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  • Title: Maternal mortality at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital, 1989 to 1990.
    Author: Wiebenga JE.
    Journal: Malawi Med J; 1992 Apr; 8(1):19-23. PubMed ID: 12319271.
    Abstract:
    An obstetrician examined records of all maternal deaths that occurred in the Chatinkha Maternity Wing of Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi, during 1989-1990. None of the deaths were caused by conditions unrelated to pregnancy. In 1989 there were 78 maternal deaths out of 14,272 live births (a maternal mortality ratio of 546/100,000 live births). In 1990 there were 73 maternal deaths out of 14,281 live births (a maternal mortality ratio of 511/100,000 live births). In each year, 37 women died directly from complications of pregnancy, delivery, or their management. In 1989, the leading cause of maternal death was postabortal sepsis (15 cases), followed by obstructed labor (8 cases) and puerperal sepsis (6 cases). In 1990, the leading causes were puerperal sepsis (13 cases) and postabortal sepsis (10 cases). The number of HIV-seropositive women among direct maternal deaths was 8 for both years. In 1990, the cesarean section rate was 6.5%. Women who had undergone a cesarean section faced a risk of puerperal sepsis-related death 8.5 times greater than that of women who had delivered vaginally. The 1990 mortality rate among induced abortion cases may have been as high as 8%. There were 41 and 36 indirect maternal deaths in 1989 and 1990, respectively. The leading causes of indirect maternal death were fever (8 cases) and bacterial meningitis (5 cases). The cause could not be determined in 15 cases. By 1990, the leading causes of indirect maternal death were bacterial meningitis (8 cases) and AIDS (6 cases). 5 of the 8 bacterial meningitis cases tested positive for HIV. The 4 patients with tuberculosis and 3 patients with septicemia were HIV positive. 41% and 56% of maternal deaths in 1989 and 1990, respectively, were avoidable. When one excluded uncertain avoidable factors, 21% and 45% of maternal deaths could not be avoided. The leading avoidable factors were deficient hospital care (18 cases), patient's delay (12 cases), and illegal abortion (10 cases) in 1989; they were patient's delay (10 cases) and illegal abortion (8 cases) in 1990.
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