Department of Community Medicine and School of Public Health, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER), Chandigarh, India.
PLoS One. 2018 Oct 9;13(10):e0203209. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0203209. eCollection 2018.
This paper uses care pathway and delay models to better understand the possible social reasons for maternal deaths in a city with good public and private health infrastructure. The findings can inform programmes to reduce maternal mortality. During 2007-15, 136 maternal deaths were reported in Chandigarh, India. Using World Health Organisation's verbal autopsy questionnaire, interviews were conducted with primary caregivers of 68 (50%) of the 136 deceased women, as majority of the families had returned to their native places. We used process-tracing techniques to construct the care pathways and identify delays, and explored open-ended responses using thematic analysis. The mean age of the deceased women was 27 years, 51% resided in slums, 32% were primigravida, 25% had their deliveries assisted by traditional birth attendants, and 23% had Caesarean section. Eight percent died at home, and 54% died in tertiary level facilities. Post-partum haemorrhage (26.5%), and complications of puerperium (25%) and labour/delivery (14.7%) were the reported medical causes. Male child preference and norms for home delivery were identified as the distal socio-cultural causes. Individual and family level factors included: shame on multiple pregnancies; fear of discrimination from providers; past successful deliveries at home leading to overconfidence and not seeking institutional care; and lack of awareness about family planning, antenatal care, and danger signs of pregnancy. Healthcare system factors were: non-availability of senior doctors at the time of consultation in the emergency that delayed initiation of immediate treatment, and lack of availability of life-saving equipment due to patient load. Empirical evidence was found on social causes of maternal deaths, which could have been prevented by appropriate actions at individual, family, societal, institutional and policy levels. This study identified potential preventable causes of primarily social origin, which could help in taking actionable steps at several levels to further reduce maternal deaths in India.
本文使用护理路径和延误模型来更好地理解在一个拥有良好公私卫生基础设施的城市中产妇死亡的可能社会原因。研究结果可以为降低产妇死亡率的项目提供信息。在 2007 年至 2015 年期间,印度昌迪加尔报告了 136 例产妇死亡。利用世界卫生组织的口述尸检问卷,对 136 名死者的主要照顾者中的 68 人(50%)进行了访谈,因为大多数家庭已经返回原籍。我们使用过程追踪技术构建护理路径并确定延误,并使用主题分析探索开放式回答。死者的平均年龄为 27 岁,51%居住在贫民窟,32%为初产妇,25%由传统助产妇接生,23%进行剖腹产。8%的死亡发生在家庭中,54%的死亡发生在三级设施中。产后出血(26.5%)、产褥期并发症(25%)和分娩/分娩并发症(14.7%)是报告的医疗原因。男性儿童偏好和家庭分娩规范被确定为遥远的社会文化原因。个人和家庭层面的因素包括:多胎妊娠的羞耻感;对来自提供者的歧视的恐惧;在家中成功分娩导致过度自信和不寻求机构护理;以及缺乏关于计划生育、产前护理和妊娠危险信号的意识。医疗保健系统因素包括:在紧急情况下咨询时没有高级医生,导致立即治疗的延迟启动,以及由于患者负荷导致救命设备的缺乏。研究发现了产妇死亡的社会原因的实证证据,这些原因本可以通过个人、家庭、社会、机构和政策层面的适当行动来预防。本研究确定了主要由社会原因引起的潜在可预防原因,这有助于在几个层面上采取可行的措施,进一步降低印度的产妇死亡率。