59 research outputs found
Distinguishing intrauterine foetal demise versus abdominal pregnancy in low resource settings, a case report
Diagnosis of abdominal pregnancy always poses a clinical dilemma. Transvaginal ultrasound is the ideal radiological procedure in locating these pregnancies. However in resource limited setting, abdominal and pelvic ultrasounds can be the only available yet unreliable modalities for distinguishing intrauterine versus abdominal pregnancies. We present a case of a 36 year old para 4+0 gravida 5 who presented with foetal demise at 16 weeks of gestation. Multiple abdominal and pelvic ultrasounds showed intra uterine foetal demise for which she underwent induction. The definitive diagnosis of abdominal pregnancy was established using transcervical Foleys catheter aided abdominal-pelvic ultrasound which showed an empty uterus and a gestational sac, placenta and a 16-week foetus with no cardiac activity in the right adnexa/iliac region
Antenatal care visits and pregnancy outcomes at a Kenyan rural district hospital: a retrospective cohort study
Background: The goal of antenatal care (ANC) is to improve maternal and neonatal outcomes. Fewer ANC visits in focused antenatal care (FANC) model can affect maternal and perinatal outcomes in low income settings where the number ANC visits are often low.Objective: To determine the number of ANC visits and their influence on maternal and perinatal outcomes at a rural Kenyan hospital.Study design: Retrospective cohort.Study population: Women who received ANC and were admitted at Longisa District Hospital postnatal ward after delivery at or above 28 weeks gestation.Study site: Postnatal ward, Longisa District Hospital, Bomet County, Kenya.Results: Between 1st July and 31st August 2014, 200 (83%) of the screened postpartum (n=241) women were found to be eligible. Majority (n=122, 61.0%) of the women received less than 4 ANC visits. Most women were: married (83.5%), housewives (65.5%), and had: parity of 2 to 4 (50.5%); primary education (66.5%); live births (93.0%); spontaneous vertex delivery (82.5%); spontaneous onset of labour (n=192, 96.0%) and no complication at or post-partum (n=175, 87.5%). Majority of the neonates had 5 minute APGAR score >7 (88.0%); and were with their mothers after 24 hours postpartum (81.5%). High parity (â„5) was associated with reduced frequency of ANC visits (OR=0.29, 95% CI 0.1-0.87, p=0.027). Early perinatal and maternal outcomes were not significantly associated with the number of ANC visits.Conclusion: In this rural Kenyan hospital, few women had 4 or more ANC visits. Parity of 5 or greater was significantly associated with fewer than 4 ANC visits. Early perinatal and maternal outcomes did not vary with the number of visits. Quality rather than number of ANC visits should be evaluated as a measure of ANC
The Gender Context of HIV Risk and Pregnancy Goals in Western Kenya
Background: Intentional childbearing may place heterosexual couples at risk of HIV infection in resource-limited settings with high HIV prevalence areas where society places great value on having children.Objective: To explore cognitive, cultural, and spatial mapping of sexual and reproductive health domains and services in western Kenya among men and women.Design: Community-based formative qualitative study design.Setting: Five administrative/geographical divisions of Nyando District, western Kenya.Subjects: Adult male 18 years and older and female who were of reproductive-potential ages (15 to 49 years for females)(n=90).Results:Men and women have disparate goals for number of children and engage in gendered patterns of protective method use (contraceptives used by women often in secret, condoms by men but rarely).Conclusion: HIV infection was still seen as stigmatising. These study results are relevant to design of effective integrated delivery for reproductive and HIV services in high-burden sub-Saharan African countries
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Home versus inpatient induction of labour for improving birth outcomes
Background
The setting in which induction of labour takes place (home or inpatient) is likely to have implications for safety, women's experiences and costs.
Home induction may be started at home with the subsequent active phase of labour happening either at home or in a healthcare facility (hospital, birth centre, midwiferyâled unit). More commonly, home induction starts in a healthcare facility, then the woman goes home to await the start of labour. Inpatient induction takes place in a healthcare facility where the woman stays while awaiting the start of labour.
Objectives
To assess the effects on neonatal and maternal outcomes of third trimester home induction of labour compared with inpatient induction using the same method of induction.
Search methods
For this update, we searched the Cochrane Pregnancy and Childbirth Group's Trials Register, ClinicalTrials.gov, the WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (ICTRP) (31 January 2020)), and reference lists of retrieved studies.
