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Maternal and Child health
Hafsa Raheel, MD, MCPS, FCPS
Assistant Professor
Department of Family and Community Medicine
KSU
Objectives
To appreciate the importance of Maternal and Child health
To appreciate the link between the health issues of mothers
and children and understand the consequences of ill health
To be able to enlist the global strategies in place for MCH care
To appreciate the strategies of MCH care in KSA
Specific Objectives of MCH
Reduction of maternal, perinatal, infant and childhood
mortality and morbidity
Promotion of Reproductive health
Promotion of the physical and psychological development of
the child and adolescent within the family
03_Presentation MCH for UG 2014.ppt
Definition
“Maternal and Child health (MCH) refers to the promotive,
preventive, curative, and rehabilative health care for mothers
and children. It includes the sub areas of maternal health, child
health, family planning, school health, handicapped children,
adolescence, and health aspects of care of children in special
settings such as day care.”
Components of MCH
Maternal health
Family planning
Child health
School health
Handicapped children
Care of children in special setting such as Day care
Maternal Health
Fast Facts about Maternal Health
Each and Every Day...
 1,600 women die needlessly during pregnancy and childbirth:
 Many are undernourished before and during their pregnancy
 These women often lack information and appropriate voluntary
services for family planning and post-abortion care
 Many women lack information and services during their pregnancy
and receive inadequate health care before, during, and after
delivery
 Women continue to die at the rate of one every minute of every
day due to preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth
 A woman's death during childbirth often means death for her
newborn
Why emphasize on Maternal Health?
Healthy daughter Healthy mother
Provide Adequate education
and Correct Information
Regarding
In early Adolescence
• Nutritional requirements and
and proper eating
• Pubertal changes
In Later Adolescence
• Contraception
• Birth spacing and small
families
• Child rearing
• Breast Feeding
INFANCY
ADOLESCENCE
PREGNANCY AND
LACTATION
W
O
M
E
N
Healthy
Mothers
Healthy
Children
POOR NUTRITION
• Inadequate breast feeding
• Delayed weaning
• Misconceptions about food
• Recurrent Infections
• Poor social status of women
• Lack of education
PSYCHOSOCIAL
• Improper education
• child rearing
• breast feeding
• No education
• contraception
• birth spacing
• small families
INFANCY
ADOLESCENCE
PREGNANCY AND
LACTATION
W
O
M
E
N
• Malnutrition
• Stunting - small pelvis
• Nutritional deficiencies
• Iodine
• Iron
• large family
• Closely spaced birth
AT BIRTH
• Nutritional deficiency
• Prematurity
• Low birth weight
• Delivery problems
IN REARING
• Cannot feed properly
• Large families
• Cannot educate child
AGGRAVATED
• Early marriage
• Teenage Pregnancy
Sick
mothers
Unfit
Children
Phases of Maternal Health
A) Nutrition
- fetal growth
- birth weight
- nutrition during infancy
Infections
 Maternal Abs – passive immunity
 Maternal immunizations – protects against adverse
outcomesBefore Pregnancy:
Phases of Maternal Health
B) During pregnancy
Nutrition – weight, anemia
Care of the breast
Infections
 Rubella
 Syphilis
 Malaria
 UTI
 Tetanus immunization
Smoking
Heavy work and stress
Psychological stress
Phases of Maternal Health
C) Labour and post partum
Infections – Opthalmia neonatorum, tetanus neonatorum
Bleeding
Trauma
Asphyxia
Lactation
Birth spacing – family planning
Source: WHO, Systematic Review of Causes of Maternal Death (preliminary
data), 2010.
Global Causes of Maternal Mortality
Declines in maternal mortality ratio across all developing regions
Maternal deaths per 100,000 live births, 1990 to 2008
Source: Trends in Maternal Mortality 1990-2008. WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA
and The World Bank.
Trends in Maternal Mortality 1990 – 2008 ; WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA, and World
Bank
Why do these women die?
