Perinatal care and its association with perinatal death among women attending care in three district hospitals of western Uganda
Date
2024
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
Abstract
Background Provision of effective care to all women and newborns during the perinatal period is a viable strategy
for achieving the Sustainable Development Goal 3 targets on reducing maternal and neonatal mortality. This study
examined perinatal care (antenatal, intrapartum, postpartum) and its association with perinatal deaths at three district
hospitals in Bunyoro region, Uganda.
Methods A cross-sectional study was conducted in which a questionnaire was administered consecutively to 872
postpartum women before discharge who had attended antenatal care and given birth in the study hospitals. Data
on care received during antenatal, labour, delivery, and postpartum period, and perinatal outcome were extracted
from medical records of the enrolled postnatal women using a pre-tested structured tool. The care received from
antenatal to 24 h postpartum period was assessed against the standard protocol of care established by World Health
Organization (WHO). Poisson regression was used to assess the association between care received and perinatal
death.
Results The mean age of the women was 25 years (standard deviation [SD] 5.95). Few women had their blood tested
for hemoglobin levels, HIV, and Syphilis (n = 53, 6.1%); had their urine tested for glucose and proteins (n = 27, 3.1%);
undertook an ultrasound scan (n = 262, 30%); and had their maternal status assessed (n = 122, 14%) during antenatal
care as well as had their uterus assessed for contraction and bleeding during postpartum care (n = 63, 7.2%). There
were 19 perinatal deaths, giving a perinatal mortality rate of 22/1,000 births (95% Confidence interval [CI] 8.1–35.5).
Of these 9 (47.4%) were stillbirths while the remaining 10 (52.6%) were early neonatal deaths. In the antenatal phase,
only fetal examination was significantly associated with perinatal death (adjusted prevalence ratio [aPR] = 0.22, 95% CI
0.1–0.6). No significant association was found between perinatal deaths and care during labour, delivery, and the early
postpartum period.
Conclusion Women did not receive all the required perinatal care during the perinatal period. Perinatal mortality
rate in Bunyoro region remains high, although it’s lower than the national average. The study shows a reduction in
the proportion of perinatal deaths for pregnancies where the mother received fetal monitoring. Strategies focused
on strengthened fetal status monitoring such as fetal movement counting methods and fetal heart rate monitoring
devices during pregnancy need to be devised to reduce the incidence of perinatal deaths. Findings from the study
provide valuable information that would support the strengthening of perinatal care services for improved perinatal
outcomes.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Antenatal care, Intrapartum care, Postnatal care, Stillbirth