Maternal mortality due to abortion complications in forcibly displaced populations: A study protocol for a community-facility capture-recapture (CFCR) study
Blake Erhardt-Ohren, Dipika Paul, Anik Mahmud, Anika Tarannum, Karen Weidert, Altaf Hossain, Sayed Rubayet, Ndola Prata

TL;DR
This study aims to better understand maternal deaths from unsafe abortions in refugee camps using a new method to improve global health interventions.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel community-facility capture-recapture methodology to estimate maternal mortality in forcibly displaced populations.
Findings
Current data on maternal deaths from unsafe abortion in refugee settings is outdated and insufficient.
The study will use a new method to more accurately measure maternal mortality due to abortion complications.
Findings may help improve access to safe reproductive health services for forcibly displaced populations.
Abstract
There is a paucity of research exploring abortion complication-related morbidity and mortality in humanitarian settings. The most recent data we have to understand the impact of global negligence on forcibly displaced persons’ reproductive health needs in humanitarian emergencies is from the 1999 United Nations Population Fund’s annual report, which estimated that 25-50% of maternal deaths in refugee settings were due to complications from unsafe abortion. This study will investigate maternal death surveillance and reporting (MDSR). The protocol will be implemented in a refugee setting: Forcibly Displaced Myanmar National (FDMN) camps in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. We will review death records for the past twelve months to learn more about how deaths are reported and recorded in facilities and in the camp-in-charge (CiC) office. Following the record review, we will interview individuals…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth and Conflict Studies · Migration, Health and Trauma · Global Maternal and Child Health