Selection criteria
Published and unpublished randomised controlled trials (RCTs) in which home and inpatient settings for induction have been compared. We included conference abstracts but excluded quasiârandomised trials and crossâover studies.
Data collection and analysis
Two review authors independently assessed study reports for inclusion. Two review authors carried out data extraction and assessment of risk of bias independently. GRADE assessments were checked by a third review author.
Main results
We included seven RCTs, six of which provided data on 1610 women and their babies. Studies were undertaken between 1998 and 2015, and all were in highâ or upperâmiddle income countries. Most women were induced for post dates. Three studies reported government funding, one reported no funding and three did not report on their funding source. Most GRADE assessments gave very lowâcertainty evidence, downgrading mostly for high risk of bias and serious imprecision.
1. Home compared to inpatient induction with vaginal prostaglandin E (PGE) (two RCTs, 1028 women and babies; 1022 providing data).
Although women's satisfaction may be slightly better in home settings, the evidence is very uncertain (mean difference (MD) 0.16, 95% confidence interval (CI) â0.02 to 0.34, 1 study, 399 women), very lowâcertainty evidence.
There may be little or no difference between home and inpatient induction for other primary outcomes, with all evidence being very low certainty:
â spontaneous vaginal birth (average risk ratio (RR) [aRR] 0.91, 95% CI 0.69 to 1.21, 2 studies, 1022 women, randomâeffects method);
â uterine hyperstimulation (RR 1.19, 95% CI 0.40 to 3.50, 1 study, 821 women);
â caesarean birth (RR 1.01, 95% CI 0.81 to 1.28, 2 studies, 1022 women);
â neonatal infection (RR 1.29, 95% CI 0.59 to 2.82, 1 study, 821 babies);
â admission to neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) (RR 1.20, 95% CI 0.50 to 2.90, 2 studies, 1022 babies).
Studies did not report serious neonatal morbidity or mortality.
2. Home compared to inpatient induction with controlled release PGE (one RCT, 299 women and babies providing data).
There was no information on whether the questionnaire on women's satisfaction with care used a validated instrument, but the findings presented showed no overall difference in scores.
We found little or no difference between the groups for other primary outcomes, all also being very lowâcertainty evidence:
â spontaneous vaginal birth (RR 0.94, 95% CI 0.77 to 1.14, 1 study, 299 women);
â uterine hyperstimulation (RR 1.01, 95% CI 0.51 to 1.98, 1 study, 299 women);
â caesarean births (RR 0.95, 95% CI 0.64 to 1.42, 1 study, 299 women);
â admission to NICU (RR 1.38, 0.57 to 3.34, 1 study, 299 babies).
The study did not report on neonatal infection nor serious neonatal morbidity or mortality.
3. Home compared to inpatient induction with balloon or Foley catheter (four RCTs; three studies, 289 women and babies providing data).
It was again unclear whether questionnaires reporting women's experiences/satisfaction with care were validated instruments, with one study (48 women, 69% response rate) finding women were similarly satisfied.
Home inductions may reduce the number of caesarean births, but the data are also compatible with a slight increase and are of very lowâcertainty (RR 0.64, 95% CI 0.41 to 1.01, 2 studies, 159 women).
There was little or no difference between the groups for other primary outcomes with all being very lowâcertainty evidence:
â spontaneous vaginal birth (RR 1.04, 95% CI 0.54 to 1.98, 1 study, 48 women):
â uterine hyperstimulation (RR 0.45, 95% CI 0.03 to 6.79, 1 study, 48 women);
â admission to NICU (RR 0.37, 95% CI 0.07 to 1.86, 2 studies, 159 babies).
There were no serious neonatal infections nor serious neonatal morbidity or mortality in the one study (involving 48 babies) assessing these outcomes.
