Promoting Mother's Psychological Health after Fetal Loss-Descriptive Case Reports-Global Journal of Reproductive Medicine-Juniper Publishers
JUNIPER PUBLISHERS-Global Journal of Reproductive Medicine
Promoting Mother's Psychological Health after Fetal Loss-Descriptive Case Reports
Authored by Shaheena Salman Alwani*
Life is the biggest gift of God and the process of
giving birth is praise-worthy. Therefore, maternal mortality and morbidity is
alarming and need extensive interventions. The psychosocial and psychological
perspectives of childbirth need attention and vigorous trainings for health-
care workers. Many countries are working to improve standards of their living
and to curtail subsequent life threatening illness associated with pregnancy
and birth. For that, different reporting, evaluating and practicing guidelines
made to check the present practices that have greater impact on health-care
industries and on patients. One of the widely eminent is CEMACH (Confidential
Enquiry into Maternal and Child Health). According to Weindling, CEMACH was
established in April 2003. Previously it worked as CESDI (the Confidential
Enquiry into Stillbirths and deaths in infancy) and CEMD (the Confidential
Enquiry into Maternal Deaths). Formerly, the ministry of health had not
reported adequately and timely about the maternal deaths but it started its
formalized reporting in the year 1952. In the first 2 years of CEMD, about 77%
of maternal deaths were captured and later for the United Kingdom, in years
1985-87 onwards reports were published. CEMD's motive was to assess the causes
of maternal deaths and to indentify avoidable causes to reduce it. It
recommended improvements in clinical setup and care provision. Moreover, future
research and way forward to audits were indicated. Later, it was facilitated by
department of health that all 14 regions of England should embark on perinatal
mortality survey reports and thus CESDI, established in 1992, aimed to reduce
mortality by finding practice gaps and its improvement especially cases that
encountered less than 20 weeks post-conception to 1 year of birth. Confidential
enquiries aim was to improve practices and care. Weindling reported that six
permanent staff with allotted managers were assigned in each of the regions of
England and Wales. Further, the United Kingdom's MMR (maternal mortality rate)
can be determined by routine death-certificate data and by the results of
in-depth enquiry. CMACE illustrates that the use of routine death-certificate
data is consistently under-reported therefore; the most accurate numbers are acquire
via Enquiry.
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