Abstract

Changes in data collection and processing of US maternal mortality data across states over time have led to inconsistencies in maternal death reporting. Our purpose was to identify possible misclassification of maternal deaths and to apply alternative coding methods to improve specificity of maternal causes. We analyzed 2016–2017 US vital statistics mortality data with cause-of-death literals (actual words written on the death certificate) added. We developed an alternative coding strategy to code the “primary cause of death” defined as the most likely cause that led to death. We recoded deaths with or without literal pregnancy mentions to maternal and non-maternal causes, respectively. Originally coded and recoded data were compared for overall maternal deaths and for a subset of deaths originally coded to ill-defined causes. Among 1691 originally coded maternal deaths, 597 (35.3%) remained a maternal death upon recoding and 1094 (64.7%) were recoded to non-maternal causes. The most common maternal causes were eclampsia and preeclampsia, obstetric embolism, postpartum cardiomyopathy, and obstetric hemorrhage. The most common non-maternal causes were diseases of the circulatory system and cancer, similar to the leading causes of death among all reproductive-age women (excluding injuries). Among 735 records originally coded to ill-defined causes, 94% were recoded to more specific, informative causes from literal text. Eighteen deaths originally coded as non-maternal mentioned pregnancy in the literals and were recoded as maternal deaths. Literal text provides more detailed information on cause of death which is often lost during coding. We found evidence of both underreporting and overreporting of maternal deaths, with possible overreporting predominant. Accurate data is essential for measuring the effectiveness of maternal mortality reduction programs.

Highlights

  • Vital statistics data is the foundation of the public health system and provide essential data to monitor public health programs

  • Among the 3968 records selected for more detailed analysis, the original cause of death was as follows: 1691 maternal deaths (ICD-10 codes A34, O00-O95, O98-O99), 740 late maternal deaths (O96-O97), 141 other deaths coded to natural causes (A00-N99, Q00-R99), and 1396 coded to external causes of injury (i.e accidents, homicide or suicide) (V01-Y98) (Fig 2)

  • We selected the 1691 records originally coded as maternal deaths, and the 740 records originally coded as late maternal deaths for more detailed analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Vital statistics data is the foundation of the public health system and provide essential data to monitor public health programs. Analyzing US maternal mortality literal text files requires research proposal review by NCHS. Once approved, this data is accessible through the NCHS Research Data Center: https://www.cdc.gov/ rdc/index.htm. Researchers wanting to request the literal data will need to go through the same NCHS review process as the study authors to access these files. We cannot provide access to the final research data as NCHS requires any new proposal to go through their NCHS review process. For researchers interested in accessing the specific analytic data sets that we develop under the proposed research aims, we will work with the NCHS Research Data Center to make our analytic programs available to reproduce the final analytic data set from the original data

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