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WHO systematic review of maternal morbidity and mortality: the prevalence of severe acute maternal morbidity (near miss)

AIM: To determine the prevalence of severe acute maternal morbidity (SAMM) worldwide (near miss). METHOD: Systematic review of all available data. The methodology followed a pre-defined protocol, an extensive search strategy of 10 electronic databases as well as other sources. Articles were evaluate...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Say, Lale, Pattinson, Robert C, Gülmezoglu, A Metin
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC516581/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15357863
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4755-1-3
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author Say, Lale
Pattinson, Robert C
Gülmezoglu, A Metin
author_facet Say, Lale
Pattinson, Robert C
Gülmezoglu, A Metin
author_sort Say, Lale
collection PubMed
description AIM: To determine the prevalence of severe acute maternal morbidity (SAMM) worldwide (near miss). METHOD: Systematic review of all available data. The methodology followed a pre-defined protocol, an extensive search strategy of 10 electronic databases as well as other sources. Articles were evaluated according to specified inclusion criteria. Data were extracted using data extraction instrument which collects additional information on the quality of reporting including definitions and identification of cases. Data were entered into a specially constructed database and tabulated using SAS statistical management and analysis software. RESULTS: A total of 30 studies are included in the systematic review. Designs are mainly cross-sectional and 24 were conducted in hospital settings, mostly teaching hospitals. Fourteen studies report on a defined SAMM condition while the remainder use a response to an event such as admission to intensive care unit as a proxy for SAMM. Criteria for identification of cases vary widely across studies. Prevalences vary between 0.80% – 8.23% in studies that use disease-specific criteria while the range is 0.38% – 1.09% in the group that use organ-system based criteria and included unselected group of women. Rates are within the range of 0.01% and 2.99% in studies using management-based criteria. It is not possible to pool data together to provide summary estimates or comparisons between different settings due to variations in case-identification criteria. Nevertheless, there seems to be an inverse trend in prevalence with development status of a country. CONCLUSION: There is a clear need to set uniform criteria to classify patients as SAMM. This standardisation could be made for similar settings separately. An organ-system dysfunction/failure approach is the most epidemiologically sound as it is least open to bias, and thus could permit developing summary estimates.
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spelling pubmed-5165812004-09-11 WHO systematic review of maternal morbidity and mortality: the prevalence of severe acute maternal morbidity (near miss) Say, Lale Pattinson, Robert C Gülmezoglu, A Metin Reprod Health Research AIM: To determine the prevalence of severe acute maternal morbidity (SAMM) worldwide (near miss). METHOD: Systematic review of all available data. The methodology followed a pre-defined protocol, an extensive search strategy of 10 electronic databases as well as other sources. Articles were evaluated according to specified inclusion criteria. Data were extracted using data extraction instrument which collects additional information on the quality of reporting including definitions and identification of cases. Data were entered into a specially constructed database and tabulated using SAS statistical management and analysis software. RESULTS: A total of 30 studies are included in the systematic review. Designs are mainly cross-sectional and 24 were conducted in hospital settings, mostly teaching hospitals. Fourteen studies report on a defined SAMM condition while the remainder use a response to an event such as admission to intensive care unit as a proxy for SAMM. Criteria for identification of cases vary widely across studies. Prevalences vary between 0.80% – 8.23% in studies that use disease-specific criteria while the range is 0.38% – 1.09% in the group that use organ-system based criteria and included unselected group of women. Rates are within the range of 0.01% and 2.99% in studies using management-based criteria. It is not possible to pool data together to provide summary estimates or comparisons between different settings due to variations in case-identification criteria. Nevertheless, there seems to be an inverse trend in prevalence with development status of a country. CONCLUSION: There is a clear need to set uniform criteria to classify patients as SAMM. This standardisation could be made for similar settings separately. An organ-system dysfunction/failure approach is the most epidemiologically sound as it is least open to bias, and thus could permit developing summary estimates. BioMed Central 2004-08-17 /pmc/articles/PMC516581/ /pubmed/15357863 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4755-1-3 Text en Copyright © 2004 Say et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Say, Lale
Pattinson, Robert C
Gülmezoglu, A Metin
WHO systematic review of maternal morbidity and mortality: the prevalence of severe acute maternal morbidity (near miss)
title WHO systematic review of maternal morbidity and mortality: the prevalence of severe acute maternal morbidity (near miss)
title_full WHO systematic review of maternal morbidity and mortality: the prevalence of severe acute maternal morbidity (near miss)
title_fullStr WHO systematic review of maternal morbidity and mortality: the prevalence of severe acute maternal morbidity (near miss)
title_full_unstemmed WHO systematic review of maternal morbidity and mortality: the prevalence of severe acute maternal morbidity (near miss)
title_short WHO systematic review of maternal morbidity and mortality: the prevalence of severe acute maternal morbidity (near miss)
title_sort who systematic review of maternal morbidity and mortality: the prevalence of severe acute maternal morbidity (near miss)
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC516581/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15357863
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4755-1-3
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