Trends and Disparities in Delivery Hospitalizations Involving Severe Maternal Morbidity, 2006-2015 #243
Trends and Disparities in Delivery Hospitalizations Involving Severe Maternal Morbidity, 2006-2015
Kathryn R. Fingar, Ph.D., M.P.H., Megan M, Hambrick, M.S.W., Kevin C. Heslin, Ph.D., and Jennifer E. Moore, Ph.D., R.N.
Highlights |
- The rate of severe maternal morbidity at delivery—as defined by 21 conditions and procedures–increased 45 percent from 2006 through 2015, from 101.3 to 146.6 per 10,000 delivery hospitalizations.
- The most common indicators of severe maternal morbidity were blood transfusion, disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), and hysterectomy (in 2015, 121.1, 11.0, and 11.0 deliveries per 10,000, respectively.)
- Some conditions often involved procedural intervention. In 2015, over half of deliveries with shock, amniotic fluid embolism, sickle cell disease with crisis, and DIC had a blood transfusion; one-third of deliveries with shock had a hysterectomy.
- Severe maternal morbidity was highest among women aged 40+ years and lowest for those aged 20-29 years (248 and 136 per 10,000 deliveries, respectively).
- On average Black mothers were younger than White mothers. Yet the rate of severe maternal morbidity was 112-115 percent higher for Blacks than for Whites in 2006 (164 vs. 76) and 2015 (241 vs. 114), with no change in the Black-White disparity.
- Hispanics and Asian/Pacific Islanders also had higher rates of severe maternal morbidity than Whites in both years, but disparities decreased over time.
- Although deaths decreased for all races/ethnicities, in-hospital mortality was 3 times higher for Blacks than for Whites in 2015 (11 vs. 4 per 100,000 deliveries).
|
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario