Bhatia J C
Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore.
Stud Fam Plann. 1993 Sep-Oct;24(5):310-8.
Most studies of maternal mortality are hospital based. However, in developing countries, where many such deaths take place in the home, hospital statistics do not reflect the true extent of maternal mortality. Furthermore, the socioeconomic and demographic factors and health behavior affecting maternal mortality are rarely known. A study conducted in 1986 in South India demonstrates a new approach to investigating maternal mortality that combines the collection of information from hospital and health-facility records, field surveys, and case-control studies. The findings from this study indicate that there were 7.98 maternal deaths per 1,000 live births. Approximately one-half of the deaths occurred in the home or on the way to the hospital. Maternal deaths accounted for 36 percent of mortality for women of reproductive age. Analysis reveals that many of these deaths were preventable and that significant differentials existed with regard to demographic, social, and behavioral factors between the cases of maternal deaths and the controls.
大多数关于孕产妇死亡率的研究都是基于医院数据的。然而,在许多此类死亡发生在家中的发展中国家,医院统计数据并不能反映孕产妇死亡的真实情况。此外,影响孕产妇死亡率的社会经济、人口因素及健康行为鲜为人知。1986年在印度南部开展的一项研究展示了一种调查孕产妇死亡率的新方法,该方法结合了医院和医疗机构记录、实地调查以及病例对照研究来收集信息。这项研究的结果表明,每1000例活产中有7.98例孕产妇死亡。约一半的死亡发生在家中或前往医院的途中。孕产妇死亡占育龄妇女死亡人数的36%。分析显示,这些死亡中有许多是可以预防的,而且在孕产妇死亡病例与对照组之间,在人口、社会和行为因素方面存在显著差异。