Affiliations 

  • 1 Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, General Hospital Ipoh, Perak, Malaysia
Med J Malaysia, 1999 Dec;54(4):496-503.
PMID: 11072469

Abstract

Near-miss cases in life-threatening obstetric patients occurring over a one year period are analysed retrospectively with regards to morbidity measured in terms of hospital stay, utilisation of high dependency ward and intensive care beds and adequacy of clinical management. One-hundred and twenty two cases occurred among 9932 deliveries. Massive obstetric haemorrhage (54.2%) and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (36.9%) were the two main diagnostic groups. Seventy one (58.2%) cases were referred from peripheral centres for obstetric management and 77 (63.1%) were not booked at this hospital for antenatal care. A majority were not ill-looking (92 cases) at the time of admission but turned for the worse in the course of labour. Interventional measures taken in clinical management were considered appropriate in all cases. Delay in instituting treatment was present in 6 cases. Remediable measures were recognised in 15 (12.3%). This study, apart from supplementing mortality audits, demonstrates that high risk obstetric patients can be triaged at the time of admission to labour wards by trained midwives and junior doctors in busy obstetric units without compromising standards of care.

Study site: Obstetric and Gynaecologic Unit in Ipoh Hospital.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.