Improving pregnancy outcomes in low- and middle-income countries

Robert L. Goldenberg, Elizabeth M. McClure, Sarah Saleem

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

62 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

This paper reviews the very large discrepancies in pregnancy outcomes between high, low and middle-income countries and then presents the medical causes of maternal mortality, stillbirth and neonatal mortality in low-and middle-income countries. Next, we explore the medical interventions that were associated with the very rapid and very large declines in maternal, fetal and neonatal mortality rates in the last eight decades in high-income countries. The medical interventions likely to achieve similar declines in pregnancy-related mortality in low-income countries are considered. Finally, the quality of providers and the data to be collected necessary to achieve these reductions are discussed. It is emphasized that single interventions are unlikely to achieve important reductions in pregnancy-related mortality. Instead, improving the overall quality of pregnancy-related care across the health-care system will be necessary. The conditions that cause maternal mortality also cause stillbirths and neonatal deaths. Focusing on all three mortalities together is likely to have a larger impact than focusing on one of the mortalities alone.

Original languageEnglish
Article number88
JournalReproductive Health
Volume15
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 22 Jun 2018

Keywords

  • Low-middle income countries
  • Maternal mortality
  • Neonatal mortality
  • Stillbirth

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