To
a physician, any disease-related death is one too many. But death is
a certainty of life; and despite best efforts, deaths from cancer,
heart disease and/or Alzheimer’s are more readily understood,
albeit painfully accepted.
Not
so with death near the time of birth.
To
hear that a woman has died during her pregnancy, or shortly after
giving birth, is seemingly more stunning to the senses. But all
physicians and the general public need to take note of a statistic
that, for years, has gone unnoticed by many: There has been a
persistent increase in maternal mortality from pregnancy-related
causes.
A
“pregnancy-related death” is defined as “death of a woman while
pregnant or within 1 year of pregnancy termination—regardless of
the duration or site of the pregnancy—from any cause related to, or
aggravated by, the pregnancy or its management, but not from
accidental or incidental causes.”
Since
1990, the rate of pregnancy-related deaths for all women in the
United States has essentially doubled, according to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention Pregnancy Mortality Surveillance
System. Between 1987-1990, the rate was 9.1 pregnancy-related deaths
per 100,000 live births; the rate in 2011 was 17.8/100,000
CDC
researcher Dr. Andreea Creanga and colleagues published this data in
the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists’ January
2015 issue of Obstetrics & Gynecology.
The
data indicate that pregnancy-related mortality increased for all
American women and within all age groups. The greatest threat is in
women 40 years of age and older, regardless of race
Additionally,
Hispanics with less than 12 years of education, and Blacks who get
pregnant outside of wedlock have higher rates of mortality.
…all
physicians and the general public need to take note of a statistic
that, for years, has gone unnoticed by many.
Black
women have the highest risk of dying from pregnancy complications.
Between 2006 and 2010, per 100,000 live births, the mean
pregnancy-related mortality ratio in Hispanics was 11.7; Whites,
12.0; and 38.9 for Blacks
As
a Black female ob-gyn who has treated thousands of patients of all
races, I assuredly say it is time to change the history of Black
women (and men’s) health. Black health matters must matter to
Blacks.
Black
women have the least successful healthcare outcomes for most killer
diseases such as diabetes, hypertension, obesity, and heart disease.
Some attribute this to lack of access to care, or no insurance. Those
factors may play a role. For those who lack insurance, utilizing
community health services, as well as better allocation of
discretionary spending is advised. But even for Black women with
access and insurance, less successful healthcare outcomes persist.
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Clinical Research |
Black
women also experience unique psychosocial stressors—such as
colorism, negative media imagery, lack of marriage-minded men—that,
due to cortisol stimulation, affect their physical condition,
decreases immunity and increases the risk of serious diagnoses.
The
increase in pregnancy-related deaths for all American women is
important data for obstetricians. But regardless of specialty, all
physicians need to advise women patients—White, Black, Hispanic,
Asian or other—that there must be a commitment to seek preventative
health care, and begin prenatal care early in order to have not only
healthy newborns, but healthy mothers alive to care for them.
Melody
T. McCloud, MD, is an obstetrician-gynecologist and founder/medical
director of Atlanta Women’s Health Care. She is an author, speaker
and media consultant. Twitter: @DrMelodyMcCloud. Doximity: “Melody
T. McCloud, M.D.” - See more at:
http://www.physiciansweekly.com/pregnancy-related-deaths-rising-in-the-u-s/#sthash.CKSpEKwa.dpuf




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