Journal article
Obstetric Anesthesia Digest, 2021
Assistant Professor
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence and Impact
McMaster University
1280 Main St. West,
HSC3V - 43B
Hamilton, Ontario L8S 4K1
Canada
APA
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Joseph, K., Boutin, A., Lisonkova, S., Muraca, G., Razaz, N., John, S., … Schisterman, E. (2021). Maternal Mortality in the United States: Recent Trends, Current Status, and Future Considerations. Obstetric Anesthesia Digest.
Chicago/Turabian
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Joseph, K., A. Boutin, S. Lisonkova, G. Muraca, N. Razaz, S. John, A. Mehrabadi, Y. Sabr, C. Ananth, and E. Schisterman. “Maternal Mortality in the United States: Recent Trends, Current Status, and Future Considerations.” Obstetric Anesthesia Digest (2021).
MLA
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Joseph, K., et al. “Maternal Mortality in the United States: Recent Trends, Current Status, and Future Considerations.” Obstetric Anesthesia Digest, 2021.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{k2021a,
title = {Maternal Mortality in the United States: Recent Trends, Current Status, and Future Considerations},
year = {2021},
journal = {Obstetric Anesthesia Digest},
author = {Joseph, K. and Boutin, A. and Lisonkova, S. and Muraca, G. and Razaz, N. and John, S. and Mehrabadi, A. and Sabr, Y. and Ananth, C. and Schisterman, E.}
}
Rigorous studies carried out by the National Center for Health Statistics show that previously reported increases in maternal mortality rates in the United States were an artifact of changes in surveillance. The pregnancy checkbox, introduced in the revised 2003 death certificate and implemented by the states in a staggered manner, resulted in increased identification of maternal deaths and in reported maternal mortality rates. This Commentary summarizes the findings of the National Center for Health Statistics reports, describes temporal trends and the current status of maternal mortality in the United States, and discusses future concerns. Although the National Center for Health Statistics studies, based on recoding of death certificate information (after excluding information from the pregnancy checkbox), showed that crude maternal mortality rates did not change significantly between 2002 and 2018, age-adjusted analyses show a temporal reduction in the maternal mortality rate (21% decline, 95% CI 13-28). Specific causes of maternal death, which were not affected by the pregnancy checkbox, such as preeclampsia, showed substantial temporal declines. However, large racial disparities continue to exist: Non-Hispanic Black women had a 2.5-fold higher maternal mortality rate compared with non-Hispanic White women in 2018. This overview of maternal mortality underscores the need for better surveillance and more accurate identification of maternal deaths, improved clinical care, and expanded public health initiatives to address social determinants of health. Challenges with ascertaining maternal deaths notwithstanding, several causes of maternal death (unaffected by surveillance artifacts) show significant temporal declines, even though there remains substantial scope for preventing avoidable maternal death and reducing disparities.