(Press-News.org) Increased vigilance for high blood pressure and diffuse stomach pain. These are some of the characteristics of emergency care adapted for pregnant women and new mothers. The model, which could become clinical routine throughout Sweden, is described in a thesis at the University of Gothenburg.
The aim of the thesis was to reduce morbidity and mortality among pregnant women and new mothers seeking emergency care. Sweden has relatively low rates of pregnancy-related morbidity and mortality, but pregnant women and new mothers do not currently receive the same level of emergency care as other patients.
“Despite a very low maternal mortality rate, pregnant women and new mothers can unnecessarily fall severely ill, and in a few cases even die, because the healthcare system does not identify how sick they are when they seek emergency care,” says Linnéa Lindroos, PhD student in obstetrics and gynecology at Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg and Senior Consultant in obstetrics at Sahlgrenska University Hospital.
The thesis describes an adapted form of what is called triage in emergency care. Triage refers to the initial and rapid assessments and prioritizations that takes place when many people seek emergency care at the same time, and it will determine how long a patient waits.
Similar symptoms – different risks
The problem is that the usual triage system is not always suitable for pregnant women and new mothers. For example, elevated blood pressure in a non-pregnant patient is rarely acute in itself, blood pressure levels normally build up over time, whereas a pregnant woman with high blood pressure may be rapidly heading towards pre-eclampsia.
Other conditions that require extra vigilance are bleedings that may be due to the placenta not being properly attached, or non-specific abdominal pain that may indicate premature labor.
“If you follow the usual triage flow, you may fail to prioritize these patients. Additionally, in case of pregnancy, we have two patients, including the baby, to consider, which makes it extra difficult,” says Linnéa Lindroos.
Good practice for patients and staff
She is the driving force behind the triage system, Gothenburg Obstetric Triage System (GOTS), developed, applied and evaluated in Gothenburg. The aim is not to give pregnant women and new mothers priority in the queue, but to take their physical changes and medical conditions more into account.
According to the results of the thesis, the system has a good ability to reliably identify acutely ill patients. At the same time, the introduction of triage in emergency obstetric care has challenged previous approaches and procedures for this category of patients.
“An important benefit is the reduction of experienced work-related stress among healthcare workers, especially midwives. The working method offers a structured approach to assessing patients, leading to more efficient decision-making and an improved overview of the patients present in the unit at the same time. Our research shows that the triage system is well accepted among midwives, nurses and doctors.”
Age and underlying diseases affect
The issue of an emergency triage system tailored to pregnant women and new mothers is particularly important in light of the increasing number of births after 40, and the fact that women are more likely to bring obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure and heart disease into pregnancy. Increased psychiatric illness in society also plays a role.
“We have an ageing population giving birth, and categories of women who previously did not get pregnant. Now they can get pregnant, through better management of underlying conditions, and through IVF, but this also increases the risk of complications such as bleeding and premature birth. We rarely advise against pregnancy, but it is important that we identify deviations from the normal course of events,” concludes Linnéa Lindroos.
Title: Obstetric emergency triage – A new mindset in obstetric emergency care in Sweden, https://hdl.handle.net/2077/77768
END
Great results with emergency care adapted for pregnant women
2023-11-14
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Vegan diet fosters changes in gut microbiome that reduce hot flashes by 95%, finds new study
2023-11-14
A low-fat vegan diet that includes soy fosters changes in the gut microbiome that decrease postmenopausal vasomotor symptoms, or hot flashes, overall by 95%, according to a new study by the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine. A vegan diet also eliminated severe hot flashes, led to a 96% decrease in moderate-to-severe hot flashes, and reduced daytime and nighttime hot flashes by 96% and 94%, respectively. Participants also lost 6.4 pounds on average.
“Women who want to fight hot flashes should feed the bacteria in their gut a vegan diet rich in fruits, vegetables, grains, and beans, which also leads to weight loss and protects against heart disease and type 2 diabetes,” ...
Drug that kills off sleeping bone cells could treat lower back pain
2023-11-14
An existing drug that targets senescent, or sleeping cells could provide the answer to treating lower back pain, according to a new study.
The research, published today as a Reviewed Preprint in eLife, advances our understanding of the role of senescent osteoclasts – cells that break down and remove damaged bone tissue – in the development of lower back pain, which affects 8 in 10 people at some point in their lives. eLife’s editors say the study provides compelling evidence that an existing drug, Navitoclax, can eliminate senescent osteoclasts in mice and, in doing so, markedly reduce spinal pain.
