Kandasamy Tharani, Merialdi Mario, Guidotti Richard J, Betrán Ana P, Harris-Requejo Jennifer, Hakimi Farima, Van Look Paul F, Kakar F
Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Int J Gynaecol Obstet. 2009 Jan;104(1):14-7. doi: 10.1016/j.ijgo.2008.08.024. Epub 2008 Oct 15.
To use an active facility-based maternal and newborn surveillance system to describe cesarean delivery practices and outcomes in a resource-poor setting.
Using data from operating room logbooks, 392 cesarean deliveries were evaluated between April 1 and June 30 2006 at a large public maternity hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan.
The perinatal mortality rate was 89 per 1000 births: 57% antepartum and 37% intrapartum stillbirths. Fetuses with normal birth weight comprised 85% of intrapartum stillbirths. Obstructed labor, uterine rupture, and malpresentation accounted for more than 50% of perinatal deaths. The cesarean delivery rate was 10.2% and there were 2 maternal deaths.
The high percentage of intrapartum stillbirths among normal birth weight fetuses suggests a need for improved labor monitoring and surgical obstetric practices. The use of a facility-based perinatal surveillance system is critical in guiding such quality assurance initiatives.