Worldwide, for an estimated 358,000 women, pregnancy and childbirth end
in death and mourning, and beyond these maternal deaths, 9-10% of
pregnant women or about 14 million women per year suffer from acute
maternal complications. This paper documents the types and severity of
maternal and foetal complications among women who gave birth in
hospitals in Matlab and Chandpur, Bangladesh, during 2007-2008. The
Community Health Research Workers (CHRWs) of the icddr,b service area
in Matlab prospectively collected data for the study from 4,817 women
on their places of delivery and pregnancy outcomes. Of them, 3,010
(62.5%) gave birth in different hospitals in Matlab and/or Chandpur and
beyond. Review of hospital-records was attempted for 2,102 women who
gave birth only in the Matlab Hospital of icddr,b and in other public
and private hospitals in the Matlab and Chandpur area. Among those,
1,927 (91.7%) records were found and reviewed by a physician. By
reviewing the hospital-records, 7.3% of the women (n=1,927) who gave
birth in the local hospitals were diagnosed with a severe maternal
complication, and 16.1% with a less-severe maternal complication.
Abortion cases - either spontaneous or induced - were excluded from the
analysis. Over 12% of all births were delivered by caesarean section
(CS). For a substantial proportion (12.5%) of CS, no clear medical
indication was recorded in the hospitalregister. Twelve maternal deaths
occurred during the study period; most (83%) of them had been in
contact with a hospital before death. Recommendations include
standardization of the hospital record-keeping system, proper
monitoring of indications of CS, and introduction of maternal death
audit for further improvement of the quality of care in public and
private hospitals in rural Bangladesh