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Maternal mortality in an academic institution in Upper Egypt

Research Authors
Kamal M. Zahran, Kawthar Abdel-Motagly Fadel, Sabra M. Ahmed & Amira F. EL-Gazzar
Research Journal
Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Research Publisher
NULL
Research Rank
2
Research Vol
NULL
Research Website
NULL
Research Year
2017
Research_Pages
NULL
Research Abstract

Maternal mortality is a worldwide problem. Measuring maternal mortality and identifying its causes is
essential, and should be assessed regularly for the purpose of planning, monitoring and evaluation of
provided maternal health care. Quality of care indicators such as case fatality rate is used to measure
the facility performance, in particular, quality and promptness of care. This descriptive study aimed to
calculate maternal mortality ratio, quality of care indicators such as maternal mortality index, case fatality
and direct obstetric case fatality rate for the Women’s Health Hospital and identify causes of maternal
mortality, and the main deficits in medical records. The Maternal mortality ratio was alarmingly high
in Women’s Health Hospital, Assiut University, Egypt reaching 225/100,000, however, those who delivered
in the hospital, the MMR was 100.5/100,000. The leading causes of maternal death were obstetric
haemorrhage (38.3%), complications of caesarean sections (27.7%) and pre-eclampsia/eclampsia (23.4%).
Nearly half (42%) of the deaths occurred during vacations. Quality indicators revealed poor quality of
health care.