Limitations in the recording of maternal mortality in Germany: An analysis of statistical challenges.

Journal of health monitoring Pub Date : 2025-09-03 eCollection Date: 2025-09-01 DOI:10.25646/13382
Safiya Fatima Zaloum, Julia Callaghan, Amira Goepfrich, Joachim Dudenhausen, Lars Paulson, Lars Hellmeyer, Klaus Vetter, Martina Ziegert, Thorsten Braun, Josefine Theresia Koenigbauer
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Abstract

Background: The World Health Organization (WHO) defines maternal mortality as the death of a woman during pregnancy or up to 42 days after delivery. The maternal mortality ratio (MMR) serves as an indicator of the quality of health care. In Germany, recording is based on the death certificate (ICD-10 code), with variations in documentation leading to underreporting. Studies indicate insufficient data in Berlin and queries in Germany.

Method: 2,316 death certificates of women (aged 15 - 50) from the Berlin Central Archive (2019 - 2022) were analysed to identify maternal deaths and the quality of the information provided was assessed. In addition, the recording of pregnancy status on death certificates was examined nationwide.

Results: Fourteen maternal deaths (excluding late cases according to the WHO) were identified. Only four cases were identifiable as maternal deaths solely on the basis of ICD-10 codes. The additional information 'Is or was the woman pregnant?' which is important for identification, was available in about a quarter of the death certificates reviewed. In 73.2 % of cases, the question 'Is or was the woman pregnant?' remained unanswered. A nationwide comparison of death certificates revealed considerable differences: only Bavaria and Bremen followed the WHO definition. Saxony-Anhalt does not record pregnancy status at all.

Conclusion: The recording of maternal mortality in Germany is incomplete. Death certificates are often deficient. Many federal states record periods outside the WHO definition (3 - 12 months after birth). A standardized national system for registering maternal deaths is required to improve data collection and enable better prevention.

德国产妇死亡率记录的局限性:统计挑战分析。
背景:世界卫生组织(世卫组织)将孕产妇死亡率定义为妇女在怀孕期间或分娩后42天内的死亡。产妇死亡率(MMR)是保健质量的一个指标。在德国,记录是根据死亡证明(ICD-10代码)进行的,文件的差异导致少报。研究表明,柏林的数据不足,德国的查询也不足。方法:分析来自柏林中央档案馆(2019 - 2022)的2316份女性(15 - 50岁)死亡证明,以确定孕产妇死亡,并评估所提供信息的质量。此外,在全国范围内检查了死亡证明上的怀孕状况记录。结果:确定了14例产妇死亡(根据世卫组织不包括晚期病例)。仅根据《国际疾病分类-10》的编码,可确定为孕产妇死亡的病例只有4例。附加信息“这个女人怀孕了吗?”这对身份识别很重要,在被审查的死亡证明中,约有四分之一的人可以找到。在73.2%的病例中,“这个女人怀孕了吗?”的问题没有得到回答。在全国范围内对死亡证明的比较显示出相当大的差异:只有巴伐利亚和不来梅遵循世界卫生组织的定义。萨克森-安哈特州根本不记录怀孕状况。结论:德国对孕产妇死亡率的记录不完整。死亡证明往往有缺陷。许多联邦州记录了超出世卫组织定义的时期(出生后3 - 12个月)。需要建立一个标准化的全国孕产妇死亡登记系统,以改进数据收集和更好地预防。
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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