Management of Obstetric Emergencies in a Tertiary Hospital in Cameroon: A Milestone for End of Preventable Maternal Deaths ()
1. Introduction
Reducing maternal mortality by the year 2015 was one of the most challenging millennium goals pledged by the United Nations’ members in 2000. The target was to reduce by 75% the high maternal mortality ratios of the 1990’s by the year 2015 [1] [2]. There has been a period of escalation of maternal mortality in low and middle income countries (LMIC) and especially in sub-Saharan Africa where the majority of the world maternal death was recorded [1] [3] [4] [5]. The evaluation of the achievement of the goal showed a global reduction of 44% worldwide but with a lot of disparities in the efforts of countries [2] [6] [7]. In a new publication of WHO, entitled Ending preventable maternal mortality (EPMM), new target at country level was established at a maternal mortality rate (MMR) not more than 140/100,000 live births [8]. In Cameroon MMR has almost doubled from 430/100,000 live births in 1998 to 782 in 2011 [3] [5] [9]. To respond to this situation, the Cameroon government has adopted amongst other strategies the one of constructing tertiary hospitals with high technology equipment, skilled health workers and other facilities with the missions of offering high quality obstetric care (state of the art obstetric care). These hospitals are expected to offer evidence based reproductive health care to women to minimise maternal deaths. Tebeu et al. in a study conducted in a tertiary hospital in Cameroon, in 2010, reported an MMR of 287.5%/100,000 live births as compared to 782 at National level [9]. Amongst the strategies proven efficient to reduce maternal and perinatal deaths are management of obstetric and neonatal emergencies, the antenatal care, skilled birth attendants, and good health care delivery system. Appropriate and timely management of obstetric emergencies in hospital (reducing the third delay) has been proven as an efficient strategy to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality by many authors [8] [10]. In a study conducted in Nigeria, Lamina Mustafa et al. [11] found that obstetric emergencies constitute 18.5% of deliveries and represented 70.6% of causes of maternal death. Direct obstetric causes of MM in Cameroon include post partum haemorrhage (29.2%), unsafe abortions (25%), ectopic pregnancy (12.5%), hypertensive diseases in pregnancy (8.3%) and indirect causes include malaria (8.2%) and cardiac diseases in 4.2% [9]. Studies designed to determine the case fatality of individual causes of maternal and perinatal death are scarce in Cameroon. The objective of this study was to describe the patterns of obstetric emergencies in HGOPED, the outcome of management and the contribution of each of these to maternal death.
2. Patients and Methods
2.1. Study Site
DGOPH is a tertiary Hospital created in 2013 and inaugurated in 2015, mainly dedicated to mother and child care. The three missions of this institution comprise of 1) providing high standard and quality care to targeted patients, 2) contributing to Medical training and 3) healthcare related research. The infrastructure and equipment are of high quality; human resources include 9 obstetrician and Gynaecologists, 5 Paediatricians, 3 intensive care workers, radiologists, surgeons, qualified midwives, nurses and many other categories of workers involved in management of emergencies. The laboratory service host one of the most functional blood bank units of the country where blood products like whole blood, frozen plasma, packed cells, platelets are always available.
In this study, an obstetrical emergency was any life-threatening medical condition during pregnancy, labour or post partum. The scope included direct obstetrical causes and acute complications of some indirect causes like malaria, cardiac diseases, and sickle cell anaemia.
2.2. Work Organization and Management of Obstetrical Emergencies (OE) at DGOPH
The work organization in the department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology is divided into two shifts for medical physicians, residents in Obstetrics and Gynaecology: the daily routine activities and the call duties. Besides routine duties, the service is covered every day by a team comprised of the above mentioned workers’ categories, supervised by a consultant obstetrician and gynaecologist who work in close collaboration with the team of midwives, nurses and other paramedical staff. The hospital has elaborated guidelines for the standardized management of the most frequent OE and gynaecological emergencies. Thought not exhaustive, these guidelines are qualitatively and quantitatively updated on regular basis.
2.3. Study Design
We carried out a two phases cross sectional study with the retrospective phase consisting of review of service delivery records of cases of obstetrical emergencies from August 2015 to December 2017. In the prospective phase same information was recorded to refine the analysis from January 2018 to December 2019.
2.4. Inclusion Criteria
All cases of obstetrical emergencies received and managed during the period of study were included.
2.5. Exclusion Criteria
Those with incomplete data in the files (retrospective phase) or who died less than two hours after admission in our maternity (prospective phase) were excluded. We also excluded all patients who refused to participate in the study.
