|
|
Effect of sublingual misoprostol on severe postpartum haemorrhage
Oct 6, 2005, 15:31, Reviewed by: Dr.
|
|
�Our trial suggests that misoprostol would play an important part in such a strategy to reduce complications of delivery and maternal mortality�
|
By BMJ,
A relatively cheap and easy to use drug could save the lives of thousands of women in the developing world, according to a study in recent BMJ.
Postpartum haemorrhage (excessive blood loss after childbirth) is the leading cause of maternal death in Africa. Several drugs reduce blood loss, but in poor areas they are often inaccessible, too expensive, and too difficult to use.
The study took place in Guinea-Bissau, West Africa, where maternal death is more than 8 per 1000 live births. Immediately after delivery, 330 women received misoprostol tablets and 331 received placebo (dummy pills).
Significantly fewer women in the misoprostol group experienced severe blood loss.
In rural Guinea-Bissau, 75% of women give birth at home, and worldwide only about 50% of women give birth in health facilities. So strategies are needed to increase the safety of deliveries attended by unskilled birth attendants, say the authors.
�Our trial suggests that misoprostol would play an important part in such a strategy to reduce complications of delivery and maternal mortality,� they conclude.
- British Medical Journal - Issue Dated 1 October 2005 (Vol 331, No 7519)
http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/331/7519/723
Read full text of the source article for this news item on the journal's web site (http://bmj.com)
|
For any corrections of factual information, to contact the editors or to send
any medical news or health news press releases, use
feedback form
Top of Page
|
|
|
|