School of Health Systems and Public Health, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa.
Unit of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Zimbabwe, Harare, Zimbabwe.
BMC Public Health. 2022 May 10;22(1):923. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-13321-7.
Reducing maternal mortality is a priority of Sustainable Development Goal 3.1 which requires frequent epidemiological analysis of trends and patterns of the causes of maternal deaths. We conducted two reproductive age mortality surveys to analyse the epidemiology of maternal mortality in Zimbabwe and analysed the changes in the causes of deaths between 2007-08 and 2018-19.
We performed a before and after analysis of the causes of death among women of reproductive ages (WRAs) (12-49 years), and pregnant women from the two surveys implemented in 11 districts, selected using multi-stage cluster sampling from each province of Zimbabwe (n=10); an additional district selected from Harare. We calculated mortality incidence rates and incidence rate ratios per 10000 WRAs and pregnant women (with 95% confidence intervals), in international classification of disease groups, using negative binomial models, and compared them between the two surveys. We also calculated maternal mortality ratios, per 100 000 live births, for selected causes of pregnancy-related deaths.
We identified 6188 deaths among WRAs and 325 PRDs in 2007-08, and 1856 and 137 respectively in 2018-19. Mortality in the WRAs decreased by 82% in diseases of the respiratory system and 81% in certain infectious or parasitic diseases' groups, which include HIV/AIDS and malaria. Pregnancy-related deaths decreased by 84% in the indirect causes group and by 61% in the direct causes group, and HIV/AIDS-related deaths decreased by 91% in pregnant women. Direct causes of death still had a three-fold MMR than indirect causes (151 vs. 51 deaths per 100 000) in 2018-19.
Zimbabwe experienced a decline in both direct and indirect causes of pregnancy-related deaths. Deaths from indirect causes declined mainly due to a reduction in HIV/AIDS-related and malaria mortality, while deaths from direct causes declined because of a reduction in obstetric haemorrhage and pregnancy-related infections. Ongoing interventions ought to improve the coverage and quality of maternal care in Zimbabwe, to further reduce deaths from direct causes.
降低孕产妇死亡率是可持续发展目标 3.1 的优先事项,该目标要求对孕产妇死亡原因的趋势和模式进行频繁的流行病学分析。我们进行了两次生育年龄死亡率调查,以分析津巴布韦孕产妇死亡率的流行病学,并分析了 2007-08 年至 2018-19 年期间死因的变化。
我们对两次调查中 11 个地区的生育年龄(12-49 岁)妇女和孕妇的死因进行了前后分析,这两次调查是使用多阶段聚类抽样从津巴布韦每个省(n=10)和哈拉雷的一个额外地区选择的。我们使用负二项式模型,按国际疾病分类组计算每 10000 名生育年龄妇女和孕妇的死亡率发生率和发生率比(95%置信区间),并比较了两次调查之间的差异。我们还计算了选定的与妊娠相关的死亡原因的孕产妇死亡率比,每 100000 例活产。
我们在 2007-08 年期间确定了 6188 例生育年龄妇女和 325 例妊娠相关死亡,在 2018-19 年期间分别确定了 1856 例和 137 例。生育年龄妇女的呼吸系统疾病和某些传染性或寄生虫病(包括艾滋病毒/艾滋病和疟疾)死亡率下降了 82%。间接原因组的妊娠相关死亡下降了 84%,直接原因组下降了 61%,孕妇的艾滋病毒/艾滋病相关死亡下降了 91%。2018-19 年,直接死因的孕产妇死亡率仍比间接死因高三倍(每 100000 例 151 例与 51 例死亡)。
津巴布韦的妊娠相关直接和间接死因均有所下降。间接死因的死亡主要是由于艾滋病毒/艾滋病相关和疟疾死亡率的下降,而直接死因的死亡是由于产科出血和妊娠相关感染的减少。津巴布韦需要继续加强干预措施,提高孕产妇保健的覆盖面和质量,进一步降低直接死因的死亡率。