Three Delays Model
Delay in decision to seek care
 Lack of understanding of complications
 Acceptance of maternal death
 Low status of women
 Socio-cultural barriers to seeking care
Delay in reaching care
 Mountains, islands, rivers — poor organization
Delay in receiving care
 Supplies, personnel
 Poorly trained personnel with punitive attitude
 Finances
Global Targets
Target 6 of the MDGs
To reduce the maternal mortality ratio
by three-quarters between 1990 and
2015.
Defining Maternal Death
According to the Tenth Revision of the ICD:
Maternal Death:
A maternal death is the death of a woman while pregnant or within 42 days of
termination of pregnancy, irrespective of the duration and the site of the pregnancy,
from any cause related to or aggravated by the pregnancy or its management but not
from accidental causes (WHO 1993).
Pregnancy-related death: “time of death” definition; Irrespective of cause.
Late maternal death: The death of a woman from direct or indirect obstetric
causes more than 42days but less than one year after termination of pregnancy.
Maternal Mortality Indicators
Maternal mortality ratio
Maternal mortality rate
Life-time risk of maternal morality
Proportion maternal
Maternal Mortality Ratio
N of maternal deaths in a specified period *100,000
N of live births in same period
Interpretation:
MMRatio = 50-250 per 100,000 live births
Problems with quality of care
MMRatio > 250 per 100,000 live births
Problems with quality of care & access
Maternal Mortality Rate
N of maternal deaths in a specified period *1000
N of women of reproductive age
Relationship Between MMRate & MMRatio:
MM Rate = MM ratio * GFR
MM Ratio = MMRate / GFR
General fertility rate = (N of live births in a period) / (N of
women of reproductive ages in a period) * 1,000
Other Maternal Mortality Indicators
Life time risk of maternal mortality = (N of maternal deaths
over the reproductive life span) / (women entering the
reproductive period)
Proportion maternal = proportion of all female deaths due to
maternal causes = (N of maternal deaths in a period/Number of
all female deaths in same period) * 100
Where do Maternal Mortality data come
from?
Vital registration data - MM Rate and MM Ratio
Health service data – maternity registers - MM Ratio
Special studies
 Hospital studies – tracing deaths, interviews
 Research, longitudinal studies, verbal autopsy
Surveys & censuses
 Direct estimation - Rate and Ratio
 Sisterhood method (indirect) – Rate and Ratio
Interventions for Maternal Care
SAFE MOTHERHOOD
ANC SD EOC
EQUITY FOR WOMEN
PRIMARY HEALTH CARE
BASIC MATERNITY CARE
FP: Family planning, ANC: Antenatal care, SD : Clean safe delivery,
EOC:Emergency obstetrics care
Interventions for Maternal Care
Antenatal care
 Nutrition support (anemia)
 Personal hygiene, dental care, rest and sleep
 Immunization (mother and the new born)
 Education on delivery and care of the new born
 Identifying high risk pregnancies
 Emphasizing on ANC visits and maintenance of AN card
 Importance and management of lactation
 Advise on birth spacing
Child Health
03_Presentation MCH for UG 2014.ppt
Fast Facts about Newborn Survival
Each and Every Day...
 11,000 newborns under 4 weeks of age die and there are 11,000
stillbirths:
 Siblings born too close together place mothers and infants at
increased risk of complications
 More than half of babies who die have low birth weight and many
babies are born to undernourished and unhealthy mothers
 Many newborns are not breastfed immediately after birth nor
exclusively, or are fed inappropriate foods, leading to malnutrition
and illness
 Many mothers and their newborns receive inadequate health care
to address complications arising from delivery or in the first days
and weeks of life
 Most causes of newborn death including birth asphyxia and
injuries, infection, complications of prematurity, and congenital
abnormalities are preventable
Childhood health problems
1. Infectious Diseases:
- Congenital Infections abortions, still births,
congenital diseases and malformations
- Neonatal infections (e.g. opthlamia neonatorum, tetanus)
- vaccine related diseases
Childhood health problems
2. Malnutrition:
e.g. protein energy malnutrition, iron deficiency anemia,
rickets and vitamins deficiencies.
