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Mortality related to caesarean section in rural Matebeleland North Province, Zimbabwe

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posted on 2024-09-06, 05:22 authored by R.A.K. Rutgers, L. Van Eygen
Maternal mortality ratio in low income countries is 100-500 times higher than in rich countries; compare the extremes: Zimbabwe with 1100 maternal deaths/100 000 live births and Sweden with 2/100 000.' Mortality rates related to caesarean section (CS) are in the same range, 0.5-2% (1:2001:50) in poor income countries and 0.01-0.02% (1:10 000-1:5 000)2 in the richer parts of the world. Mortality is greater in women who have more than one CS compared to those with a first CS, because of increasing age and therefore hi gher prevalence of general medical conditions, as well higher incidence of complications such as ruptured uterus (risk 0.2-1.5% after low transverse incision) and placenta praevia or accreta (risks 1.1-3.0 and 5-10 times greater than in an unscarred uterus).2 Compared to vaginal birth maternal mortality related to CS was shown to be 17 times higher in a medical audit in Midlands province in Zimbabwe.

A CAJM article on Cesarean birth related death in rural Zimbabwe.

History

Publisher

Faculty of Medicine, Central African Journal of Medicine (CAJM), University of Zimbabwe (UZ)

Citation

Rutgers, R.A.K. and Van Eygen,L. (2008) Mortality related to caesarean section in rural Matebeleland North Province, Zimbabwe, Central African Journal of Medicine (CAJM), vol. 54, nos. 5-8, pp. 24-28. Harare: CAJM.

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Article

Copyright holder

University of Zimbabwe (UZ)

Country

Zimbabwe.

Language

en

Identifier ISSN

0008-9176

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    University of Zimbabwe Social Sciences Research

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