Online Program

290881
Improving maternal mortality reporting in Georgia


Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Nino Lomia, MD, MPH, USAID SUSTAIN Project, John Snow Inc., Tbilisi, Georgia
Nino Berdzuli, MD, MPH, Senior Technical Advisor, Maternal and Reproductive Health, JSI Research and Training Institute, Inc, Arlington, VA
Lela Sturua, MD, MPH, Head of Non-communicable Diseases Division, National Center for Disease Control, Tbilisi, Georgia
Maia Kereselidze, PhD, Head of Medical Statistics Department, National Center for Disease Control, Tbilisi, Georgia
Manana Tsintsadze, PhD, Chief Specialist, Department of Medical Statistics, National Center for Disease Control, Tbilisi, Georgia
Improving maternal mortality data in Georgia is crucial for measuring the progress towards the reduction of maternal deaths and planning prompt interventions. Official data showed significant MMR fluctuations over the last years (52.1 in 2009 vs 19.2 in 2010). Objective: To identify deficiencies in maternal deaths reporting and classification of causes of deaths and identify areas for improvements. Methods: The study, initiated by JSI SUSTAIN project (funded by USAID) and the Ministry of Health, collected data on the deaths of women of reproductive age (WRA) that occurred in 2010 using: vital statistics, linkage of death records with birth and fetal death records, health statistics and medical record review. Results: The study identified five unregistered deaths of WRA. Discrepancies between different sources in ascertainment and coding of underlying causes of death were overwhelming (62%). Vital records review showed that undetermined causes of death were most commonly reported (51%). Misclassification of underlying causes of deaths, particularly cancer, as a death due to circulatory system diseases (52%) remains to be a challenge. The study revealed two additional maternal deaths that were originally misclassified in official statistics. Thus, the revised MMR for 2010 increased from 19.2 to 20.8 per 100000 live births. Conclusion: Despite the recent reforms in the civil registration system, intersectoral collaboration between all stakeholders is required for further improvements in the functionality of the system. Death certification and ICD coding trainings for health professionals and implementation of maternal death surveillance will be essential to improve maternal mortality reporting and cause-of-death registration.

Learning Areas:

Epidemiology
Public health or related public policy

Learning Objectives:
Identify deficiencies in maternal deaths reporting and classification of causes of deaths; Discuss the importance of intersectoral collaboration between the main stakeholders; Discuss the importance of training health care professionals in death certification and ICD coding; Discuss the importance of maternal death surveillance system in improving maternal mortality reporting in the country.

Keyword(s): Mortality, Reporting

Presenting author's disclosure statement:

Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I have been involved in this special maternal mortality study from the very beginning as a principal investigator: identifying and analyzing multiple sources of mortality data, creating a database application to hold all information gathered from these sources, developing the questionnaire to be used for the medical record review, supervising field work, analyzing the study finding and preparing regular summary updates and final study report.
Any relevant financial relationships? No

I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.