Abstract

Sponsored by the US Department of State and the US Army Pacific as part of a Medical Readiness Training Exercise, 17 physicians from Tripler Army Medical Center traveled to Outer Mongolia during September 1995 to examine the practice of medicine in the country. The obstetrical care observed was delivered at Third Women's Hospital in Ulanbataar. Prenatal care in Mongolia is provided mainly by family physicians, with the family doctor visiting each pregnant patient every month for the first 5 months, increasing to weekly visits at 7 months. The patient is taken to an obstetrical or women's and children's hospital when she reaches term or goes into labor. The staff at Third Women's Hospital deliver approximately 2000 babies annually and perform approximately 1000 pregnancy terminations through sharp curettage. The cesarean section rate is reported to be 10%. The hospital has no laboratory or X-ray capability, but can send out for such tests on rare occasions. During labor, patients are fully ambulatory on an as-needed basis. Fetal monitoring is not routinely available, except for occasional auscultation, patients in labor were not given IV fluid, delivery rooms were bleak and with only antiquated equipment, lighting was poor, and gloves were reused until they were too tattered for reuse. The authors discuss their experience with 3 cesarean sections and 1 ectopic pregnancy performed while in the country.

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