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How we can improve maternal healthcare -- before, during and after pregnancy

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    It was chaos as I got off the elevator.
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    I was coming back on duty
    as a resident physician
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    to cover the labor and delivery unit,
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    and all I could see was a swarm
    of doctors and nurses
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    hovering over a patient in the labor room.
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    They were all desperately trying
    to save a woman's life.
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    The patient was in shock.
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    She had delivered a healthy baby boy
    a few hours before I arrived.
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    Suddenly, she collapsed,
    became unresponsive,
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    and had profuse uterine bleeding.
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    By the time I got to the room,
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    there were multiple doctors and nurses
    and the patient was lifeless.
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    The resuscitation team
    tried to bring her back to life,
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    but despite everyone's
    best efforts, she died.
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    What I remember most about that day
    was the father's piercing cry.
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    It went through my heart
    and the heart of everyone on that floor.
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    This was supposed to be
    the happiest day of his life,
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    but instead it turned out
    to be the worst day.
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    I wish I could say this tragedy
    was an isolated incident,
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    but sadly that's not the case.
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    Every year in the United States,
    somewhere between 700 and 900 women
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    die from a pregnancy-related cause.
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    The shocking part of this story
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    is that our maternal mortality rate
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    is actually higher than all other
    high-income countries,
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    and our rates are far worse
    for women of color.
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    Our rate of maternal mortality
    actually increased over the last decade,
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    while other countries reduced their rates.
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    And the biggest paradox of all?
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    We spend more on health care
    than any other country in the world.
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    Well, around the same time in residency
    that this new mother lost her life,
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    I became a mother myself,
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    and even with all of my background
    and training in the field,
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    I was taken aback by how little attention
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    was paid to delivering
    high-quality maternal health care,
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    and I thought about what that meant,
    not just for myself,
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    but for so many other women.
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    Maybe it's because my dad
    was a civil rights attorney
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    and my parents were socially conscious
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    and demanded that we stand up
    for what we believe in,
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    or the fact that my parents
    were born in Jamaica,
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    came to the United States,
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    and were able to realize
    the American Dream.
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    Or maybe it was my residency training,
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    where I saw firsthand
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    how poorly so many
    low-income women of color
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    were treated by our healthcare system.
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    For whatever the reason,
    I felt a responsibility to stand up,
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    not just for myself,
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    but for all women,
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    and especially those marginalized
    by our healthcare system.
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    And I decided to focus my career
    on improving maternal health care.
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    So what's killing mothers?
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    Cardiovascular disease, hemorrhage,
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    high blood pressure
    causing seizures and strokes,
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    blood clots and infection
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    are some of the major causes
    of maternal mortality in this country,
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    but a maternal death
    is only the tip of the iceberg.
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    For every death, over a hundred women
    suffer a severe complication
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    related to pregnancy and childbirth
    resulting in over 60,000 every year
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    having one of these events.
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    These complications,
    called severe maternal morbidity,
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    are on the rise in the United States,
    and they're life-altering.
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    It's estimated that somewhere
    between 1.5 and two percent
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    of the four million deliveries
    that occur every year in this country
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    are associated with one of these events.
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    That is five or six women every hour
    having a blood clot, a seizure, a stroke,
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    receiving a blood transfusion,
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    having end organ damage
    such as kidney failure,
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    or some other tragic event.
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    Now, the part of this story
    that's frankly unforgivable
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    is the fact that 60 percent
    of these deaths and severe complications
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    are thought to be preventable.
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    When I say 60 percent are preventable,
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    I mean there are concrete steps
    and standard procedures
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    that we could implement
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    that could prevent
    these bad outcomes from occurring
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    and save women's lives.
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    And it doesn't require
    fancy new technology.
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    We just have to apply what we know
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    and ensure equal standards
    between hospitals.
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    For example, if a pregnant woman
    in labor has really high blood pressure
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    and we treat her with the right
    antihypertensive medication
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    in a timely fashion,
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    we can prevent stroke.
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    If we accurately track
    blood loss during delivery,
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    we can detect a hemorrhage sooner
    and save a woman's life.
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    We could actually lower the rates
    of these catastrophic events tomorrow,
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    but it requires that we value
    the quality of care
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    we deliver to pregnant women
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    before, during, and after pregnancy.
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    If we raise quality of care universally
    to what is supposed to be the standard,
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    we could bring the rates of these deaths
    and severe complications way down.
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    Well, there is some good news.
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    There are some success stories.
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    There are some places that have
    actually adopted these standards,
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    and it's really making a difference.
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    A few years ago, the American College
    of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
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    joined forces with other
    healthcare organizations,
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    researchers like myself,
    and community organizations.
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    They wanted to implement
    standard care practices
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    in hospitals and health systems
    throughout the country,
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    and the vehicle they're using is a program
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    called the Alliance for Innovation
    in Maternal Health, the AIM Program.
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    Their goal is to lower maternal mortality
    and severe maternal morbidity rates
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    through quality and safety initiatives
    across the country.
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    The group has developed
    a number of safety bundles
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    that target some of the most
    preventable causes of a maternal death.
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    The AIM Program currently
    has the potential to reach
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    over 50 percent of the US births.
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    So what's in a safety bundle?
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    Evidence-based practices,
    protocols, procedures,
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    medications, equipment, and other items
    targeting these conditions.
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    Let's take the example
    of a hemorrhage bundle.
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    For a hemorrhage, you need a cart
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    that has everything a doctor or nurse
    might need in an emergency:
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    an IV line, an oxygen mask, medications,
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    checklists, other equipment.
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    Then you need something
    to measure blood loss:
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    sponges and pads.
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    And instead of just eyeballing it,
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    the doctors and nurses
    collect these sponges and pads
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    and either weigh them
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    or use newer technology to accurately
    assess how much blood has been lost.
Title:
How we can improve maternal healthcare -- before, during and after pregnancy
Speaker:
Elizabeth Howell
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:17

English subtitles

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