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Certifying perinatal deaths Certifying perinatal deaths

Certifying perinatal deaths - PowerPoint Presentation

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Certifying perinatal deaths - PPT Presentation

MEDICAL CERTIFICATION OF Cause of death TONGA November 2018 Perinatal deaths Scope of perinatal deaths neonatal deaths stillbirths Neonatal Definition A child who is born of any age who shows signs of life who dies between 027 completed days ID: 930573

perinatal death deaths certificate death perinatal certificate deaths mother infant conditions days baby labour weeks life birth neonatal activity

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Slide1

Certifying perinatal deaths

MEDICAL CERTIFICATION OF Cause of death,

TONGA

November, 2018

Slide2

Perinatal deaths

Scope of perinatal deaths: - neonatal deaths - stillbirths Neonatal Definition: A child who is born of any age who shows signs of life who dies between 0-27 completed days - 0-7 days: early neonatal death - 8-27 days: late neonatal death Stillbirth (or fetal death): A child who is born who does not show any signs of life - WHO definition states between 22 weeks completed gestation and 500grams birth weight - check with your legislative requirements in-country on definition

Slide3

Perinatal deathsNeonatal deaths generally form the majority of infant deaths

High quality data helps us address maternal and infant health Related to SDG 3:

Slide4

Perinatal deaths

2 types of death certificates possible: General death certificate Perinatal death certificate WHO recommends general death certificate Demographic information is extremely important for perinatal deaths

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Certificate of cause of perinatal death

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Certificate of cause of perinatal death

Slide7

Enforce, Implement & Evaluate

7

Slide8

Perinatal deathsActivity:

Look at your own country’s death certificate and document what recommended variables are missing. Record what type of death certificate you are using (i.e. general death certificate or perinatal)

Slide9

Perinatal deaths

Conditions in mother versus babyVery important interaction Be aware of causes which can occur in both mother and baby E.g. hypertension, haemorrhage Need to give more exact terms e.g. pre-eclampsia, abruption of placenta, maternal hypertension Are conditions pre-existing? E.g. diabetes (state whether gestational or existing, hypertension, other circulatory conditions)

Slide10

Perinatal deathsCommunicate conditions in mother that may have caused condition in baby

E.g. prematurity Tell the coder why – early onset of labour from incompetent cervix? Placental abruption? (this helps interventions) External versus natural Asphyxia (cord accident, bedclothes over baby) Congenital versus acquired E.g. pulmonary hypoplasia, hydrocephalus

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SPECIFIC CONDITIONS

Pre-term labourUse if no clear pathology (e.g. chorioamnionitis) of labour before 37 weeksGrowth restriction Use best diagnostic tools available Difficult in many settings Prematurity Avoid using without pathology known Obstructed labour Enter as main condition if reason is related to mother (transverse pelvis) but enter as secondary condition if reason is for transverse fetusHIVAlways enter if existent in mother

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RESOURCESPerinatal review committee at hospital

Take to review meetings if you don’t have an official committee ICD-10 PM

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FILLING OUT DEATH CERTIFICATE

Need to consider certificate used in your countrySequence needs to take into account mother and baby If different from WHO standard consider how to communicate relevant information Maternal care, existing conditions in mother and maternal conditions all need to be taken into account Don’t forget to fill out a birth notification and medical cause of death certificate for perinatal deaths

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ACTIVITY

Do exercises provided – fill out once on WHO recommended certificate. Fill out again on own country certificate and consider how to communicate all relevant information if variables are not included on the death certificate.

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Activity 1A pregnant mother with poorly controlled Diabetes Mellitus delivered a infant weighing 3.5 kg at 37 weeks of gestation.

The baby developed hypoglycaemia and had a loud murmur and a large heart on chest x ray. The echocardiogram showed multiple anomalies in the heart. The baby died on the second day of life.

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ACTIVITY 2

A 1,480-gram male infant was born at 32-weeks gestation to a 20-year-old primiparous woman.The infant developed respiratory distress syndrome and required mechanical ventilation for 7 days. Despite receiving adequate calories for growth, the infant gained weight poorly and had persistent diarrhea. Steatorrhea was confirmed upon microscopic examination. Results from a sweat chloride test given on the 21st day after birth were negative, but the patient had an elevated sweat chloride concentration of 85 millimoles per liter when the test was repeated at 35 days of age. On the 37th day after birth, the infant became lethargic and was noted to be oedematous. Escherichia coli was cultured from the infant’s cerebral spinal fluid, total serum proteins were reported to be low, and clotting studies were prolonged. The infant died at 45 days of age despite appropriate life-saving efforts. Gross autopsy confirmed the clinical impression of cystic fibrosis.

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ACTIVITY 3

The patient was a 30 year old woman with a healthy four year old boy. She had a normal second pregnancy apart from hydramnios. Ultrasound examination of the fetus at 36 weeks noted the presence of anencephaly. Labour was induced. A stillborn anencephalic fetus weighing 1500g was delivered.