Osteoclasts resorb ...
Inflammation and loss of protective mechanisms in the brain linked to suicide risk
2023-11-14
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (Nov. 14, 2023) — A first-of-its-kind study has identified overactive inflammation and loss of critical protection mechanisms in the brain as potential contributors to suicide risk.
The findings support further exploration of anti-inflammatory medications to reduce risk, especially in situations where suicidal ideation can be ascertained early.
The study was published in the journal Molecular Psychiatry and led by Van Andel Institute’s Lena Brundin, M.D., Ph.D., Columbia ...
Another step toward the HIV-1 vaccine: Dynamics of neutralizing antibodies
2023-11-14
An international team has for the first time researched the longevity of neutralizing antibodies in HIV-1-infected people. Currently, it is assumed that an HIV-1 vaccine can only be effective if it produces these antibodies in vaccinated humans. The findings improve understanding of the dynamics of such antibodies and are an important building block for further research into an HIV-1 vaccine. Professor Dr Florian Klein, Director of the Institute of Virology at the University Hospital Cologne, and Dr Dr Philipp Schommers, Head of the Laboratory for Antiviral Immunity at Department ...
When languages collide, which survives?
2023-11-14
Language has the power to shape our perceptions and interactions with the world. Different languages can coexist, but their dynamics are shaped by the communities that speak them – and how those communities interact with each other. Shared beliefs, assumptions, and feelings toward specific language forms often determine whether a specific language will survive or disappear, especially within multilinguistic societies.
In Chaos, by AIP Publishing, researchers from the University of the Balearic Islands in Spain incorporate language ideologies, along with the impact of interaction between individuals with opposing preferences, on the language shift process.
“Our ...
Keep it secret: Cloud data storage security approach taps quantum physics
2023-11-14
Distributed cloud storage is a hot topic for security researchers around the globe pursuing secure data storage, and a team in China is now merging quantum physics with mature cryptography and storage techniques to achieve a cost-effective cloud storage solution.
Shamir’s secret sharing, a known method, is a key distribution algorithm. It involves distributing private information to a group so that “the secret” can be revealed only when a majority pools their knowledge. It’s common to combine quantum key distribution (QKD) and Shamir’s secret sharing algorithm for secure ...
Putting sound waves to work to create safer public spaces
2023-11-14
WASHINGTON, Nov. 14, 2023 – The risk of hearing loss does not come just from loud machinery or other obvious noise. It can also affect people in public environments like theaters and concert halls. Absorbing this excess sound to make public environments safer for hearing and using the unwanted sound waves to create electricity is the aim of a paper published this week in Physics of Fluids, by AIP Publishing.
“According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an estimated 12.5% of children and adolescents aged 6-19 years and 17% of adults aged 20-69 years have suffered permanent ...
Severe respiratory disease among children with and without medical complexity during the pandemic
2023-11-14
About The Study: This study of 139,000 respiratory hospitalizations in Canada of children younger than age 18 found a substantial decrease in severe respiratory disease resulting in hospitalizations, intensive care unit admissions, and mortality during the first two years of the pandemic compared with the three pre-pandemic years. These findings suggest that future evaluations of the effect of public health interventions aimed at reducing circulating respiratory pathogens during non-pandemic periods of increased respiratory illness may be warranted.
Authors: Eyal Cohen, M.D., M.Sc., of ...
Type 2 diabetes and colorectal cancer risk
2023-11-14
About The Study: In this study where the majority of 54,000 participants were African American with low socioeconomic status, diabetes was associated with elevated colorectal cancer (CRC) risk, suggesting that diabetes prevention and control may reduce CRC disparities. The association was attenuated for those who completed colonoscopies, highlighting how adverse effects of diabetes-related metabolic dysregulation may be disrupted by preventative screening.
Authors: Shaneda Warren Andersen, Ph.D., of the University of Wisconsin, Madison, is the corresponding author.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.43333)
Editor’s ...
Von Kaven Award goes to mathematician Lisa Sauermann
2023-11-14
Professor Dr. Lisa Sauermann from Bonn has received this year’s von Kaven Award from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) in recognition of her research achievements in the field of extremal combinatorics. The award goes to mathematicians who conduct research under the DFG’s Heisenberg or Emmy Noether Programmes. Endowed with €10,000, this year’s award will be presented on 17 November in connection with the Gauss Lectureship of the German Mathematical Society (Deutsche Mathematiker-Vereinigung, DMV) in Berlin. The laudatory speech will be given by mathematician Professor Dr. Katrin ...