Bose Carl L, Bauserman Melissa, Goldenberg Robert L, Goudar Shivaprasad S, McClure Elizabeth M, Pasha Omrana, Carlo Waldemar A, Garces Ana, Moore Janet L, Miodovnik Menachem, Koso-Thomas Marion
Reprod Health. 2015;12 Suppl 2(Suppl 2):S1. doi: 10.1186/1742-4755-12-S2-S1. Epub 2015 Jun 8.
The Global Network for Women's and Children's Health Research (Global Network) supports and conducts clinical trials in resource-limited countries by pairing foreign and U.S. investigators, with the goal of evaluating low-cost, sustainable interventions to improve the health of women and children. Accurate reporting of births, stillbirths, neonatal deaths, maternal mortality, and measures of obstetric and neonatal care is critical to efforts to discover strategies for improving pregnancy outcomes in resource-limited settings. Because most of the sites in the Global Network have weak registration within their health care systems, the Global Network developed the Maternal Newborn Health Registry (MNHR), a prospective, population-based registry of pregnancies at the Global Network sites to provide precise data on health outcomes and measures of care.
Pregnant women are enrolled in the MNHR if they reside in or receive healthcare in designated groups of communities within sites in the Global Network. For each woman, demographic, health characteristics and major outcomes of pregnancy are recorded. Data are recorded at enrollment, the time of delivery and at 42 days postpartum.
From 2010 through 2013 Global Network sites were located in Argentina, Guatemala, Belgaum and Nagpur, India, Pakistan, Kenya, and Zambia. During this period, 283,496 pregnant women were enrolled in the MNHR; this number represented 98.8% of all eligible women. Delivery data were collected for 98.8% of women and 42-day follow-up data for 98.4% of those enrolled. In this supplement, there are a series of manuscripts that use data gathered through the MNHR to report outcomes of these pregnancies.
Developing public policy and improving public health in countries with poor perinatal outcomes is, in part, dependent upon understanding the outcome of every pregnancy. Because the worst pregnancy outcomes typically occur in countries with limited health registration systems and vital records, alternative registration systems may prove to be highly valuable in providing data. The MNHR, an international, multicenter, population-based registry, assesses pregnancy outcomes over time in support of efforts to develop improved perinatal healthcare in resource-limited areas.
全球妇女和儿童健康研究网络(全球网络)通过将外国和美国研究人员配对,在资源有限的国家支持并开展临床试验,目标是评估低成本、可持续的干预措施,以改善妇女和儿童的健康状况。准确报告出生、死产、新生儿死亡、孕产妇死亡率以及产科和新生儿护理措施,对于在资源有限环境中发现改善妊娠结局策略的努力至关重要。由于全球网络的大多数站点在其医疗保健系统内的登记工作薄弱,全球网络开发了孕产妇新生儿健康登记处(MNHR),这是一个基于人群的前瞻性全球网络站点妊娠登记处,以提供关于健康结局和护理措施的精确数据。
如果居住在全球网络站点内指定社区组或在这些社区接受医疗保健的孕妇,会被纳入MNHR。为每位妇女记录人口统计学、健康特征和妊娠主要结局。数据在登记时、分娩时和产后42天记录。
2010年至2013年期间,全球网络站点位于阿根廷、危地马拉、印度的贝尔高姆和那格浦尔、巴基斯坦、肯尼亚和赞比亚。在此期间,283,496名孕妇被纳入MNHR;这一数字占所有符合条件妇女的98.8%。98.8%的妇女收集到了分娩数据,98.4%登记入组的妇女收集到了产后42天随访数据。在本增刊中,有一系列手稿使用通过MNHR收集的数据报告这些妊娠的结局。
在围产期结局较差的国家制定公共政策和改善公共卫生,部分取决于了解每一次妊娠的结局。由于最糟糕的妊娠结局通常发生在健康登记系统和生命记录有限的国家,替代登记系统在提供数据方面可能被证明具有很高价值。MNHR作为一个国际、多中心、基于人群的登记处,长期评估妊娠结局,以支持在资源有限地区改善围产期医疗保健的努力。