Blood demand and utilization among pregnant and postpartum women with and without HIV infections at the university teaching Hospital, Zambia
Udhayashankar Kanagasabai, Michelle S. Chevalier, Clement B. Ndongmo, Bellington Vwalika, Yusuf Ahmed, Dejana Selenic, Anindya K. De, Bakary Drammeh

TL;DR
This study examines blood use among pregnant and postpartum women in Zambia, comparing those with and without HIV, to improve maternal care in resource-limited settings.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into blood demand patterns among pregnant women with and without HIV in a low-resource setting.
Findings
Women living with HIV accounted for 24.4% of blood requests, but made up 47.1% of those who received transfusions.
Pregnancy-related complications like postpartum hemorrhage and acute anemia were common reasons for transfusion.
The study suggests that HIV status may have a smaller impact on blood demand than previously believed.
Abstract
Complications from pregnancy, primarily post-partum hemorrhage, including infections like HIV, are the leading causes of maternal mortality in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Blood products are not always available for obstetric emergencies because of chronic shortages in SSA countries. Understanding the quantity of blood products used by pregnant and post-partum women with and without HIV infections could inform strategies for the appropriate use of blood in resource-limited settings. A prospective study was conducted of medical charts of all pregnant or postpartum (42 days following delivery) women who presented to the obstetrics ward at the University Teaching Hospital (UTH) Zambia and had blood ordered during their hospital stay from November 2016 to March 2017. Abstracted data from the requisition forms included age, hospital ward, clinical indication for blood transfusion, transfusion…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlood donation and transfusion practices · Maternal and fetal healthcare · Blood transfusion and management
