Abstract

Maternal mortality is not easy to measure directly in countries in which it remains a public-health problem. Registers in which the cause of death is reported provide a useful tool, if their coverage can be assessed. In Bamako, they showed an average maternal mortality of about 300 deaths per 100,000 live births, characterized by a pronounced U-shaped distribution: the risk of dying was largest for mothers below 20 years and above 35 years. It was possible to divide maternal deaths into direct and indirect obstetric causes, the former being predominant at all ages, except the youngest. However, such registers are not always available. Two indirect methods have been devised to assess maternal mortality from general life tables, in the absence of any information on cause of death. The first method, in which ratios of age-specific death rates for women to those for men is used, ascribes the deviation of this ratio observed at childbearing ages to maternal mortality. The second method which is based on the fa...

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