# National survey regarding obstetricians’ perspective of obstetric emergencies in Brazil

**Authors:** Vitória Espindola Leite Borges, Francisco Barbosa Jr, Fábio Fernandes Neves, Maria Rita de Souza Mesquita, Elaine Christine Dantas Moisés

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.clinsp.2024.100333 · Clinics · 2024-02-07

## TL;DR

A national survey in Brazil found that while healthcare resources exist, disorganization and lack of training contribute to high maternal mortality from obstetric emergencies.

## Contribution

This study provides insights into Brazilian obstetricians' perspectives on obstetric emergency management and identifies systemic gaps.

## Key findings

- Most obstetricians have resources to manage severe maternal cases but lack systematic protocols.
- Only 36% participate in continuing education programs for obstetric emergencies.
- High maternal mortality is linked to disorganized systems and insufficient training.

## Abstract

The maternal mortality rate in developing countries, such as Brazil, has significantly increased since 2020. Obstetric Emergencies (OE) account for 72.5% of these deaths. A national survey was conducted in Brazil to evaluate how gynecologists and obstetricians deal with OE and identify the main difficulties regarding theoretical/practical knowledge and structural resources.

An electronic questionnaire assessing resource availability, health teams, institutional protocols, and provision of OE training courses was completed by Brazilian obstetricians.

More than 90 % of the questionnaire respondents reported treating a pregnant and/or puerperal patient with severe morbidity and that their health network has human resources, trained professionals, and structural resources required for this type of care. However, few respondents participate in continuing education programs (36 %) or specific training for the medical team (61.41 %). The implementation rates of obstetric risk identification protocols (33.09 %), a rapid response team (46.54 %), and boxes and emergency cart assembly teams (71.68 %) were determined.

A high Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR) may be related to disorganized healthcare systems, low implementation of risk classification protocols for the care of severe maternal and fetal conditions, and lack of access to continued/specific training programs. The Brazilian MMR is multifactorial. According to obstetricians, Brazilian health services include care teams, essential medications, obstetric centers, and clinical analysis laboratories, though they lack systematized processes and permanent professional training for qualified care of OE.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** deaths (MESH:D003643), OE (MESH:D048949), maternal and fetal conditions (MESH:D005315), Maternal (MESH:D000079262)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

32 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10864865/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10864865