Posts Tagged birth

Pregnancy-Related Deaths Happen Before, During, and Up to a Year After Delivery

Pregnancy-Related Deaths Happen Before, During, and Up to a Year After Delivery

3-in-5 pregnancy-related deaths could be prevented, no matter when they occur.

Pregnancy-related deaths can occur up to a year after a woman gives birth – but whenever they occur, most of these deaths are preventable, according to a new CDC Vital Signs report.

Of the 700 pregnancy-related deaths that happen each year in the United States, nearly 31 percent happen during pregnancy, 36 percent happen during delivery or the week after, and 33 percent happen one week to one year after delivery.

Overall, heart disease and stroke caused more than 1 in 3 (34 percent) pregnancy-related deaths. Other leading causes included infections and severe bleeding. The leading causes of death varied by the timing of the pregnancy-related death.

The findings are the result of a CDC analysis of 2011-2015 national data on pregnancy mortality and of 2013-2017 detailed data from 13 state maternal mortality review committees. CDC defines pregnancy-related death as the death of a woman during pregnancy or within one year of the end of pregnancy from a pregnancy complication; a chain of events initiated by pregnancy; or the aggravation of an unrelated condition by the physiologic effects of pregnancy.

The data confirm persistent racial disparities: Black and American Indian/Alaska Native women were about three times as likely to die from a pregnancy-related cause as white women. However, the new analysis also found that most deaths were preventable, regardless of race or ethnicity.

“Ensuring quality care for mothers throughout their pregnancies and postpartum should be among our Nation’s highest priorities,” said CDC Director Robert R. Redfield, M.D. “Though most pregnancies progress safely, I urge the public health community to increase awareness with all expectant and new mothers about the signs of serious pregnancy complications and the need for preventative care that can and does save lives.”

Every pregnancy-related death reflects a web of missed opportunities

The CDC Vital Signs report provides the most current data available from CDC’s Pregnancy Mortality Surveillance System. It also summarizes potential prevention strategies from 13 state maternal mortality review committees (MMRCs). MMRCs are multidisciplinary groups of experts that review maternal deaths to better understand how to prevent future deaths.

The committees determined that each pregnancy-related death was associated with several contributing factors, including access to appropriate and high-quality care, missed or delayed diagnoses, and lack of knowledge among patients and providers around warning signs. MMRC data suggest that the majority of deaths – regardless of when they occurred – could have been prevented by addressing these factors at multiple levels.

Key findings

  • From 2011-2015, of pregnancy-related deaths:
    • Nearly 1/3 (31 percent) happened during pregnancy.
    • Just over 1/3 (36 percent) happened at delivery or in the week after.
    • Exactly 1/3 (33 percent) happened 1 week to 1 year postpartum.
  • Leading causes of death differed throughout pregnancy and after delivery.
    • Heart disease and stroke caused more than 1 in 3 deaths overall.
    • Obstetric emergencies, like severe bleeding and amniotic fluid embolism (when amniotic fluid enters a mother’s bloodstream), caused most deaths at delivery.
    • In the week after delivery, severe bleeding, high blood pressure, and infection were most common.
    • Cardiomyopathy (weakened heart muscle) caused most deaths 1 week to 1 year after delivery.

Working together to prevent maternal deaths

MMRC data demonstrate the need to address multiple contributing factors to prevent deaths during pregnancy, at labor and delivery, and in the postpartum period:

  • Providers can help patients manage chronic conditions and have ongoing conversations about the warning signs of complications.
  • Hospitals and health systems can play an important coordination role, encouraging cross-communication and collaboration among healthcare providers. They can also work to improve the delivery of quality care before, during, and after pregnancy and standardize approaches for responding to obstetric emergencies.
  • States and communities can address social determinants of health, including providing access to housing and transportation. They can develop policies to ensure high-risk women are delivered at hospitals with specialized health care providers and equipment — a concept called “risk-appropriate care.” And they can support MMRCs to review the causes behind every maternal death and identify actions to prevent future deaths.
  • Women and their families can know and communicate about the warning symptoms of complications and note their recent pregnancy history any time they receive medical care in the year after delivery.

