Availability of facility resources and services and infection-related maternal outcomes in the WHO Global Maternal Sepsis Study: a cross-sectional study

Infections are among the leading causes of maternal mortality and morbidity. The Global Maternal Sepsis and Neonatal Initiative, launched in 2016 by WHO and partners, sought to reduce the burden of maternal infections and sepsis and was the basis upon which the Global Maternal Sepsis Study (GLOSS) w...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Lancet global health 2021-09, Vol.9 (9), p.e1252-e1261
Hauptverfasser: Brizuela, Vanessa, Cuesta, Cristina, Bartolelli, Gino, Abdosh, Abdulfetah Abdulkadir, Abou Malham, Sabina, Díaz, Virginia, El-Kak, Faysal, El Sheikh, Mohamed, Pérez, Aquilino M, Bonet, Mercedes, Abalos, Edgardo, Assarag, Bouchra, El Kak, Faysal, Pérez, Aquilino M., Souza, João Paulo, Aman, Mohammad Iqbal, Pasquale, Julia, Leroy, Charlotte, Roelens, Kristien, Agossou, M. Christian Urlyss, Goufodji Keke, Sourou, Apaza Peralta, Patricia Soledad, Hernández Muñoz, Rosalinda, Cecatti, José Guilherme, Ouedraogo, Henri Gautier, Cheang, Kannitha, Rathavy, Tung, Simo, Elie, Tebeu, Pierre-Marie, Yakana, Emah Irene, Carvajal, Javier, Colmorn, Lotte Berdiin, Langhoff-Roos, Jens, Mereci, Wilson, Salah Eldin, Yasser, Sultan, Alaa, Adanu, Richard, Govule, Philip, Noora Lwanga, Charles, Arriaga Romero, William Enrique, Bustillo, Carolina, Trikha, Sonia, Cetin, Irene, Donati, Serena, Baimussanova, Guldana, Gwako, George, Asylbasheva, Raisa, Boobekova, Aigul, Itani, Saad Eddine, Chikhwaza, Owen, Gadama, Luis, Malunga, Eddie, Petrov, Victor, Lkhagvasuren, Bat-Erdene, Essolbi, Amina, Jaze, Zara, Bique Osman, Nafissa, Einda, Hla Mya Thway, Maung, Thae Maung, Tin, Khaing Nwe, Gurung, Tara, Rijken, Marcus J., Van Den Akker, Thomas, Estrada, María Esther, Aimakhu, Chris, Fawole, Bukola, Chaudhri, Rizwana, Hamid, Saima, Khan, M. Adnan, Zavaleta Pimentel, Nelly M., Andal, Maria Lu, Recidoro, Zenaida Dy, Martin, Carolina Paula, Diouf, Léopold, Guirassy, Dembo, Cararach, Vicenç, Jayaratne, Kapila, Rowel, Dhammica, Nabag, Wisal, Yunusova, Dilrabo, Dunlop, Catherine, Knight, Marian, Lissauer, David, Vitureira, Gerardo, Truong, Luong Ngoc, Hanh, Nghiem Thi Xuan, Baguiya, Adama, Chamillard, Mónica, Nabhan, Ashraf, Nadisauskiene, Ruta, Bellissimo-Rodrigues, Fernando, Jacob, Shevin T., Campodónico, Liana, Gamerro, Hugo, Giordano, Daniel, Gülmezoglu, A. Metin
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Zusammenfassung:Infections are among the leading causes of maternal mortality and morbidity. The Global Maternal Sepsis and Neonatal Initiative, launched in 2016 by WHO and partners, sought to reduce the burden of maternal infections and sepsis and was the basis upon which the Global Maternal Sepsis Study (GLOSS) was implemented in 2017. In this Article, we aimed to describe the availability of facility resources and services and to analyse their association with maternal outcomes. GLOSS was a facility-based, prospective, 1-week inception cohort study implemented in 713 health-care facilities in 52 countries and included 2850 hospitalised pregnant or recently pregnant women with suspected or confirmed infections. All women admitted for or in hospital with suspected or confirmed infections during pregnancy, childbirth, post partum, or post abortion at any of the participating facilities between Nov 28 and Dec 4 were eligible for inclusion. In this study, we included all GLOSS participating facilities that collected facility-level data (446 of 713 facilities). We used data obtained from individual forms completed for each enrolled woman and their newborn babies by trained researchers who checked the medical records and from facility forms completed by hospital administrators for each participating facility. We described facilities according to country income level, compliance with providing core clinical interventions and services according to women's needs and reported availability, and severity of infection-related maternal outcomes. We used a logistic multilevel mixed model for assessing the association between facility characteristics and infection-related maternal outcomes. We included 446 facilities from 46 countries that enrolled 2560 women. We found a high availability of most services and resources needed for obstetric care and infection prevention. We found increased odds for severe maternal outcomes among women enrolled during the post-partum or post-abortion period from facilities located in low-income countries (adjusted odds ratio 1·84 [95% CI 1·05–3·22]) and among women enrolled during pregnancy or childbirth from non-urban facilities (adjusted odds ratio 2·44 [1·02–5·85]). Despite compliance being high overall, it was low with regards to measuring respiratory rate (85 [24%] of 355 facilities) and measuring pulse oximetry (184 [57%] of 325 facilities). While health-care facilities caring for pregnant and recently pregnant women with suspected or confirmed inf
ISSN:2214-109X
2214-109X
DOI:10.1016/S2214-109X(21)00248-5