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Timing of maternal mortality and severe morbidity during the postpartum period: a systematic review

Timing of maternal mortality and severe morbidity during the postpartum period: a systematic review
Timing of maternal mortality and severe morbidity during the postpartum period: a systematic review

Objective: the objective of this review was to determine the timing of overall and cause-specific maternal mortality and severe morbidity during the postpartum period.

Introduction: many women continue to die or experience adverse health outcomes in the postpartum period; however, limited work has explored the timing of when women die or present complications during this period globally.

Inclusion criteria: this review considered studies that reported on women after birth up to 6 weeks postpartum and included data on mortality and/or morbidity on the first day, days 2-7, and days 8-42. Studies that reported solely on high-risk women (eg, those with antenatal or intrapartum complications) were excluded, but mixed population samples were included (eg, low-risk and high-risk women).

Methods: MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science, and CINAHL were searched for published studies on December 20, 2019, and searches were updated on May 11, 2021. Critical appraisal was undertaken by 2 independent reviewers using standardized critical appraisal instruments from JBI. Quantitative data were extracted from included studies independently by at least 2 reviewers using a study-specific data extraction form. Quantitative data were pooled, where possible. Identified studies were used to obtain the summary estimate (proportion) for each time point. Maternal mortality was calculated as the maternal deaths during a given period over the total number of maternal deaths known during the postpartum period. For cause-specific analysis, number of deaths due to a specific cause was the numerator, while the total number of women who died due to the same cause in that period was the denominator. Random effects models were run to pool incidence proportion for relative risk of overall maternal deaths. Subgroup analysis was conducted according to country income classification and by date (ie, data collection before or after 2010). Where statistical pooling was not possible, the findings were reported narratively.

Results: a total of 32 studies reported on maternal outcomes from 17 reports, all reporting on mixed populations. Most maternal deaths occurred on the first day (48.9%), with 24.5% of deaths occurring between days 2 and 7, and 24.9% occurring between days 8 and 42. Maternal mortality due to postpartum hemorrhage and embolism occurred predominantly on the first day (79.1% and 58.2%, respectively). Most deaths due to postpartum eclampsia and hypertensive disorders occurred within the first week (44.3% on day 1 and 37.1% on days 2-7). Most deaths due to infection occurred between days 8 and 42 (61.3%). Due to heterogeneity, maternal morbidity data are described narratively, with morbidity predominantly occurring within the first 2 weeks. The mean critical appraisal score across all included studies was 85.9% (standard deviation = 13.6%).

Conclusion: women experience mortality throughout the entire postpartum period, with the highest mortality rate on the first day. Access to high-quality care during the postpartum period, including enhanced frequency and quality of postpartum assessments during the first 42 days after birth, is essential to improving maternal outcomes and to continue reducing maternal mortality and morbidity worldwide.

Systematic review registration number: PROSPERO CRD42020187341.

Female, Humans, Maternal Death, Maternal Mortality, Morbidity, Parturition, Postpartum Period, Pregnancy
2689-8381
2119-2194
Dol, Justine
a1ba7653-3a47-439e-b9a4-904c400c80c3
Hughes, Brianna
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Bonet, Mercedes
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Dorey, Rachel
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Dorling, Jon
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Grant, Amy
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Langlois, Etienne V.
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Monaghan, Joelle
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Ollivier, Rachel
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Parker, Robin
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Roos, Nathalie
e72c8cc8-7dd9-4da6-ac51-00bd13d80344
Scott, Heather
a637b0f0-2e5c-4a36-b64a-181b0430b79c
Shin, Hwayeon Danielle
eb9a7de1-2020-45cc-a903-3a922403029b
Curran, Janet
1da6b1a5-b7fe-4563-b1dc-8c15b145c886
Dol, Justine
a1ba7653-3a47-439e-b9a4-904c400c80c3
Hughes, Brianna
9cb78c48-fdb2-4302-a633-bd4e6c0622a5
Bonet, Mercedes
5a97afe0-c640-42aa-ba64-9b2dc77903be
Dorey, Rachel
3ffacbf7-a462-456d-bc56-6aa0ff49dd1b
Dorling, Jon
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630
Grant, Amy
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Langlois, Etienne V.
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Monaghan, Joelle
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Ollivier, Rachel
8a34741e-4888-495f-8389-fe711f057eb8
Parker, Robin
359aee8a-6f19-4982-914e-319d3f16a4c6
Roos, Nathalie
e72c8cc8-7dd9-4da6-ac51-00bd13d80344
Scott, Heather
a637b0f0-2e5c-4a36-b64a-181b0430b79c
Shin, Hwayeon Danielle
eb9a7de1-2020-45cc-a903-3a922403029b
Curran, Janet
1da6b1a5-b7fe-4563-b1dc-8c15b145c886

