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3.9.3 - Pre-existing Disease in Pregnancy

from Section 3.9 - Obstetrics and Maternal Peripartum Complications

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 July 2023

Ned Gilbert-Kawai
Affiliation:
The Royal Liverpool Hospital
Debashish Dutta
Affiliation:
Princess Alexandra Hospital NHS Trust, Harlow
Carl Waldmann
Affiliation:
Royal Berkshire Hospital, Reading
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Summary

Key Learning Points

  1. 1. Direct obstetric deaths are those resulting from obstetric complications of the pregnancy state (pregnancy, labour and the puerperium) from interventions, omissions or incorrect treatment, or a chain of events resulting from any of the above.

  2. 2. Indirect obstetric deaths are those resulting from previous existing disease or disease that developed during pregnancy and which was not due to direct obstetric causes, but which was aggravated by physiological effects of pregnancy.

  3. 3. Indirect or pre-existing disease in pregnancy accounts for three-quarters of maternal deaths in the UK, and has remained stubbornly high in recent years.

  4. 4. Maternal morbidity is rising, owing to concurrent medical illness, increasing maternal age, socio-economic factors and obesity. Cardiac disease is the major cause, then death from thromboembolism, followed by neurological causes and all-cause sepsis.

  5. 5. Multidisciplinary teams care for the sick mother in different hospital sites. Recent national Royal College of Anaesthetists Maternal Critical Care Guidelines 2018 make general recommendations for optimal teamwork and collaboration on maternity and designated critical care units.

Type
Chapter
Information
Intensive Care Medicine
The Essential Guide
, pp. 320 - 326
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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References

References and Further Reading

Knight, M, Bunch, K, Tuffnell, D, et al.; MBRRACE-UK (eds). Saving lives, improving mothers’ care. Lessons learned to inform maternity care from the UK and Ireland Confidential Enquiries into Maternal Deaths and Morbidity 2017–19. Oxford: National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit, University of Oxford; 2021. www.npeu.ox.ac.uk/assets/downloads/mbrrace-uk/reports/maternal-report-2021/MBRRACE-UK_Maternal_Report_2021_-_FINAL_-_WEB_VERSION.pdfGoogle Scholar
Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists. 2017. Management of inherited bleeding disorders in pregnancy. Green-top guideline No. 71. obgyn.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1471-0528.14592Google Scholar
Royal College of Anaesthetists. 2018. Care of the critically ill woman in childbirth; enhanced maternal care. www.rcoa.ac.uk/sites/default/files/documents/2019-09/EMC-Guidelines2018.pdfGoogle Scholar
Simpson, NB, Shankar-Hari, M, Rowan, KM, et al. Maternal risk modelling in critical care – development of a multivariable risk prediction model for death and prolonged intensive care. Crit Care Med 2020;48:663–72.Google Scholar

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