A Thirty-Year Review of Maternal Mortality in Oklahoma, 1950 Through 1979

1988 
Oklahoma's Maternal Mortality Committee has been active since 1941. During the 30-year period 1950 through 1979, the committee reviewed in detail 75.9% of the pregnancy-related deaths that occurred in Oklahoma. The maternal mortality ratio in 1950 was 95.1/100,000 live births, and for 1979 it was 8.1/100,000 live births, a decrease of 91.5%. The risk of death from childbearing remained greater for black women than for American Indian or white women throughout the three decades. For American Indian women, the risk of death associated with pregnancy has decreased and is almost equal to the risk for white women. The Maternal Mortality Committee estimated that two thirds of Oklahoma's maternal deaths were preventable. The proportion of deaths judged preventable did not vary substantially during the study period. We conclude that maternal mortality in Oklahoma can be reduced to fewer than three deaths per 100,000 live births. Intensive monitoring and investigation of deaths and their causes by local maternal mortality committees continues to be an important mechanism for obtaining information to assist health workers in the prevention of deaths.
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