3. Injuries:
Of several categories including:-
 Wounds and fractures
 Chemical poisoning
 Swallowing of objects
 Road Traffic Accidents
 Burns
 Drowning
Source: Bryce J et al for the Child Health Epidemiology Reference Group. The Lancet, March 2005. As used in WHR 2005
Injuries
3%
Pneumonia
19%
Neonatal
deaths
36%
Other
10%
HIV/AIDS
3%
Measles
4%
Malaria
8%
Diarrhoea
17%
10 million child deaths – Why?
For these 4
causes, ~
53% of
deaths are
malnourish
ed children
4 million newborn deaths – why?
Source: Lawn JE, Cousens SN, Zupan J Lancet 2005. for 192 countries based on cause specific mortality
data and multi cause modelled estimates. As used in World Health Report 2005
60 to 90% of
neonatal deaths
are in low birth
weight babies,
mostly preterm
Three causes
account for 86%
of all neonatal
deaths
03_Presentation MCH for UG 2014.ppt
Child survival strategies
During 1970s
PHC movement with its commitment to tackle underlying social
economic and political causes of poor health emerged largely
focusing child health
During early 1980s
focus was shifted from PHC to vertical “single issue” programs to
achieve cheaper and faster results
leading to Child Survival Revolution of 1980s spearheaded by
UNICEF
build around a package of intervention grouped under the acronym -
GOBI – Growth monitoring, ORS, Breast Feeding & Immunization
Child survival strategies
cont…
The inherent limitations of these vertical approaches soon
become apparent as health workers have to deal with large
range of health problems and single issue programs were not
designed to provide such guidance
A more comprehensive view of the needs of child was
required –
Dealing with children , not just with disease!!
03_Presentation MCH for UG 2014.ppt
03_Presentation MCH for UG 2014.ppt
Full coverage with proven intervention could
reduce Under Five Mortality by 66% equivalent
to 6 million child deaths per year
Prevention
Breast feeding
Insecticide treated nets
and repellents for Malaria
Zinc
Complementary feeding
Water &sanitation
Hygiene
Treatment
ORT
Antibiotics for Pneumonia
/ Sepsis
Newborn care
Antimalarials
Antibiotics for dysentery
Zinc
Indicators of Child Health
Mortality in infancy and childhood
 Prenatal mortality rate
 Neonatal mortality rate
 Infant mortality rate
 Under 5 mortality rate
Mortality in and around infancy
Infant Mortality
Preinatal death
Post-neonatal death
Neonatal death
Late
neonatal
death
Early
neo-
natal
death
Still birth
28 weeks
of gestation
Birth 7 Days 28 Days 1 Year
“There can be no
keener revelation
of a society’s soul
than the way it
treats its children”
Nelson Mandela,
1988
MCH in KSA
MCH Indicators in KSA
Under-5 mortality rank 100
Under-5 mortality rate (2005) 26
Infant Mortality rate (under 1), 2005 21
Neonatal Mortality rate, 2000 12
Maternal mortality ratio (2000, adjusted) 23
Antenatal care coverage (%), 1997-2005* 90
Source UNICEF 2005
Integrated PHC and MCH services in KSA
1980s – Comprehensive PHC services, focus on CDD, Immunization and
MCH
1990s – Baby friendly hospitals (BFHI), Acute respiratory infections (ARI)