CDC is prioritizing the lives of America’s mothers to prevent pregnancy-related death

To read the entire Vital Signs report, visit: www.cdc.gov/vitalsigns/maternal-deaths. For more information about CDC’s work on maternal mortality, please visit: www.cdc.gov/reproductivehealth.

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Alabama’s Infant Mortality Rate Increased in 2016

Alabama’s Infant Mortality Rate Increased in 2016

According to the Alabama Department of Public Health the state’s infant mortality rate of 9.1 infant deaths per 1,000 live births in 2016 is the highest since 2008. This represents the deaths of 537 infants who did not reach 1 year of age. There were 59,090 live births in 2016.

“Our infant mortality rate is troubling and disheartening and trending in the wrong direction. Challenges include ensuring mothers have access to healthcare before, during, and after pregnancy, reducing premature births, the opioid epidemic, and addressing persistent racial disparities,” said Acting State Health Officer Dr. Scott Harris.

For reasons not fully understood, disparities in infant mortality by race continue to persist. One major predictor of a woman’s likelihood of delivering a baby preterm is her race. The infant mortality rate for black infants was more than twice that of white infants. The 2016 black infant mortality rate was 15.1 per 1,000, a slight decrease from the 2015 infant mortality rate of 15.3.

According to Dr. Paul Jarris, chief medical officer of the March of Dimes, race or ethnicity does not cause preterm birth, but some racial and ethnic groups face challenges related to racism that have a profoundly negative impact on birth outcomes:  inequities in health care, housing, jobs, neighborhood safety, food security and income. For white mothers, infant mortality increased from a record low rate of 5.2 in 2015 to 6.5 in 2016. Of note, the top three leading causes of infant death remain the same:  congenital malformation, premature births, and Sudden Infant Death Syndrome.

The percent of preterm births increased in 2016 from 11.7 percent to 12.0 percent. Infants born preterm, before 37 weeks gestation, are more likely to die before their first birthday or face life-long disabilities or chronic health conditions. Low birth weight infants, defined as those weighing less than 5 pounds, 8 ounces, are more than 20 times more likely to die than infants of normal weight. The percent of low weight births in 2016 declined slightly from 10.4 in 2015 to 10.3 in 2016.

Approximately 75 percent of births in 2016 were to women who had adequate prenatal care; 2.1 percent of births were to mothers with no prenatal care. In many states, including Alabama, women whose incomes are not low enough for Medicaid but cannot afford health insurance can qualify for Medicaid once they become pregnant and coverage lasts throughout pregnancy and a few weeks after.

On a positive note, as seen nationally, the percent of birth to teenagers in Alabama continues to trend downward to its lowest ever recorded of 7.7 percent in 2016.

Maternal smoking decreased to 10.1 percent of all live births, the lowest ever recorded. Of the mothers who smoked during pregnancy, 8.1 percent of births were to teen mothers and 10.3 percent of births were to adults.

Strategies to reduce infant mortality in Alabama:

  • Increase the use of progesterone to women with a history of prior preterm birth.
  • Reduce tobacco use among women of childbearing age.
  • Encourage women to wait at least 18 months between giving birth and becoming pregnant again.
  • Expand the Well Woman Preventive visit to provide pre-conception and inter-conception care.
  • Continue safe sleep education efforts.
  • Continue collaborative efforts to address the opioid epidemic.
  • Expand the Fetal and Infant Mortality Review activities at the community level.

Initiatives:

  • Identifying, studying, and learning the factors that play a role in infant survival; implementing initiatives at the community level to improve infant health and vitality statewide.
  • Establishing a Maternal Mortality Review Committee to analyze the maternal deaths that occur within the state so as to improve maternal health outcomes.

Graphs and detailed charts are available at alabamapublichealth.gov.

Posted in: Health

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