Koonin L M, MacKay A P, Berg C J, Atrash H K, Smith J C
Division of Reproductive Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, USA.
MMWR CDC Surveill Summ. 1997 Aug 8;46(4):17-36.
PROBLEM/CONDITION: The Healthy People 2000: National Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Objectives specifies goals of no more than 3.3 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births overall and no more than 5.0 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births among black women; as of 1990, these goals had not been met. In addition, race-specific differences between black women and white women persist in the risk for pregnancy-related death.
This report summarizes surveillance data for pregnancy-related deaths in the United States for 1987-1990.
The National Pregnancy Mortality Surveillance System was initiated in 1988 by CDC in collaboration with the CDC/American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Maternal Mortality Study Group. Health departments in the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and New York City provided CDC with copies of death certificates and available linked outcome records (i.e., birth certificates or fetal death records) of all identified pregnancy-related deaths.
During 1987-1990, 1,459 deaths were determined to be pregnancy-related. The overall pregnancy-related mortality ratio was 9.2 deaths per 100,000 live births. The pregnancy-related mortality ratio for black women was consistently higher than for white women for every risk factor examined by race. The disparity between pregnancy-related mortality ratios for black women and white women increased from 3.4 times greater in 1987 to 4.1 times greater in 1990. Older women, particularly women aged > or =35 years, were at increased risk for pregnancy-related death. The gestational age-adjusted risk for pregnancy-related death was 7.7 times higher for women who received no prenatal care than for women who received "adequate" prenatal care. The distribution of the causes of death differed depending on the pregnancy outcome; for women who died following a live birth (i.e., 55% of the deaths), the leading causes of death were pregnancy-induced hypertension complications, pulmonary embolism, and hemorrhage.
Pregnancy-related mortality ratios for black women continued, as noted in previously published surveillance reports, to be three to four times higher than those for white women. The risk factors evaluated in this analysis confirmed the disparity in pregnancy-related mortality between white women and black women, but the reason(s) for this difference could not be determined from the available information.
Continued surveillance and additional studies should be conducted to assess the magnitude of pregnancy-related mortality, to identify those differences that contribute to the continuing race-specific disparity in pregnancy-related mortality, and to provide information that policy makers can use to develop effective strategies to prevent pregnancy-related mortality for all women.
问题/状况:《2000年美国人健康计划:国家健康促进与疾病预防目标》规定,总体每10万例活产中孕产妇死亡不超过3.3例,黑人女性每10万例活产中孕产妇死亡不超过5.0例;截至1990年,这些目标尚未实现。此外,黑人女性和白人女性在与妊娠相关死亡风险方面存在种族差异。
本报告总结了1987 - 1990年美国与妊娠相关死亡的监测数据。
国家妊娠死亡监测系统于1988年由美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)与CDC/美国妇产科医师学会孕产妇死亡研究小组合作启动。50个州、哥伦比亚特区和纽约市的卫生部门向CDC提供了所有已确认的与妊娠相关死亡的死亡证明副本以及可用的关联结局记录(即出生证明或死胎记录)。
在1987 - 1990年期间,确定1459例死亡与妊娠相关。总体妊娠相关死亡率为每10万例活产9.2例死亡。按种族审查的每个风险因素,黑人女性的妊娠相关死亡率始终高于白人女性。黑人女性和白人女性妊娠相关死亡率之间的差距从1987年的3.4倍扩大到1990年的4.1倍。年龄较大的女性,尤其是年龄≥35岁的女性,妊娠相关死亡风险增加。未接受产前护理的女性妊娠相关死亡的孕周调整风险比接受“充分”产前护理的女性高7.7倍。死亡原因的分布因妊娠结局而异;对于活产后死亡的女性(即死亡人数的55%),主要死亡原因是妊娠高血压并发症、肺栓塞和出血。
正如先前发表的监测报告中所指出的,黑人女性的妊娠相关死亡率继续比白人女性高3至4倍。本分析中评估的风险因素证实了白人女性和黑人女性在妊娠相关死亡率方面的差异,但无法从现有信息中确定造成这种差异的原因。
应继续进行监测和开展更多研究,以评估妊娠相关死亡率的规模,确定导致妊娠相关死亡率持续存在种族差异的因素,并提供政策制定者可用于制定有效策略以预防所有女性妊娠相关死亡的信息。