programmes
Mid 1990s – more PHC related programmes introduced
 Reproductive health
 Safe motherhood
 Adolescent health
 Women's’ health
 Chronic diseases control
 Development of district health system and strengthening of referral system
 School health revived
 Elderly care
References
TAKING STOCK OF MATERNAL, NEWBORN
AND CHILD SURVIVAL 2000–2010 DECADE
REPORThttp://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2010/
9789241599573_eng.pdf
Khan, Khalid S. et al. WHO Analysis of Causes of
Maternal Deaths: A Systematic Review, The Lancet,
2006 Vol. 367. Issue 9516, pp. 1066-1074.
Refer to the binder for more

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03_Presentation MCH for UG 2014.ppt

  • 1. Maternal and Child health Hafsa Raheel, MD, MCPS, FCPS Assistant Professor Department of Family and Community Medicine KSU
  • 2. Objectives To appreciate the importance of Maternal and Child health To appreciate the link between the health issues of mothers and children and understand the consequences of ill health To be able to enlist the global strategies in place for MCH care To appreciate the strategies of MCH care in KSA
  • 3. Specific Objectives of MCH Reduction of maternal, perinatal, infant and childhood mortality and morbidity Promotion of Reproductive health Promotion of the physical and psychological development of the child and adolescent within the family
  • 5. Definition “Maternal and Child health (MCH) refers to the promotive, preventive, curative, and rehabilative health care for mothers and children. It includes the sub areas of maternal health, child health, family planning, school health, handicapped children, adolescence, and health aspects of care of children in special settings such as day care.”
  • 6. Components of MCH Maternal health Family planning Child health School health Handicapped children Care of children in special setting such as Day care
  • 8. Fast Facts about Maternal Health Each and Every Day...  1,600 women die needlessly during pregnancy and childbirth:  Many are undernourished before and during their pregnancy  These women often lack information and appropriate voluntary services for family planning and post-abortion care  Many women lack information and services during their pregnancy and receive inadequate health care before, during, and after delivery  Women continue to die at the rate of one every minute of every day due to preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth  A woman's death during childbirth often means death for her newborn
  • 9. Why emphasize on Maternal Health? Healthy daughter Healthy mother
  • 10. Provide Adequate education and Correct Information Regarding In early Adolescence • Nutritional requirements and and proper eating • Pubertal changes In Later Adolescence • Contraception • Birth spacing and small families • Child rearing • Breast Feeding INFANCY ADOLESCENCE PREGNANCY AND LACTATION W O M E N Healthy Mothers Healthy Children
  • 11. POOR NUTRITION • Inadequate breast feeding • Delayed weaning • Misconceptions about food • Recurrent Infections • Poor social status of women • Lack of education PSYCHOSOCIAL • Improper education • child rearing • breast feeding • No education • contraception • birth spacing • small families INFANCY ADOLESCENCE PREGNANCY AND LACTATION W O M E N • Malnutrition • Stunting - small pelvis • Nutritional deficiencies • Iodine • Iron • large family • Closely spaced birth AT BIRTH • Nutritional deficiency • Prematurity • Low birth weight • Delivery problems IN REARING • Cannot feed properly • Large families • Cannot educate child AGGRAVATED • Early marriage • Teenage Pregnancy Sick mothers Unfit Children
  • 12. Phases of Maternal Health A) Nutrition - fetal growth - birth weight - nutrition during infancy Infections  Maternal Abs – passive immunity  Maternal immunizations – protects against adverse outcomesBefore Pregnancy:
  • 13. Phases of Maternal Health B) During pregnancy Nutrition – weight, anemia Care of the breast Infections  Rubella  Syphilis  Malaria  UTI  Tetanus immunization Smoking Heavy work and stress Psychological stress
  • 14. Phases of Maternal Health C) Labour and post partum Infections – Opthalmia neonatorum, tetanus neonatorum Bleeding Trauma Asphyxia Lactation Birth spacing – family planning
  • 15. Source: WHO, Systematic Review of Causes of Maternal Death (preliminary data), 2010. Global Causes of Maternal Mortality
  • 16. Declines in maternal mortality ratio across all developing regions Maternal deaths per 100,000 live births, 1990 to 2008 Source: Trends in Maternal Mortality 1990-2008. WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA and The World Bank.