Authors' conclusions
Data on the effectiveness, safety and women's experiences of home versus inpatient induction of labour are limited and of very lowâcertainty. Given that serious adverse events are likely to be extremely rare, the safety data are more likely to come from very large observational cohort studies rather than relatively small RCTs
Randomized Trial of Early Detection and Treatment of Postpartum Hemorrhage
Background: Delays in the detection or treatment of postpartum hemorrhage can result in complications or death. A blood-collection drape can help provide objective, accurate, and early diagnosis of postpartum hemorrhage, and delayed or inconsistent use of effective interventions may be able to be addressed by a treatment bundle.Methods: We conducted an international, cluster-randomized trial to assess a multicomponent clinical intervention for postpartum hemorrhage in patients having vaginal delivery. The intervention included a calibrated blood-collection drape for early detection of postpartum hemorrhage and a bundle of first-response treatments (uterine massage, oxytocic drugs, tranexamic acid, intravenous fluids, examination, and escalation), supported by an implementation strategy (intervention group). Hospitals in the control group provided usual care. The primary outcome was a composite of severe postpartum hemorrhage (blood loss, â„1000 ml), laparotomy for bleeding, or maternal death from bleeding. Key secondary implementation outcomes were the detection of postpartum hemorrhage and adherence to the treatment bundle.Results:Â A total of 80 secondary-level hospitals across Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, and Tanzania, in which 210,132 patients underwent vaginal delivery, were randomly assigned to the intervention group or the usual-care group. Among hospitals and patients with data, a primary-outcome event occurred in 1.6% of the patients in the intervention group, as compared with 4.3% of those in the usual-care group (risk ratio, 0.40; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.32 to 0.50; P<0.001). Postpartum hemorrhage was detected in 93.1% of the patients in the intervention group and in 51.1% of those in the usual-care group (rate ratio, 1.58; 95% CI, 1.41 to 1.76), and the treatment bundle was used in 91.2% and 19.4%, respectively (rate ratio, 4.94; 95% CI, 3.88 to 6.28).Conclusions: Early detection of postpartum hemorrhage and use of bundled treatment led to a lower risk of the primary outcome, a composite of severe postpartum hemorrhage, laparotomy for bleeding, or death from bleeding, than usual care among patients having vaginal delivery
Randomized Trial of Early Detection and Treatment of Postpartum Hemorrhage
Background: Delays in the detection or treatment of postpartum hemorrhage can result in complications or death. A blood-collection drape can help provide objective, accurate, and early diagnosis of postpartum hemorrhage, and delayed or inconsistent use of effective interventions may be able to be addressed by a treatment bundle.Methods: We conducted an international, cluster-randomized trial to assess a multicomponent clinical intervention for postpartum hemorrhage in patients having vaginal delivery. The intervention included a calibrated blood-collection drape for early detection of postpartum hemorrhage and a bundle of first-response treatments (uterine massage, oxytocic drugs, tranexamic acid, intravenous fluids, examination, and escalation), supported by an implementation strategy (intervention group). Hospitals in the control group provided usual care. The primary outcome was a composite of severe postpartum hemorrhage (blood loss, â„1000 ml), laparotomy for bleeding, or maternal death from bleeding. Key secondary implementation outcomes were the detection of postpartum hemorrhage and adherence to the treatment bundle.Results:Â A total of 80 secondary-level hospitals across Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, and Tanzania, in which 210,132 patients underwent vaginal delivery, were randomly assigned to the intervention group or the usual-care group. Among hospitals and patients with data, a primary-outcome event occurred in 1.6% of the patients in the intervention group, as compared with 4.3% of those in the usual-care group (risk ratio, 0.40; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.32 to 0.50; P<0.001). Postpartum hemorrhage was detected in 93.1% of the patients in the intervention group and in 51.1% of those in the usual-care group (rate ratio, 1.58; 95% CI, 1.41 to 1.76), and the treatment bundle was used in 91.2% and 19.4%, respectively (rate ratio, 4.94; 95% CI, 3.88 to 6.28).Conclusions: Early detection of postpartum hemorrhage and use of bundled treatment led to a lower risk of the primary outcome, a composite of severe postpartum hemorrhage, laparotomy for bleeding, or death from bleeding, than usual care among patients having vaginal delivery
Usability, acceptability, and feasibility of the World Health Organization Labour Care Guide: A mixed-methods, multicountry evaluation.
Introduction
The World Health Organizationâs (WHO) Labour Care Guide (LCG) is a ânext-generationâ partograph based on WHOâs latest intrapartum care recommendations. It aims to optimize clinical care provided to women and their experience of care. We evaluated the LCGâs usability, feasibility, and acceptability among maternity care practitioners in clinical settings.