2.6. Variables Collected and Analyzed
We compiled the following information from patients’ files or directly from patients or relatives in the prospective phase and entered in a pre-tested data collection sheet: 1) Socio-demographic data such as age, level of education and profession; 2) obstetric information: parity, gestational age and 3) therapeutic information: patient managed in this hospital or referred, diagnosis or type of obstetric emergency, management according to hospital guidelines or no, obstetrician present at arrival or not, maternal outcome (successful with no admission in intensive care unit (ICU), admission in ICU, death, referred to other health facilities).
Case fatality was determined for each type of obstetric emergency and in case of death, factors involved were analysed (existence of protocol of management, timing of management, availability of carers, and availability of blood products) to evaluate the use of evidence-based and standard health care procedures.
Data analysis was done using SPSS version 23 software.
2.7. Ethical Considerations
We obtained clearance from the hospital institutional review board and the General Manager granted administrative authorization.
3. Results
The results were similar for the retrospective and the prospective phases and are analysed conjointly.
3.1. Socio-Demographic Characteristics of Study Population
Out of the 2634 deliveries recorded during the study period, 418 (15.86%) presented as obstetrical emergencies. Table 1 summarises the socio-demographic characteristics of the study population. The mean age of patients was 29.37 ± 5.76 years with extreme ages of 16 and 47 years. 284 (67.95%) of study population had university level of education and only 29 (6.94%) primary level. The majority of our participants had a revenue generating profession with 20.33% of them being civil servants, 20.33% self-employed and 21.29% workers of the private sector.
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Table 1. Socio-demographic distribution of patients.
3.2. Primary Site of Patients’ Management
Forty per cent of patients with obstetric emergencies (167) were referred from other health facilities while 251(60%) started management in the study site.
Table 2 highlights the patterns of obstetric emergencies recorded during the study period. Hypertensive diseases in pregnancy (HDP) mostly Preeclampsia/eclampsia (PEE) constituted the most frequently encountered 86/418 (20.57%) followed by ectopic pregnancy, 58 (13.87%).
3.3. Maternal Outcome after Management
Out the 418 patients, 412 (98.56%) were managed successfully with only 19.61% admitted in ICU. Six (6) maternal deaths were recorded giving a case fatality of 6/418 (1.4%) of obstetric emergencies and an MMR of 228/100,000 live births. The causes of death are summarized on Table 3.
Of the 418 patients, 336 (80.38%) were managed without admission in ICU. It must be noted that some of the patients who needed intensive care were managed in the routine wards because of limited places and equipment in ICU.
Three diseases namely post partum haemorrhage (PPH), sickle cell anaemia (SCA), and preeclampsia/eclampsia (PEE) dominated the causes of maternal death with equal proportion of 2 (33.33%) each. The case fatality for PPH was 2/32 (6.25%), 2/4 (50%) for SCA and 2/86 (2.32%) for PEE.
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Table 2. Patterns of obstetric emergencies.
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Table 3. Therapeutic characteristics and maternal outcomes of OE.
Legend: NCIU: not admitted in intensive care unit; ICU: admitted in intensive care unit; Ref: referred from other facilities; MIS: started management in site.
3.4. Management Processing Time
As shown in Table 4, the minimal processing time was 10 minutes and the maximum 1140. The shorted mean processing time was recorded for abortions and the longest for sickle cell anaemia.
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Table 4. Mean and median management processing time.
Min: minimal; Max: maximal.
4. Discussion
Our study has shown a global obstetric emergency rate of 418/2634 (15.86%) which is consistent with the figures of Mustapha Lamina et al. who found a rate of 18.5% in Nigeria [11]. We recorded 6 maternal deaths during the period under study, which represented an MMR of 228/100,000 live births slightly different from the figures found by Fomulu et al. in 2013 in a retrospective study in a reference hospital in Yaounde between 2002 and 2006 (365/100,000) and Tebeu et al. in 2015 in the Yaoundé Gynaeco-obstetric and Paediatric hospital (287.5/100,000) [3] [9]. Our relative low rate may be explained by the smallest sample size. Like the previous authors who evaluated the MMR in the reference hospitals of the country between 2000 and 2015, this rate was lower than the national level which was 782/100,000 and other rates reported in some reference hospitals in sub-Saharan Africa [12] [13]. Lower rates are recorded in Asian countries of the same levels of care, 141/100,000 live births in India (n = 104/73,935) [14]. All the cases of maternal death were due to obstetric emergencies with 66.66% (n = 4) due to direct causes and 33.33% (n = 2) to indirect causes. It is well established that obstetric emergencies constitute the major causes of maternal deaths in LMIC. Table 5 summarises pictures of maternal deaths reported in some LMIC.