  • 17. Trends in Maternal Mortality 1990 – 2008 ; WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA, and World Bank
  • 18. Why do these women die? Three Delays Model Delay in decision to seek care  Lack of understanding of complications  Acceptance of maternal death  Low status of women  Socio-cultural barriers to seeking care Delay in reaching care  Mountains, islands, rivers — poor organization Delay in receiving care  Supplies, personnel  Poorly trained personnel with punitive attitude  Finances
  • 19. Global Targets Target 6 of the MDGs To reduce the maternal mortality ratio by three-quarters between 1990 and 2015.
  • 20. Defining Maternal Death According to the Tenth Revision of the ICD: Maternal Death: A maternal death is the death of a woman while pregnant or within 42 days of termination of pregnancy, irrespective of the duration and the site of the pregnancy, from any cause related to or aggravated by the pregnancy or its management but not from accidental causes (WHO 1993). Pregnancy-related death: “time of death” definition; Irrespective of cause. Late maternal death: The death of a woman from direct or indirect obstetric causes more than 42days but less than one year after termination of pregnancy.
  • 21. Maternal Mortality Indicators Maternal mortality ratio Maternal mortality rate Life-time risk of maternal morality Proportion maternal
  • 22. Maternal Mortality Ratio N of maternal deaths in a specified period *100,000 N of live births in same period Interpretation: MMRatio = 50-250 per 100,000 live births Problems with quality of care MMRatio > 250 per 100,000 live births Problems with quality of care & access
  • 23. Maternal Mortality Rate N of maternal deaths in a specified period *1000 N of women of reproductive age Relationship Between MMRate & MMRatio: MM Rate = MM ratio * GFR MM Ratio = MMRate / GFR General fertility rate = (N of live births in a period) / (N of women of reproductive ages in a period) * 1,000
  • 24. Other Maternal Mortality Indicators Life time risk of maternal mortality = (N of maternal deaths over the reproductive life span) / (women entering the reproductive period) Proportion maternal = proportion of all female deaths due to maternal causes = (N of maternal deaths in a period/Number of all female deaths in same period) * 100
  • 25. Where do Maternal Mortality data come from? Vital registration data - MM Rate and MM Ratio Health service data – maternity registers - MM Ratio Special studies  Hospital studies – tracing deaths, interviews  Research, longitudinal studies, verbal autopsy Surveys & censuses  Direct estimation - Rate and Ratio  Sisterhood method (indirect) – Rate and Ratio
  • 27. SAFE MOTHERHOOD ANC SD EOC EQUITY FOR WOMEN PRIMARY HEALTH CARE BASIC MATERNITY CARE FP: Family planning, ANC: Antenatal care, SD : Clean safe delivery, EOC:Emergency obstetrics care
  • 28. Interventions for Maternal Care Antenatal care  Nutrition support (anemia)  Personal hygiene, dental care, rest and sleep  Immunization (mother and the new born)  Education on delivery and care of the new born  Identifying high risk pregnancies  Emphasizing on ANC visits and maintenance of AN card  Importance and management of lactation  Advise on birth spacing
  • 31. Fast Facts about Newborn Survival Each and Every Day...  11,000 newborns under 4 weeks of age die and there are 11,000 stillbirths:  Siblings born too close together place mothers and infants at increased risk of complications  More than half of babies who die have low birth weight and many babies are born to undernourished and unhealthy mothers  Many newborns are not breastfed immediately after birth nor exclusively, or are fed inappropriate foods, leading to malnutrition and illness  Many mothers and their newborns receive inadequate health care to address complications arising from delivery or in the first days and weeks of life  Most causes of newborn death including birth asphyxia and injuries, infection, complications of prematurity, and congenital abnormalities are preventable
