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A ten-year review of indications and outcomes of obstetric admissions to an intensive care unit in a low-resource country.

Betty Anane-FeninEvans Kofi AgbenoJoseph OsarfoDouglas Aninng Opoku AnningAbigail Serwaa BoatengSebastian Ken-AmoahAnthony Ofori AmanfoLeonard Derkyi-KwartengMohammed MouhajerSarah Ama AmooJoycelyn AshongErnestina Jeffery
Published in: PloS one (2021)
This was a review of the reasons for admitting severely-ill pregnant women and women who had delivered within the past 42 days to the intensive care unit (ICU), the admission outcomes and risk factors associated with ICU mortality in a tertiary hospital in a low-resource country. High blood pressure and its complications, bleeding and severe infections were observed as the three most significant reasons for ICU admissions in decreasing order of significance. Pre-existing medical conditions and those arising as a result of, or aggravated by pregnancy; obstructed labour and post-operative monitoring were the other reasons for ICU admission over the study period. Overall, 26% of the admitted patients died at the ICU and maternal age of at least 25 years and the need for intubation were identified as risk factors for ICU deaths. Attention must be paid to high blood pressure during pregnancy.
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