Maternal mortality estimation methodologies: a scoping review and evaluation of suitability for use in humanitarian settings.

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Blake Erhardt-Ohren, Sandra I McCoy, Dennis M Feehan, Rohini J Haar, Ndola Prata
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Around the world, a maternal death occurs approximately every two minutes-most of these deaths are preventable. The maternal mortality ratio is a key indicator for the Sustainable Development Goals, yet we have no reliable way to estimate maternal deaths in refugee or internally displaced persons (IDP) camps and settlements. The goal of this study was to understand the methodologies most suited for adaptation for use to estimate the proportion of maternal mortality due to abortion complications in these settings.

Methods: We conducted a scoping review of methodologies to estimate maternal mortality and evaluated them using a predetermined set of criteria. We evaluated nine original methodologies using eleven categories related to implementation in refugee or IDP camps and settlements: data sources, definitions, sample size, timing of point estimate relative to data collection, bias, human resources, time needed for implementation, data collection training, statistical training, digitalization, and cost. Each category could be assigned zero to four points, for a total score of 44 points. After evaluating each original methodology, we reviewed the original publication's citations or searched for other implementations through October 2022. We revised the original scores and developed a rank-order list of the methodologies according to their suitability for implementation in refugee and IDP camps.

Results: We identified 124 publications that estimated maternal mortality. The Maternal Deaths from Informants/Maternal Death Follow on Review (MADE-IN/MADE-FOR) (33.5), hospital- or facility-based (33.5), and community informant-based (32.5) methodologies ranked highest due to low costs, short time interval needed for implementation, small sample sizes and close timing of point estimate relative to data collection, easy digitalization, and the need for no statistical training.

Discussion: Similar to the lack of a "perfect" methodology to estimate maternal mortality in stable settings, there are compromises to consider when applying these methodologies to humanitarian settings. The most promising methodologies are adaptable to practical constraints in refugee and IDP camps and settlements. New methodologies that adapt and strengthen the MADE-IN/MADE-FOR, hospital- or facility-based, and community informant-based methodology show promise and must be further developed.

孕产妇死亡率估计方法:范围审查和人道主义环境适用性评价。
背景:在世界各地,大约每两分钟就有一名孕产妇死亡,其中大多数死亡是可以预防的。产妇死亡率是可持续发展目标的一项关键指标,但我们没有可靠的方法来估计难民或国内流离失所者营地和安置点的产妇死亡率。本研究的目的是了解最适合用于估计这些情况下因流产并发症导致的孕产妇死亡率比例的方法。方法:我们对估算孕产妇死亡率的方法进行了范围审查,并使用一套预先确定的标准对其进行了评估。我们使用与难民或国内流离失所者营地和定居点实施相关的11个类别评估了9种原始方法:数据来源、定义、样本量、与数据收集相关的点估计时间、偏差、人力资源、实施所需时间、数据收集培训、统计培训、数字化和成本。每个类别可分为0到4分,总分为44分。在评估了每种原始方法之后,我们审查了原始出版物的引用或搜索了2022年10月之前的其他实施方法。我们修订了原来的分数,并根据这些方法是否适合在难民营和国内流离失所者营地实施,编制了一份方法排序清单。结果:我们确定了124篇估计孕产妇死亡率的出版物。举报人造成的孕产妇死亡/孕产妇死亡跟踪审查(MADE-IN/MADE-FOR)(33.5分)、基于医院或设施的(33.5分)和基于社区的(32.5分)方法排名最高,原因是成本低、实施所需的时间间隔短、样本规模小、相对于数据收集的点估计时间近、易于数字化以及不需要统计培训。讨论:与缺乏“完美”的方法来估计稳定环境下的孕产妇死亡率类似,在将这些方法应用于人道主义环境时也需要考虑妥协。最有希望的方法适用于难民和国内流离失所者营地和定居点的实际限制。适应和加强MADE-IN/MADE-FOR、基于医院或设施以及基于社区信息提供者的方法的新方法显示出希望,必须进一步发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Conflict and Health
Conflict and Health Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
5.60%
发文量
57
审稿时长
18 weeks
期刊介绍: Conflict and Health is a highly-accessed, open access journal providing a global platform to disseminate insightful and impactful studies documenting the public health impacts and responses related to armed conflict, humanitarian crises, and forced migration.
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