Surgical, Obstetric, and Anesthetic Mortality Measurement at a Ugandan Secondary Referral Hospital
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Anesthesia & Analgesia
Abstract
Background: The health care systems of low-income countries have severely limited capacity to treat surgical diseases and conditions. There is limited information about which hospital mortality outcomes are suitable metrics in these settings.
Methods: We did a 1-year observational cohort study of patient admissions to the Surgery and the
Obstetrics and Gynecology departments and of newborns delivered at a Ugandan secondary referral hospital. We examined the proportion of deaths captured by standardized metrics of mortality.
Results: There were 17,015 admissions and 9612 deliveries. A total of 847 deaths were documented: 385 (45.5%) admission deaths and 462 (54.5%) perinatal deaths. Less than one third
of admission deaths occurred during or after an operation (n = 126/385, 32.7%). Trauma and maternal mortality combined with perioperative mortality produced 79.2% (n = 305/385) of admission deaths. Of 462 perinatal deaths, 412 (90.1%) were stillborn, and 50 (10.9%) were early neonatal deaths. The combined metrics of the trauma mortality rate, maternal mortality ratio, thirty-day perioperative mortality rate, and perinatal mortality rate captured 89.8% (n = 761/847) of all deaths documented at the hospital.
Conclusions: The combination of perinatal, maternal, trauma, and perioperative mortality metrics captured most deaths documented at a Ugandan referral hospital. (Anesth Analg 2021; 133:1608–16)
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Firth, P. G., Mushagara, R., Musinguzi, N., Liu, C., Boatin, A. A., Mugabi, W., ... & Ttendo, S. S. (2021). Surgical, Obstetric, and Anesthetic Mortality Measurement at a Ugandan Secondary Referral Hospital. Anesthesia & Analgesia, 133(6), 1608-1616.