Patterns of obstetric emergencies were dominated by hypertensive diseases in pregnancy, EP, PPH and obstructed labour which is not different from what is described in other low or middle income settings [1] [5] [9] [11].
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Table 5. Picture of maternal reported by some authors in LMIC.
Post partum haemorrhage (PPH) represented one of the most frequent causes of maternal death in our study (7.65%). Two out 32 patients who presented with PPH died, making a case fatality of 6.25%. Case fatality of PPH reported in LMIC varies widely (1.3% to 27.3%) with countries and levels of care and also when evidence-based interventions are implemented or not [15] - [20]. Ezugwu EC et al. reported that case fatality of PPH without evidence-based health intervention will be as high as 13.6% as compared to 2.5% when timely and standardized management is applied [16]. Determinants of death related to post partum haemorrhage include women’s characteristics, pre-delivery maternal anaemia, lack of blood products, unskilled birth attendants, inadequate or no antenatal care, transfer from other health facilities, delays in management in the hospital amongst others [15] [18] [19] [20]. All the cases of maternal death recorded in our study were referred from other health facilities with critical conditions which warranted admission in intensive care unit. The role of poor referral system has been demonstrated by other authors in Cameroon like Belinga Etienne et al. [21] who quoted that 70% - 90% of maternal deaths are due to referred cases according to Perrin in Benin.
Hypertensive diseases in pregnancy (HDP) (mostly preeclampsia/eclampsia) constituted 33.33% of maternal deaths (MD). According to WHO, HDP is one of the four main causes of maternal death (WHO report 2019) and Lale Say et al. reporting a global maternal death causes according to WHO review found these to represent 11.6% to 21% causes of MD [10]. In studies conducted in tertiary hospitals in Cameroon, Tebeu and coll. And Fomulu et al. 8.3% and 15.4% respectively [3] [9] while Dasari et al. in India reported HDP to represent 17% of causes of MD [14]. The case fatality of HDP was 2.32% which is similar to the outcome of few authors in sub-Saharan Africa like Edward T. Dassah et al. in Ghana (2.2%) and EC. Ezugwu in Nigeria (2.5%) [16] [22] but in constrats was very low compared to 11% described by Rob Mooij et al. in Tanzania [23]. Mekoya D. Mengistu, TilatumRuma and coll. reported no death in a retrospective study enrolling 156 cases of HDP in Addis Ababa. We attribute our relative good performance to many factors including:
1) The existence of management protocols in the service to which almost all carers are strictly bound;
2) The availability of skilled workers (obstetricians, midwife, and reanimators) when needed;
3) The availability of drugs (antihypertensive drugs, magnesium sulphate);
4) The Presence of an ICU where critical cases needing special attention are admitted though with insufficient beds and resuscitation equipment. In fact, our protocol of management recommends, in accordance with the state of the art in developed countries that all cases of severe preeclampsia and eclampsia be admitted in ICU and hospitals with obstetric units should have an obstetric ICU [24] but we could not achieve this objective because of the aforementioned reasons. This is a shortcoming in the management of emergencies in general and HDP in particular.
5) Concerning the timing of management, the mean proceeding time was 61.53 ± 85.49 (see Table 4) with extremes of 15 minutes to 3 hours. American college of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) recommends that expeditious management of confirmed severe HDP should be initiated within 30 - 60 minutes [25]. Our proceeding time did not always fall within this timeline and delays of up to 3 hours were observed due to several factors including frequent stoke outs of emergency drugs, lack of financial means (payment was made out of patients pockets!) and at time absence of one or many members of the multidisciplinary therapeutic team.
We admitted 4 cases of sickle cell anaemia (SCA) in pregnancy; all referred from other peripheral hospitals with acute onset complications. The reasons for referral included severe anaemia, pains crisis or the two complications combined. All the 4 cases were admitted in ICU during part or all the duration of their hospital stay. The 4 patients delivered through caesarean section and 2 (50%) died in the early post caesarean period in severe acute respiratory syndrome which we suspected to be due to acute thoracic syndrome. The case fatality of this obstetric emergency appears extremely high compared to what is reported in the literature that ranges from almost no maternal mortality in United Kingdom and USA [26] [27], 0.4% (total of 255 patients) in Saudi Arabia [28], 5.98 relative risk of death in a systemic review conducted by Eugene Oteng Ntim et al. in 2014 [29] to 11.4% in a study by Projestine S. Muganyizi et al. in Tanzania [30]. This high mortality can be explained by the reduced number of cases, the fact that patients were all referred in critical conditions but also can delineate the suboptimal performance of our ICU which is not specialized in such diseases.
