Limiting adverse birth outcomes in resource-limited settings (LABOR): protocol of a prospective intrapartum cohort study [version 2; peer review: 2 approved]
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Gates Open Research
Abstract
Background: Each year, nearly 300,000 women and 5 million fetuses
or neonates die during childbirth or shortly thereafter, a burden
concentrated disproportionately in low- and middle-income countries.
Identifying women and their fetuses at risk for intrapartum-related morbidity and death could facilitate early intervention.
Methods: The Limiting Adverse Birth Outcomes in Resource-Limited
Settings (LABOR) Study is a multi-country, prospective, observational
cohort designed to exhaustively document the course and outcomes
of labor, delivery, and the immediate postpartum period in settings
where adverse outcomes are frequent. The study is conducted at four
hospitals across three countries in Ghana, India, and Zambia. We will
enroll approximately 12,000 women at presentation to the hospital for
delivery and follow them and their fetuses/newborns throughout their
labor and delivery course, postpartum hospitalization, and up to 42
days thereafter. The co-primary outcomes are composites of maternal
(death, hemorrhage, hypertensive disorders, infection) and
fetal/neonatal adverse events (death, encephalopathy, sepsis) that
may be attributed to the intrapartum period. The study collects
extensive physiologic data through the use of physiologic sensors and
employs medical scribes to document examination findings,
diagnoses, medications, and other interventions in real time.
Discussion: The goal of this research is to produce a large, sharable
dataset that can be used to build statistical algorithms to
prospectively stratify parturients according to their risk of adverse
outcomes. We anticipate this research will inform the development of
new tools to reduce peripartum morbidity and mortality in low resource settings.
Description
Research Article