Abstract

Severe maternal complications in pregnancy in sub-Saharan Africa contribute to high maternal mortality and morbidity. Incidence data on severe maternal complications, life-threatening conditions, maternal deaths and birth outcomes are essential for clinical audit and to inform trial design of the types and frequency of expected severe adverse events (SAEs). However, such data are very limited, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. We set up standardized, systematic clinical surveillance embedded into routine clinical care in a rural county hospital in Kenya. Pregnant women and newborns are systematically assessed and investigated. Data are reported using a standardized Maternal Admission Record that forms both the hospital's clinical record and the data collection tool. Integrating clinical surveillance with routine clinical care is feasible and should be expanded in sub-Saharan Africa, both for improving clinical practice and as a basis for intervention studies to reduce maternal and newborn mortality and morbidity where rates are highest.

Highlights

  • The burden of maternal mortality in sub-Saharan Africa remains high

  • This paper aims to describe the methods undertaken to achieve systematic clinical surveillance in the maternity department of a rural county hospital in Kenya, in close collaboration with hospital management, and involving all hospital staff providing maternity care

  • Clinical surveillance is fully integrated into clinical care in the Kilifi County Hospital (KCH) maternity department

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Summary

Introduction

Maternal deaths are the ‘tip of the iceberg’ of the 20–30 fold more women who experience severe maternal morbidity [3]. This includes women with a “near miss” or life threatening complication (signs of organ dysfunction as a result of a severe complication at delivery) [4], severe maternal complications (severe post-partum haemorrhage, severe pre-eclampsia, eclampsia, sepsis or severe systemic infection, ruptured uterus, and severe complications of termination of pregnancy) [5]. In a recent systematic review, including facility based studies in Africa, lifethreatening conditions (LTCs) occurred in 0.4–0.8% of all deliveries [6], accurate data were available from only three studies [7,8,9]. Less severe conditions are not usually reported at all, but tools to identify these in resource-poor settings are proposed by the WHO Maternal Morbidity Working Group [3]

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