The other diseases were successfully managed with some mild adverse maternal outcomes but no maternal death. Contrary to other studies carried in Cameroon and other sub-Saharan countries which displayed an important contribution of abortions (up to 25%) and sepsis, Ectopic pregnancy to maternal death, we recorded no death for these conditions. Although we attribute the relative good performance to the limited number of our sample size, the role of enough qualified staff, the relatively good plateau technique, the availability of management guidelines appear to be contributing factors.
5. Conclusion
Obstetric emergencies were high in the DGOPH, representing 15.4% of all live births. The management of these emergencies resulted in a relatively low rate of adverse maternal outcomes and only 6/418 deaths were recorded making a case fatality of 1.43%. Of the causes of maternal death, the case fatality of PPH and HDP was comparable to the high performance hospitals in LMIC. Determinants of this performance include the plateau technique, the quality of personnel, the existence of treatment guidelines and an ICU. These findings suggest that the strategy of building reference hospital where “state of the art obstetric care” can be implemented is an important milestone in the attainment of the sustainable millennium goals.
Authors Contribution
Robert Tchounzou, Theophile Nana Njamen Vanessa Baleba, Alphonse Ngalame Nyong, Inna Rakya, Humphry Neng Tatah designed the study and wrote the protocol; Moustapha Bilkissou, Diane Estelle Kamdem, Julie Ngo Batta and Darolles Mwadjie Wekam participated in patients recruitment. Robert Tchounzou wrote the manuscript, André Gaetan Simo Wambo, Theophile Nana Njamen, Dominique Djomo Tamchom revised the manuscript. Emile TMboudou supervised the manuscript writing. All the authors approved the final version.
Acknowledgements
We are immensely grateful to all the medical and technical staff of the Gynecology and Obstetrics Service, the emergency unit, the intensive care unit, the imaging and laboratory units, the theatre and the outpatient department of Gynecology and Obstetrics and to the general administration of the DGOPH for their contribution in patients’ management and in keeping the records. Special thanks go to Drs. Noura Benmoussa, Eyanga Olivia and Mrs. Chuo Yvette.
Appendix
Determinants of post operative infection following gynecological and obstetrical surgeries in the Douala Gynaeco-obstetric and Paediatric Hospital.
Data Collection Sheet
1) Identification
a) Name ID:__________________________ DATE: ____/_____/___________
b) Age (years): ________ c) Parity: _______ d) Residence: ________________
e) Level of education:
i) Primary ii) Secondary iii) University
2) Past history
a) Chronic disease:
i) Sickle cell anaemia ii) Diabetes iii) HTN (hypertension)
iv) Cancer v) other
b) Past surgery:
i) No ii) Yes Indication________________
c) Tobacco consumption: i) No ii) Yes
d) Chronic infection:
i) HIV ii) Tuberculosis iii) Hepatitis
3) Patient’s condition at the time of diagnosis of OE
a) Primary site of management:
i) DGOPH ii) other hospital
b) Timing of Management: time of arrival ________ time management started___________
c) Type of OE:
i) EP ii) HDP iii) PPH iv) AB
v) OL vi) SCA vii) PP viii) AP
ix) AFD, x) Malaria xi) HIV-AIDS
xii) Cardiac disease xiii) Other
d) Health carers present:
i) Emergency nurse ii) emergency physician iii) obstetrician
iv) Anaesthetist v) midwive vi) other
4) Management and maternal outcome
a) Patient management according to protocol: i) Yes ii) No
b) Patient needed ICU: i) Yes ii) No
c) Patient admitted in ICU: i) Yes ii) No
d) Duration of hospital stay___________
e) Treatment outcome:
i) Total recovery ii) referred to other hospital iii) death
5) Causes of death
a) NA
b) Late referral
c) Critical condition of patient
d) Inappropriate care
Liste of Abbreviations
AB: abortions
AFD: acute foetal distress
AP: abruption placentae
EP: ectopic pregnancy
HDP: hypertensive diseases in pregnancy
ICU: intensive care unit
MMR: maternal mortality rate
MIS: management in the site
PEE: preeclampsia/eclampsia
PP: placenta previa
PPH: post partum haemorrhage
OE: obstetric emergencies
OIC: other indirect causes
OL: obstructed labour
SCA: sickle cell anaemia