Owolabi Onikepe O, Cresswell Jenny A, Vwalika Bellington, Osrin David, Filippi Veronique
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel St, London, WC1E 7HT, United Kingdom.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, School of Medicine, University Teaching Hospital, PO Box 50110, Lusaka, Zambia.
Contraception. 2017 Feb;95(2):167-174. doi: 10.1016/j.contraception.2016.08.014. Epub 2016 Sep 1.
To describe the magnitude and severity of abortion-related complications in health facilities and calculate the incidence of abortion-related near-miss complications at the population level in three provinces in Zambia, a country where abortion is legal but stigmatized.
We conducted a cross-sectional study in 35 district, provincial and tertiary hospitals over 5 months. All women hospitalized for abortion-related complications were eligible for inclusion. Cases of abortion-related near-miss, moderate and low morbidity were identified using adapted World Health Organization (WHO) near-miss and the prospective morbidity methodology criteria. Incidence was calculated by annualizing the number of near-misses and dividing by the population of women of reproductive age. We calculated the abortion-related near-miss rate, abortion-related near-miss ratio and the hospital mortality index.
Participating hospitals recorded 26,723 births during the study. Of admissions for post-abortion care, 2406 (42%) were eligible for inclusion. Near-misses constituted 16% of admitted complications and there were 14 abortion-related maternal deaths. The hospital mortality index was 3%; the abortion-related near-miss rate for the three provinces was 72 per 100,000 women, and the near-miss ratio was 450 per 100,000 live births.
Abortion-related near-miss and mortality are challenges for the Zambian health system. Adapted to reflect health systems capabilities, the WHO near-miss criteria can be applied to routine hospital records to obtain useful data in low-income settings. Reducing avoidable maternal mortality and morbidity due to abortion requires efforts to de-stigmatize access to abortion provision, and expanded access to modern contraception.
The abortion-related near-miss rate is high in Zambia compared with other restrictive contexts. Our results suggest that near-miss is a promising indicator of unsafe abortion; can be measured using routine hospital data, conveniently defined using the WHO criteria; and can be incorporated into the frequently utilized prospective morbidity methodology.
描述赞比亚三个省份医疗机构中与堕胎相关并发症的严重程度,并计算在人群层面与堕胎相关的险些发生并发症的发生率。赞比亚堕胎合法,但仍受歧视。
我们在5个月内对35家地区、省级和三级医院进行了一项横断面研究。所有因与堕胎相关并发症住院的妇女均符合纳入标准。使用经改编的世界卫生组织(WHO)险些发生标准和前瞻性发病率方法标准,确定与堕胎相关的险些发生、中度和低度发病病例。发病率通过将近险些发生病例数按年计算并除以育龄妇女总人口得出。我们计算了与堕胎相关的险些发生率、与堕胎相关的险些发生比率和医院死亡率指数。
参与研究的医院在研究期间记录了26,723例分娩。在堕胎后护理入院病例中,2406例(42%)符合纳入标准。险些发生病例占入院并发症的16%,有14例与堕胎相关的孕产妇死亡。医院死亡率指数为3%;三个省份与堕胎相关的险些发生率为每10万名妇女72例,险些发生比率为每10万例活产450例。
与堕胎相关的险些发生情况和死亡率是赞比亚卫生系统面临的挑战。经改编以反映卫生系统能力的WHO险些发生标准可应用于常规医院记录,以在低收入环境中获取有用数据。减少因堕胎导致的可避免孕产妇死亡和发病需要努力消除对堕胎服务获取的污名化,并扩大现代避孕方法的获取途径。
与其他限制堕胎的情况相比,赞比亚与堕胎相关的险些发生率较高。我们的结果表明,险些发生情况是不安全堕胎的一个有前景的指标;可以使用常规医院数据进行测量,方便地根据WHO标准进行定义;并且可以纳入经常使用的前瞻性发病率方法中。