Women with normal pregnancy and labor can receive a leave for 112 calendar days (56 days during the prelabor period and 56 days for the postpartum period). In the case of labor complications or multiple pregnancy, duration of the postpartum leave should be increased to 70 days. Indications for a 70-day postpartum leave include preeclampsia or eclampsia; cesarean section or vacuum-extraction; profuse hemorrhage during labor requiring blood transfusions; tears of the cervix uteri; postpartum endometritis, thrombophlebitis, septicemia, and suppurative mastitis; history of heart valve disease or congenital heart defects; and premature labor.
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PMID:[Expert evaluation of temporary disability with regard to pregnancy, abortion and labor]. 368 64

In 1979-1984, 135 women (age unspecified) received drug therapy for various inflammatory diseases following delivery, abortion or gynecological surgery. The group included 36 women who had total hysterectomy and bilateral adnexitis; 11 patients who had total hysterectomy, bilateral adnexitis and resection of the intestine; 24 who had either spontaneous abortion or abortion on demand; 5 who had an illegal abortion; 52 who had cesarean section; 14 who had the forceps delivery or episiotomy; and 4 who had normal delivery (numbers do not add up). Clinical manifestations of postoperative complications could be detected during the early postoperative period. Bacteriological examination of the specimens of wound secretions, cervical secretions and abdominal exudate showed the presence of Escherichia coli, Bacteroides, Streptococcus faecalis, and anaerobic cocci. Anaerobic bacteria accounted for more than 50% of severe inflammatory complications. Anaerobic bacteria played an especially important etiological role in the patients with sepsis after illegal abortion or cesarean section. The patients received antibiotics in accordance with the results of in vitro testing of microbial resistance. Preliminary results of testing were obtained within 48 hours, while the final results were obtained within 4-5 days. The doses and combinations of antibiotics were selected individually, according to the bacteriological diagnosis, severity of the disease, tolerance to antibiotics, and resistance of microorganisms. The most frequently used combination of antibiotics was penicillin (30-80 million units or 100-120 million units in the most severe cases, iv) together with gentamycin (3 x 80, iv) and colimycin (3.04.0). Other frequent combinations were amikacin (4 x 0.5, iv) and cephalosporin (4 x 0.5, iv); and vibramycin (im) or penicillin in combination with clindamycin and colimycin. In addition to antibiotics, the patients received vitamins and hyperbaric oxygenation. Clinical improvement was achieved within 7-14 days.
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PMID:[Drug treatment of inflammatory postoperative complications]. 375 96


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