Dol, Justine, Hughes, Brianna, Bonet, Mercedes, Dorey, Rachel, Dorling, Jon, Grant, Amy, Langlois, Etienne V., Monaghan, Joelle, Ollivier, Rachel, Parker, Robin, Roos, Nathalie, Scott, Heather, Shin, Hwayeon Danielle and Curran, Janet (2022) Timing of maternal mortality and severe morbidity during the postpartum period: a systematic review. JBI Evidence Synthesis, 20 (9), 2119-2194. (doi:10.11124/JBIES-20-00578).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: the objective of this review was to determine the timing of overall and cause-specific maternal mortality and severe morbidity during the postpartum period.

Introduction: many women continue to die or experience adverse health outcomes in the postpartum period; however, limited work has explored the timing of when women die or present complications during this period globally.

Inclusion criteria: this review considered studies that reported on women after birth up to 6 weeks postpartum and included data on mortality and/or morbidity on the first day, days 2-7, and days 8-42. Studies that reported solely on high-risk women (eg, those with antenatal or intrapartum complications) were excluded, but mixed population samples were included (eg, low-risk and high-risk women).

Methods: MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science, and CINAHL were searched for published studies on December 20, 2019, and searches were updated on May 11, 2021. Critical appraisal was undertaken by 2 independent reviewers using standardized critical appraisal instruments from JBI. Quantitative data were extracted from included studies independently by at least 2 reviewers using a study-specific data extraction form. Quantitative data were pooled, where possible. Identified studies were used to obtain the summary estimate (proportion) for each time point. Maternal mortality was calculated as the maternal deaths during a given period over the total number of maternal deaths known during the postpartum period. For cause-specific analysis, number of deaths due to a specific cause was the numerator, while the total number of women who died due to the same cause in that period was the denominator. Random effects models were run to pool incidence proportion for relative risk of overall maternal deaths. Subgroup analysis was conducted according to country income classification and by date (ie, data collection before or after 2010). Where statistical pooling was not possible, the findings were reported narratively.

Results: a total of 32 studies reported on maternal outcomes from 17 reports, all reporting on mixed populations. Most maternal deaths occurred on the first day (48.9%), with 24.5% of deaths occurring between days 2 and 7, and 24.9% occurring between days 8 and 42. Maternal mortality due to postpartum hemorrhage and embolism occurred predominantly on the first day (79.1% and 58.2%, respectively). Most deaths due to postpartum eclampsia and hypertensive disorders occurred within the first week (44.3% on day 1 and 37.1% on days 2-7). Most deaths due to infection occurred between days 8 and 42 (61.3%). Due to heterogeneity, maternal morbidity data are described narratively, with morbidity predominantly occurring within the first 2 weeks. The mean critical appraisal score across all included studies was 85.9% (standard deviation = 13.6%).

Conclusion: women experience mortality throughout the entire postpartum period, with the highest mortality rate on the first day. Access to high-quality care during the postpartum period, including enhanced frequency and quality of postpartum assessments during the first 42 days after birth, is essential to improving maternal outcomes and to continue reducing maternal mortality and morbidity worldwide.

Systematic review registration number: PROSPERO CRD42020187341.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 1 September 2022
Keywords: Female, Humans, Maternal Death, Maternal Mortality, Morbidity, Parturition, Postpartum Period, Pregnancy

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 484993
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/484993
ISSN: 2689-8381
PURE UUID: 91d24d19-d3da-40c9-9a53-906e49037246
ORCID for Jon Dorling: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1691-3221

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Date deposited: 27 Nov 2023 18:03
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:16

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Contributors

Author: Justine Dol
Author: Brianna Hughes
Author: Mercedes Bonet
Author: Rachel Dorey
Author: Jon Dorling ORCID iD
Author: Amy Grant
Author: Etienne V. Langlois
Author: Joelle Monaghan
Author: Rachel Ollivier
Author: Robin Parker
Author: Nathalie Roos
Author: Heather Scott
Author: Hwayeon Danielle Shin
Author: Janet Curran

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