  • 32. Childhood health problems 1. Infectious Diseases: - Congenital Infections abortions, still births, congenital diseases and malformations - Neonatal infections (e.g. opthlamia neonatorum, tetanus) - vaccine related diseases
  • 33. Childhood health problems 2. Malnutrition: e.g. protein energy malnutrition, iron deficiency anemia, rickets and vitamins deficiencies. 3. Injuries: Of several categories including:-  Wounds and fractures  Chemical poisoning  Swallowing of objects  Road Traffic Accidents  Burns  Drowning
  • 34. Source: Bryce J et al for the Child Health Epidemiology Reference Group. The Lancet, March 2005. As used in WHR 2005 Injuries 3% Pneumonia 19% Neonatal deaths 36% Other 10% HIV/AIDS 3% Measles 4% Malaria 8% Diarrhoea 17% 10 million child deaths – Why? For these 4 causes, ~ 53% of deaths are malnourish ed children
  • 35. 4 million newborn deaths – why? Source: Lawn JE, Cousens SN, Zupan J Lancet 2005. for 192 countries based on cause specific mortality data and multi cause modelled estimates. As used in World Health Report 2005 60 to 90% of neonatal deaths are in low birth weight babies, mostly preterm Three causes account for 86% of all neonatal deaths
  • 37. Child survival strategies During 1970s PHC movement with its commitment to tackle underlying social economic and political causes of poor health emerged largely focusing child health During early 1980s focus was shifted from PHC to vertical “single issue” programs to achieve cheaper and faster results leading to Child Survival Revolution of 1980s spearheaded by UNICEF build around a package of intervention grouped under the acronym - GOBI – Growth monitoring, ORS, Breast Feeding & Immunization
  • 38. Child survival strategies cont… The inherent limitations of these vertical approaches soon become apparent as health workers have to deal with large range of health problems and single issue programs were not designed to provide such guidance A more comprehensive view of the needs of child was required – Dealing with children , not just with disease!!
  • 41. Full coverage with proven intervention could reduce Under Five Mortality by 66% equivalent to 6 million child deaths per year Prevention Breast feeding Insecticide treated nets and repellents for Malaria Zinc Complementary feeding Water &sanitation Hygiene Treatment ORT Antibiotics for Pneumonia / Sepsis Newborn care Antimalarials Antibiotics for dysentery Zinc
  • 42. Indicators of Child Health Mortality in infancy and childhood  Prenatal mortality rate  Neonatal mortality rate  Infant mortality rate  Under 5 mortality rate
  • 43. Mortality in and around infancy Infant Mortality Preinatal death Post-neonatal death Neonatal death Late neonatal death Early neo- natal death Still birth 28 weeks of gestation Birth 7 Days 28 Days 1 Year
  • 44. “There can be no keener revelation of a society’s soul than the way it treats its children” Nelson Mandela, 1988
  • 46. MCH Indicators in KSA Under-5 mortality rank 100 Under-5 mortality rate (2005) 26 Infant Mortality rate (under 1), 2005 21 Neonatal Mortality rate, 2000 12 Maternal mortality ratio (2000, adjusted) 23 Antenatal care coverage (%), 1997-2005* 90 Source UNICEF 2005
  • 47. Integrated PHC and MCH services in KSA 1980s – Comprehensive PHC services, focus on CDD, Immunization and MCH 1990s – Baby friendly hospitals (BFHI), Acute respiratory infections (ARI) programmes Mid 1990s – more PHC related programmes introduced  Reproductive health  Safe motherhood  Adolescent health  Women's’ health  Chronic diseases control  Development of district health system and strengthening of referral system  School health revived  Elderly care
  • 48. References TAKING STOCK OF MATERNAL, NEWBORN AND CHILD SURVIVAL 2000–2010 DECADE REPORThttp://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2010/ 9789241599573_eng.pdf Khan, Khalid S. et al. WHO Analysis of Causes of Maternal Deaths: A Systematic Review, The Lancet, 2006 Vol. 367. Issue 9516, pp. 1066-1074. Refer to the binder for more