A study of perinatal mortality rate from rural based Medical College Hospital

1984 
The present study conducted in a rural medical college aimed at analysing the perinatal mortality and its determinants in a rural set up. Fiftyeight still births and sixty two early neonatal deaths among 1107 consecutive deliveries gave a perinatal mortality rate of 108.4 per 1000 deliveries. Fifty percent of the total deliveries were unbooked. The perinatal mortality was higher in unbooked cases (16.3%), twins (33.2%) and preterms (33.9%) as compared to that in booked cases (5.3%), singletons (9.6%) and term deliveries (6.7%). Sixty nine percent of the still births were due to causes like obstructed labour, toxemia of pregnancy, antepartum hemorrhage, hand prolapse, and cord prolapse where timely intervention would have reduced the perinatal mortality significantly. Early neonatal deaths were mainly associated with prematurity and were largely due to birth anoxia, intraventricular hemorrhage, aspiration and infections.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    8
    References
    8
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []