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Original Article
15 (
1
); 42-48
doi:
10.56018/2023067

Determinants of Maternal Near Miss at a Tertiary Care Hospital in Ahmedabad, Western India

Assistant professor, Department of obstetrics and gynaecology, Smt NHL Municipal Medical College, Ahmedabad
Associate professor, Department of obstetrics and gynaecology, Smt NHL Municipal Medical College, Ahmedabad
Head of unit, Department of obstetrics and gynaecology, Smt NHL Municipal Medical College, Ahmedabad
Third year resident, Department of obstetrics and gynaecology, Smt NHL Municipal Medical College, Ahmedabad
Second year resident, Department of obstetrics and gynaecology, Smt NHL Municipal Medical College, Ahmedabad

*Corresponding Author: Dr.Parav D. Shah Email: paravshah9@gmail.com

Licence
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, transform, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.

Abstract

Background:

The aim is to study the various demographic characters, etiologies and outcomes of Maternal Near Miss (MNM) in antenatal and postnatal women coming to a Tertiary Care Hospital in Ahmedabad, Gujarat (Western India).

Material and Methods:

This is a retrospective observational study conducted between June 2021 and July 2022at SVPIMSR, Ahmedabad. 78 pregnant women based on WHO near-miss criteria were included.Details were recorded by studying the case sheets of the patients and asking relevant focused questions to the patients themselves or their relatives regarding the patient‘s condition at the time of admission.Detailed history, clinical examination, treatment given, causes of referral in case the patient was referred from outside were noted.

Results:

In this study, Obstetric Haemorrhage (69.2%) and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (30.7%) were the leading causes of MNM cases. Majority of the women(56.4%) belonged to the age group of 18-25 years, were multiparous (83.3%). 74.4% cases were emergency cases and 66.7% were referred cases. The maternal near-miss to maternal death ratio in our study is 8.9:1. 66.5% cases were referred due to various causes like lack of HDU facility, blood and blood products, NICU facilities etc from the peripheral centres. 18 near-miss cases (23.1%) were identified to have a delay; maximum was level 1 delay(12.8%). 31.5% of MNM cases required blood and blood product transfusion. 25% were admitted to the intensive care unit.

Conclusion:

Timely recognition, prompt treatment of MNM cases with availability of essential services like blood banks and obstetric ICUs at the primary level of treatment can help in preventing adverse outcomes. Reviewing near miss cases gives significant information about the three delays in health seeking so that appropriate action is taken. Delay in referral to tertiary care centres can be avoided by proper education to identify warning signs and symptoms and training to give primary treatment amongst primary care doctors.

Keywords

Maternal Near Miss (MNM)
Pregnancy
Obstetric Haemorrhage
Hypertensive disorder of pregnancy
Tertiary care

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