Sayinzoga Felix, Bijlmakers Leon, van Dillen Jeroen, Mivumbi Victor, Ngabo Fidèle, van der Velden Koos
Maternal, Child and Community Health Division, Rwanda Ministry of Health, Rwanda Biomedical Center, Kigali, Rwanda.
Department for Health Evidence, Radboud University Medical Centre Nijmegen, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
BMJ Open. 2016 Jan 22;6(1):e009734. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009734.
Presenting the results of 5 years of implementing health facility-based maternal death audits in Rwanda, showing maternal death classification, identification of substandard (care) factors that have contributed to death, and conclusive recommendations for quality improvements in maternal and obstetric care.
Nationwide facility-based retrospective cohort study.
All cases of maternal death audited by district hospital-based audit teams between January 2009 and December 2013 were reviewed. Maternal deaths that were not subjected to a local audit are not part of the cohort.
987 audited cases of maternal death.
Characteristics of deceased women, timing of onset of complications, place of death, parity, gravida, antenatal clinic attendance, reported cause of death, service factors and individual factors identified by committees as having contributed to death, and recommendations made by audit teams.
987 cases were audited, representing 93.1% of all maternal deaths reported through the national health management information system over the 5-year period. Almost 3 quarters of the deaths (71.6%) occurred at district hospitals. In 44.9% of these cases, death occurred in the post-partum period. Seventy per cent were due to direct causes, with post-partum haemorrhage as the leading cause (22.7%), followed by obstructed labour (12.3%). Indirect causes accounted for 25.7% of maternal deaths, with malaria as the leading cause (7.5%). Health system failures were identified as the main responsible factor for the majority of cases (61.0%); in 30.3% of the cases, the main factor was patient or community related.
The facility-based maternal death audit approach has helped hospital teams to identify direct and indirect causes of death, and their contributing factors, and to make recommendations for actions that would reduce the risk of reoccurrence. Rwanda can complement maternal death audits with other strategies, in particular confidential enquiries and near-miss audits, so as to inform corrective measures.
展示卢旺达开展基于医疗机构的孕产妇死亡审计5年的结果,呈现孕产妇死亡分类、确定导致死亡的不合格(护理)因素,并提出改善孕产妇和产科护理质量的最终建议。
全国范围内基于医疗机构的回顾性队列研究。
对2009年1月至2013年12月期间由地区医院审计团队审计的所有孕产妇死亡病例进行了审查。未接受当地审计的孕产妇死亡病例不属于该队列。
987例经审计的孕产妇死亡病例。
死亡妇女的特征、并发症发作时间、死亡地点、产次、妊娠次数、产前检查就诊情况、报告的死亡原因、委员会确定的导致死亡的服务因素和个体因素,以及审计团队提出的建议。
共审计了987例病例,占5年期间通过国家卫生管理信息系统报告的所有孕产妇死亡病例的93.1%。近四分之三的死亡病例(71.6%)发生在地区医院。在这些病例中,44.9%的死亡发生在产后期间。70%的死亡是由直接原因导致的,其中产后出血是主要原因(22.7%),其次是产程梗阻(12.3%)。间接原因占孕产妇死亡的25.7%,其中疟疾是主要原因(7.5%)。卫生系统故障被确定为大多数病例(61.0%)的主要责任因素;在30.3%的病例中,主要因素与患者或社区有关。
基于医疗机构的孕产妇死亡审计方法有助于医院团队确定死亡的直接和间接原因及其促成因素,并提出可降低再次发生风险的行动建议。卢旺达可以通过其他策略,特别是保密调查和险些死亡审计,对孕产妇死亡审计进行补充,以便为纠正措施提供依据。