Document Type
Article
Department
Obstetrics and Gynaecology (East Africa)
Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the mode of delivery and stillbirth rates over time among women with obstetric fistula.
Design: Retrospective record review.
Setting: Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda, Somalia, South Sudan, Zambia and Ethiopia.
Population: A total of 4396 women presenting with obstetric fistulas for repair who delivered previously in facilities between 1990 and 2014.
Methods: Retrospective review of trends and associations between mode of delivery and stillbirth, focusing on caesarean section (CS), assisted vaginal deliveries and spontaneous vaginal deliveries.
Main outcome measures: Mode of delivery, stillbirth.
Results: Out of 4396 women with fistula, 3695 (84.1%) delivered a stillborn baby. Among mothers with fistula giving birth to a stillborn baby, the CS rate (overall 54.8%, 2027/3695) rose from 45% (162/361) in 1990–94 to 64% (331/514) in 2010–14. This increase occurred at the expense of assisted vaginal delivery (overall 18.3%, 676/3695), which declined from 32% (115/361) to 6% (31/514).
Conclusions: In Eastern and Central Africa, CS is increasingly performed on women with obstructed labour whose babies have already died in utero. Contrary to international recommendations, alternatives such as vacuum extraction, forceps and destructive delivery are decreasingly used. Unless uterine rupture is suspected, CS should be avoided in obstructed labour with intrauterine fetal death to avoid complications related to CS scars in subsequent pregnancies. Increasingly, women with obstetric fistula add a history of unnecessary CS to their already grim experiences of prolonged, obstructed labour and stillbirth.
Publication (Name of Journal)
BJOG
Recommended Citation
Ngongo, C. J.,
Raassen, T. J.,
Lombard, L.,
Roosmalen, J.,
Weyers, S.,
Temmerman, M.
(2020). Delivery mode for prolonged, obstructed labour resulting in obstetric fistula: a retrospective review of 4396 women in East and Central Africa. BJOG, 127(6), 702-707.
Available at:
https://ecommons.aku.edu/eastafrica_fhs_mc_obstet_gynaecol/229
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.