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About:
Critically ill obstetric patients in an American and an Indian public hospital: comparison of case-mix, organ dysfunction, intensive care requirements, and outcomes
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schema:ScholarlyArticle
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wasabi.inria.fr
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Type:
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
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type
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
isDefinedBy
Covid-on-the-Web dataset
has title
Critically ill obstetric patients in an American and an Indian public hospital: comparison of case-mix, organ dysfunction, intensive care requirements, and outcomes
Creator
Bandi, Venkata
Gardner, Michael
Bandi, V
Gardner, M
Guntupalli, Kalpalatha
Guntupalli, ·
Karnad, D
Karnad, Dilip
Lapsia, V
Lapsia, Vijay
Longmire, Stephen
Longmire, ·
Munnur, U
Munnur, Uma
Ramshesh, Priya
Ramshesh, ·
Suresh, Maya
Suresh, ·
Source
PMC
abstract
OBJECTIVE: To compare case-mix, health care practices, and outcome in obstetric ICU admissions in inner-city teaching hospitals in economically developed and developing countries. DESIGN: Retrospective study. SETTING: Ben Taub General Hospital (BTGH), Houston, Texas, and King Edward Memorial Hospital (KEMH), Mumbai, India. PATIENTS: Women admitted during pregnancy or 6 weeks postpartum between 1992 and 2001. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS: Patients from BTGH (n=174) and KEMH (n=754) had comparable age, number of organs affected, incidence of medical disorders (30%), liver dysfunction, and thrombocytopenia. Fewer KEMH patients received prenatal care (27 vs 86%) and came to hospital within 24 h of onset of symptoms (60 vs 90%). They had higher APACHE II scores (median 16 vs 10), greater incidence of neurological (63 vs 36%), renal (50 vs 37%), and cardiovascular dysfunction (39 vs 29%). Severe malaria, viral hepatitis, cerebral venous thrombosis, and poisoning were common medical disorders. The BTGH group had higher incidence of respiratory dysfunction (59 vs 46%) and disseminated intravascular coagulation (40 vs 23%), placental anomalies, HELLP syndrome, chorioamnionitis, peripartum cardiomyopathy, puerperal sepsis, urinary infection, bacteremia, substance abuse, and asthma. More BTGH patients required mechanical ventilation and blood component therapy, whereas more KEMH patients needed dialysis. Of BTGH patients, 78.2% were delivered by cesarean section (vs 15.4%). Maternal (2.3 vs 25%) and fetal (13 vs 51%) mortality were lower in BTGH patients. CONCLUSIONS: There were marked differences in medical diseases, organ failure, and intensive care needs. Higher mortality in the Indian ICU may be due to difference in case mix, inadequate prenatal care, delay in reaching hospital, and greater severity of illness.
has issue date
2005-07-13
(
xsd:dateTime
)
bibo:doi
10.1007/s00134-005-2710-5
bibo:pmid
16012807
has license
no-cc
sha1sum (hex)
0ccab913f7e720d01a1ba31a99d73c205a08d697
schema:url
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-005-2710-5
resource representing a document's title
Critically ill obstetric patients in an American and an Indian public hospital: comparison of case-mix, organ dysfunction, intensive care requirements, and outcomes
has PubMed Central identifier
PMC7095210
has PubMed identifier
16012807
schema:publication
Intensive Care Med
resource representing a document's body
covid:0ccab913f7e720d01a1ba31a99d73c205a08d697#body_text
is
schema:about
of
named entity 'Texas'
named entity 'higher'
named entity 'dialysis'
named entity 'prenatal care'
named entity 'Maternal'
named entity 'developing countries'
named entity 'hospital'
named entity 'public hospital'
named entity 'A L'
named entity '15.4'
named entity 'DYS'
named entity 'SUBSTANCE ABUSE'
named entity 'DEVELOPING COUNTRIES'
named entity '2859'
named entity 'REACHING'
named entity 'SEVERITY OF ILLNESS'
named entity 'CASE MIX'
named entity 'ECONOMICALLY'
named entity 'DIFFERENCE'
named entity 'HOSPITAL'
named entity 'TEXAS'
named entity 'MEMORIAL'
named entity 'POISONING'
named entity '6 WEEKS'
named entity 'SCORES'
named entity 'OBSTETRIC'
named entity 'VIRAL HEPATITIS'
named entity 'POSTPARTUM'
named entity '1992'
named entity 'TAUB'
named entity '282'
named entity 'ICU'
covid:arg/0ccab913f7e720d01a1ba31a99d73c205a08d697
named entity 'inner-city'
named entity 'Mumbai'
named entity 'dysfunction'
named entity '2001'
named entity 'chorioamnionitis'
named entity 'Patients'
named entity 'needed'
named entity 'malaria'
named entity 'patients'
named entity 'KEMH'
named entity 'disorders'
named entity 'American'
named entity 'Critically'
named entity 'King Edward Memorial Hospital'
named entity 'obstetric'
named entity 'mechanical ventilation'
named entity 'intensive care'
named entity 'teaching hospitals'
named entity 'case mix'
named entity 'substance abuse'
named entity 'KEMH'
named entity 'developing countries'
named entity 'Houston'
named entity 'postpartum'
named entity 'BTGH'
named entity 'Texas'
named entity 'disseminated intravascular coagulation'
named entity 'bacteremia'
named entity 'ICU'
named entity 'Critically ill'
named entity 'obstetric'
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