A retrospective review of facility-level obstetric complications and stillbirths in southern Haiti, 2013 – 2016

Author:

Dev Alka12,O’Hern Keegan1,Domerçant Joseph Yves3,Lucien Gerard3,Lucie Lafortune3,Grand-Pierre Reynold4,Wright Peter F1

Affiliation:

1. Geisel School of Medicine, Dartmouth College, Lebanon, New Hampshire, United States of America.

2. alka.dev@dartmouth.edu

3. Maternity Department, Hopital Immaculée Conception, Les Cayes, Haiti.

4. Department of Family Health, Ministry of Health and Population, Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

Abstract

Objective. To assess the incidence of obstetric complications—eclampsia, dystocia, cesarean section, postpartum hemorrhage, and stillbirths—in hospitals in southern Haiti in 2013 – 2016 and to discuss implications for improvements to the surveillance of birth outcomes.

Methods. This was a cross-sectional, retrospective study of data for 32 442 deliveries recorded in 2013 – 2016 by the Integrated Monitoring, Evaluation, and Surveillance System for facilities across three departments and one high-volume hospital in southern Haiti. Annual incidence rates of eclampsia, dystocia, cesarean section, postpartum hemorrhage, and stillbirths (both macerated and fresh) were calculated.

Results. The incidence of eclampsia in the study sample was 2% – 3% and of dystocia approximately 5%, comparable to elsewhere in Haiti and other low-income countries. Cesarean delivery rates averaged about 15% annually. Postpartum hemorrhage rates were lower than published data from similar settings. Stillbirth rates ranged from 30 – 62 per 1 000 births at all facilities, higher than previously recorded by the country’s population surveys. The rates of macerated stillbirths were remarkably high, close to 50% of total stillbirths, indicating severe delays in seeking or receiving emergency obstetric care.

Conclusions. This study provides important benchmarks for the current burden of preventable labor- and delivery-related complications in Haiti. Surveillance data suggest an urgent need for the management of hypertensive disorders during pregnancy, timely cesarean sections for dystocia, and management and treatment of postpartum hemorrhage in Haiti. Frequent data reviews may help address facility-specific bottlenecks.

Publisher

Pan American Health Organization

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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