Publication | Open Access
What Are the Factors That Interplay From Normal Pregnancy to Near Miss Maternal Morbidity in a Nigerian Tertiary Health Care Facility?
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Citations
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References
2014
Year
Family MedicineReproductive HealthGynecologyMaternity ServiceHigh-risk PregnancyNormal PregnancyMixed Method ApproachPrenatal CareObstetricsPublic HealthMaternal ComplicationMaternal Health PolicyMaternal HealthOutcomes ResearchOrgan DysfunctionNursingGlobal HealthPatient SafetyWomen's HealthPregnancyPregnant WomenMedicineEmergency Medicine
Researchers in Nigeria examined the epidemiological characteristics and factors associated with maternal outcomes using a mixed method approach: a prospective case control study design involving 375 pregnant women who received maternal care from a tertiary facility and in-depth interviews reporting the experience of near-miss survivors. A generalized ordered logit model was used to generate the estimates of partial proportional odds ratios (and 95% confidence intervals) across categories of the outcome variable. Factors strongly associated with maternal morbidity were late referral of women, presence of complications at booking antenatal visits, low birth weight, and severe birth asphyxia. The nearmiss women were further characterized, and a low proportion (25%) had organ dysfunction or failure. The challenge of such diagnoses in resource-constrained settings raises questions about the appropriateness of using organ dysfunction criteria in developing countries.
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