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Severe maternal morbidity: A population-based study of an expanded measure and associated factors

Severe maternal morbidity conditions such as sepsis, embolism and cardiac arrest during the delivery hospitalization period can lead to extended length of hospital stays, life-long maternal health problems, and high medical costs. Most importantly, these conditions also contribute to the risk of mat...

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Published in:PloS one 2017-08, Vol.12 (8), p.e0182343-e0182343
Main Authors: Lazariu, Victoria, Nguyen, Trang, McNutt, Louise-Anne, Jeffrey, Jillian, Kacica, Marilyn
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c692t-b652cb6a950b3f77a5c026a375dcdc0d1917dbdd139dafd1183974c6bd2be9223
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description Severe maternal morbidity conditions such as sepsis, embolism and cardiac arrest during the delivery hospitalization period can lead to extended length of hospital stays, life-long maternal health problems, and high medical costs. Most importantly, these conditions also contribute to the risk of maternal death. This population-based observational study proposed and evaluated the impact of expanding the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) measure of severe maternal morbidity by including additional comorbidities and intensive care admissions during delivery hospitalizations and examined associated factors. A New York State linked hospitalization and birth record database was used. Study participants included all New York State female residents, ages 10 to 55 years, who delivered a live infant in a New York acute care hospital between 2008 and 2013, inclusive. Incidence trends for both severe maternal morbidity measures were evaluated longitudinally. Associations between covariates and the two severe maternal morbidity measures were examined with logistic regression models, solved using generalized estimating equations and stratified by method of delivery. The New York expanded severe maternal morbidity measure identified 34,478 cases among 1,352,600 hospital deliveries (estimated incidence 2.55%) representing a 3% increase in the number of cases compared to the CDC measure. Both estimates increased over the study period (p 1.5 included most measured comorbidities (e.g., pregnancy-induced hypertension, placentation disorder), multiple births, preterm birth, no prenatal care, hospitalization prior to delivery, higher levels of perinatal care birthing facilities and race/ethnicity. Expanding the measure for severe maternal morbidity during delivery to capture intensive care admissions provides a more sensitive estimate of disease burden. Perinatal regionalization in New York appears effective in routing high risk pregnancies to higher levels of perinatal care birthing facilities.
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The New York expanded severe maternal morbidity measure identified 34,478 cases among 1,352,600 hospital deliveries (estimated incidence 2.55%) representing a 3% increase in the number of cases compared to the CDC measure. Both estimates increased over the study period (p&lt;0.001). Covariates with an odds ratio &gt; 1.5 included most measured comorbidities (e.g., pregnancy-induced hypertension, placentation disorder), multiple births, preterm birth, no prenatal care, hospitalization prior to delivery, higher levels of perinatal care birthing facilities and race/ethnicity. Expanding the measure for severe maternal morbidity during delivery to capture intensive care admissions provides a more sensitive estimate of disease burden. 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1932-6203
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source NCBI_PubMed Central(免费); Publicly Available Content (ProQuest)
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Age
Analysis
Birth
Births
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S.)
Child
Death
Disease control
Embolism
Epidemiology
Family medical history
Female
Health aspects
Health problems
Health risk assessment
Health services
Heart diseases
Humans
Hypertension
Incidence
Intensive care
Intensive Care Units - statistics & numerical data
Maternal Health
Maternal mortality
Mathematical models
Medicine and Health Sciences
Middle Aged
Minority & ethnic groups
Morbidity
New York - epidemiology
Obstetrics
People and places
Population studies
Population-based studies
Preexisting Condition Coverage - statistics & numerical data
Pregnancy
Pregnant women
Premature birth
Public health
Race
Regression analysis
Regression models
Risk
Risk Factors
Sepsis
Studies
United States
Womens health
Young Adult
title Severe maternal morbidity: A population-based study of an expanded measure and associated factors
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