1998 年至 2022 年巴拿马产妇死亡率。

IF 2 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Yovani Chavez, Tania Herrera
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:研究巴拿马的产妇死亡率:研究巴拿马的孕产妇死亡率,分析其直接产科死亡、间接产科死亡和促成因素:这项队列研究使用了国家统计和普查局提供的公开数据,对巴拿马共和国 1998 年至 2022 年 25 年间的孕产妇死亡情况进行了回顾性分析。公共数据来源于巴拿马国家统计和普查局网站。使用了《国际疾病和相关健康问题统计分类第十次修订版》(ICD)中的相关代码。孕产妇死亡率 (MMR) 被定义为每 100 000 例活产中的孕产妇死亡人数。使用 R 2 对数据进行趋势线可靠性分析:从 1998 年到 2022 年,巴拿马共发生了 1 026 例孕产妇死亡,其中 61.2% 归因于直接产科原因;23.9% 归因于间接产科原因;13.6% 归因于诱因;1.4% 原因不明或未确定。平均产妇死亡率为 60.1。趋势线可靠性的结果是 R 2 = 0.1(y = -0.5147x + 1094.7),在统计上不显著,但符合 2030 年可持续发展目标。产科直接死亡的具体主要原因是产后出血(ICD O72)占 12.9%;子痫(ICD O15)占 9.2%;产褥败血症(ICD O85)占 6.7%;子痫前期(ICD O14)占 6.3%。间接产科死亡的主要原因有14.9%的产妇死于其他可归类的疾病,但与妊娠、分娩和产褥期并发(国际疾病分类 O99);7.3%的产妇死于其他可归类的传染病和寄生虫病,但与妊娠、分娩和产褥期并发(国际疾病分类 O98):这项研究的结果证实,尽管孕产妇死亡极易预防,但直接的产科原因(61.2%)远远多于间接的产科原因(23.9%)、诱因(13.6%)或不明/不确定原因(1.4%)。虽然巴拿马正在努力实现到 2030 年孕产妇死亡率达到 70%的目标,但这些结果也凸显了医疗保健服务的匮乏,因为在土著社区,每 10 万人口中没有一名妇产科医生,而 30.8%的孕产妇死亡病例都发生在土著社区。此外,巴拿马的卫生系统也不能幸免于流行病和危机。从 1998 年到 2022 年,巴拿马有 5 年的孕产妇死亡率超过了 70:2001 年、2002 年、2006 年、2011 年和 2020 年。这些发现也凸显了统计数据与卫生政策之间的对立。虽然趋势线的可靠性不显著(R 2 = 0.1),但产妇死亡率符合 2030 年可持续发展目标的要求。未来的研究应考虑与间接产科和死亡诱因、医疗保健的可及性、COVID-19、剖宫产和自然分娩、年龄、经济收入、产前和产后护理有关的因素,以及美洲私营和公共医疗保健设施的质量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Maternal mortality in Panama from 1998 to 2022.

Objective: To examine maternal mortality in Panama, analyzing its direct obstetric deaths, indirect obstetric deaths, and contributory conditions.

Methods: This cohort study used publicly available data from the National Institute of Statistics and Census to present a 25-year retrospective analysis of maternal deaths in the Republic of Panama from 1998 to 2022. Public data were sourced from the National Institute of Statistics and Census website of Panama. Relevant codes from the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision (ICD) were used. The maternal mortality ratio (MMR) was defined as the number of maternal deaths per 100 000 live births. Trendline reliability with R 2 was performed to analyze the data.

Results: A total of 1 026 maternal deaths occurred in Panama from 1998 through 2022, of which 61.2% were attributed to direct obstetric causes; 23.9%, indirect obstetric causes; 13.6%, contributory conditions; and 1.4% were unknown or undetermined. The average MMR was 60.1. The trendline reliability resulted in R 2 = 0.1 (y = -0.5147x + 1094.7), which is not statistically significant but meets the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals. The specific primary causes of direct obstetric deaths were: 12.9% due to postpartum hemorrhage (ICD O72); 9.2%, eclampsia (ICD O15); 6.7%, puerperal sepsis (ICD O85); and 6.3%, pre-eclampsia (ICD O14). For indirect obstetric deaths, the primary causes were: 14.9% due to other maternal diseases classifiable elsewhere but complicating pregnancy, childbirth, and the puerperium (ICD O99); and 7.3%, maternal infectious and parasitic diseases classifiable elsewhere but complicating pregnancy, childbirth, and the puerperium (ICD O98).

Conclusions: The findings of this study confirmed that there were substantially more direct obstetric causes (61.2%) than indirect obstetric causes (23.9%), contributory causes (13.6%), or unknown/undetermined causes (1.4%) of maternal mortality, despite being highly preventable. Although Panama is right on track to fulfill the target of 70 MMR by 2030, these results highlight the lack of health care access due to the absence of obstetrician-gynecologists per 100 000 population in indigenous comarcas, where 30.8% of the maternal mortalities occur. Furthermore, the health system in Panama is not immune to pandemics and crises. From 1998 to 2022, there were 5 years when the MMR in Panama exceeded 70: 2001, 2002, 2006, 2011, and 2020. These findings also underscore the dichotomy between statistics and health policy. While the trendline reliability was insignificant (R 2 = 0.1), the MMR satisfies requirements for the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals. Future studies should consider factors related to indirect obstetrics and contributory causes of deaths, health care access, COVID-19, cesarean section and natural birth, age, economic income, prenatal and postpartum care, as well as the quality of private and public health facilities in the Americas.

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