Abstract

Illinois has one of the highest rates of maternal death in the United States, and in 2000, the Illinois Maternal Mortality Review Committee (MMRC) was created to address this high rate of maternal death. This is a detailed description of the development of the MMRC, its process of review, its impact on the state's attention to maternal mortality and its obstetric hospitals, and a summary of its initial findings. The Illinois MMRC, specifically designed to be multidisciplinary, was created to provide secondary review of select maternal deaths. Between 2000 and 2010, 45 of the 93 deaths reviewed had complete analysis. Hemorrhage was the leading cause of death, and 69% of all cases were deemed potentially avoidable. Compared to the primary required review conducted by the State Perinatal Center, the secondary review by the MMRC changed the cause of death in 20% of cases and changed the determination of avoidability in 36% of cases. Based on these findings and advocacy by the MMRC, in 2008, Illinois mandated that every M.D. and R.N. provider working in the obstetric unit of every obstetric hospital must complete the maternal hemorrhage education program. The MMRC has had a positive impact on Illinois' approach to reducing maternal deaths by being instrumental in getting the state to mandate that every obstetric hospital must comply with the Obstetric Hemorrhage Education Project to maintain its credentials. Further, the high rates at which cause of death and potential avoidability of death were changed by the MMRC underscore the need for multidisciplinary independent review of maternal deaths to achieve more accurate data and, hence, ultimately institute focused interventions to decrease preventable deaths.

Highlights

  • After reaching a nadir in the 1980–1990s, maternal death is increasing in the United States

  • The maternal mortality ratio (MMR) in the United States increased to 12.7/100,000 in 2007 from 8.5/100,000 in 1996.1–3 the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) pregnancy-related mortality ratio (PRMR), defined as a pregnancy-related death within 1 year of pregnancy due to a complication of pregnancy, a chain of events initiated by pregnancy, or aggravation of an unrelated condition by the physiologic effects of pregnancy, has increased to 15.4/100,000 in 2005 from 10.3/100,000 in 1991.4,5 It is clear that even the latest CDC data likely underrepresent actual maternal deaths.[6,7]

  • A high proportion of the maternal deaths reviewed in Illinois were potentially avoidable[13], and hemorrhage was the leading cause of maternal mortality as well as the leading cause of the potentially avoidable deaths.[6,9,16,17]

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Summary

Introduction

After reaching a nadir in the 1980–1990s, maternal death is increasing in the United States. Results: The Illinois MMRC, designed to be multidisciplinary, was created to provide secondary review of select maternal deaths. Compared to the primary required review conducted by the State Perinatal Center, the secondary review by the MMRC changed the cause of death in 20% of cases and changed the determination of avoidability in 36% of cases. Based on these findings and advocacy by the MMRC, in 2008, Illinois mandated that every M.D. and R.N. provider working in the obstetric unit of every obstetric hospital must complete the maternal hemorrhage education program.

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