Methods
Mixed-methods evaluation with doctors, midwives, and nurses in 12 health facilities across Argentina, India, Kenya, Malawi, Nigeria, and Tanzania. Purposively sampled and trained practitioners applied the LCG in low-risk women during labor and rated experiences, satisfaction, and usability. Practitioners were invited to focus group discussions (FGDs) to share experiences and perceptions of the LCG, which were subjected to framework analysis.
Results
One hundred and thirty-six practitioners applied the LCG in managing labor and birth of 1,226 low-risk women. The majority of women had a spontaneous vaginal birth (91.6%); two cases of intrapartum stillbirths (1.63 per 1000 births) occurred. Practitioner satisfaction with the LCG was high, and median usability score was 67.5%. Practitioners described the LCG as supporting precise and meticulous monitoring during labor, encouraging critical thinking in labor management, and improving the provision of woman-centered care.
Conclusions
The LCG is feasible and acceptable to use across different clinical settings and can promote woman-centered care, though some design improvements would benefit usability. Implementing the LCG needs to be accompanied by training and supportive supervision, and strategies to promote an enabling environment (including updated policies on supportive care interventions, and ensuring essential equipment is available)
Amplicon sequencing as a potential surveillance tool for complexity of infection and drug resistance markers in plasmodium falciparum asymptomatic infections
Background:
Genotyping Plasmodium falciparum subpopulations in malaria infections is an important aspect of malaria molecular epidemiology to understand within-host diversity and the frequency of drug resistance markers.
Methods:
We characterized P. falciparum genetic diversity in asymptomatic infections and subsequent first febrile infections using amplicon sequencing (AmpSeq) of ama1 in Coastal Kenya. We also examined temporal changes in haplotype frequencies of mdr1, a drug-resistant marker.
Results:
We found >60% of the infections were polyclonal (complexity of infection [COI] >1) and there was a reduction in COI over time. Asymptomatic infections had a significantly higher mean COI than febrile infections based on ama1 sequences (2.7 [95% confidence interval {CI}, 2.65â2.77] vs 2.22 [95% CI, 2.17â2.29], respectively). Moreover, an analysis of 30 paired asymptomatic and first febrile infections revealed that many first febrile infections (91%) were due to the presence of new ama1 haplotypes. The mdr1-YY haplotype, associated with chloroquine and amodiaquine resistance, decreased over time, while the NY (wild type) and the NF (modulates response to lumefantrine) haplotypes increased.
Conclusions:
This study emphasizes the utility of AmpSeq in characterizing parasite diversity as it can determine relative proportions of clones and detect minority clones. The usefulness of AmpSeq in antimalarial drug resistance surveillance is also highlighted
A review of the frequencies of Plasmodium falciparum Kelch 13 artemisinin resistance mutations in Africa.
Artemisinin resistance (AR) emerged in South East Asia 13 years ago and the identification of the resistance conferring molecular marker, Plasmodium falciparum Kelch 13 (Pfk13), 7 years ago has provided an invaluable tool for monitoring AR in malaria endemic countries. Molecular Pfk13 surveillance revealed the resistance foci in the Greater Mekong Subregion, an independent emergence in Guyana, South America, and a low frequency of mutations in Africa. The recent identification of the R561H Pfk13 AR associated mutation in Tanzania, Uganda and in Rwanda, where it has been associated with delayed parasite clearance, should be a concern for the continent. In this review, we provide a summary of Pfk13 resistance associated propeller domain mutation frequencies across Africa from 2012 to 2020, to examine how many other countries have identified these mutations. Only four African countries reported a recent identification of the M476I, P553L, R561H, P574L, C580Y and A675V Pfk13 mutations at low frequencies and with no reports of clinical treatment failure, except for Rwanda. These mutations present a threat to malaria control across the continent, since the greatest burden of malaria remains in Africa. A rise in the frequency of these mutations and their spread would reverse the gains made in the reduction of malaria over the last 20 years, given the lack of new antimalarial treatments in the event artemisinin-based combination therapies fail. The review highlights the frequency of Pfk13 propeller domain mutations across Africa, providing an up-to-date perspective of Pfk13 mutations, and appeals for an urgent and concerted effort to monitoring antimalarial resistance markers in Africa and the efficacy of antimalarials by re-establishing sentinel surveillance systems
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