Pregnancy Associated and Maternal Mortality Review (PAMR)
PAMR collects data regarding all reported deaths that are causally
related to pregnancy. The first step is to identify all deaths
occurring during pregnancy or within one year of pregnancy. Methods
used to establish this temporal relation between pregnancy and
a death include: 1) a pregnancy check box has been marked on the
death certificate, 2) the death certificate indicates that the
woman was pregnant at the time of death, or 3) the death certificate
of the reproductive-aged woman has been matched with a birth certificate
or fetal death certificate for a delivery that occurred within
one year before the woman's death.
The Center for Health Information Management and Evaluation (CHIME)
provides the Genetics and Newborn Screening Unit with copies of
death certificates that were causally related to pregnancy. For
deaths that occurred after a live birth or stillbirth, the matching
birth or fetal death certificates are also provided by CHIME. In
addition to requesting certificates of deaths that are causally
related to pregnancy, CHIME also sends certificates of all deaths
that occurred during pregnancy or within one year of pregnancy,
regardless of the cause of death or relation between pregnancy
and the death.
Data are coded after review of all available information from
death certificates (including notes written in the margins of death
certificates), medical records, autopsy reports, and matched birth
and fetal death certificates. Data concerning all deaths were reviewed
and classified by the Office of Surveillance, Evaluation, Planning
and Health Information (OSEPHI) and the Division of Community Health
(DCH) regarding the immediate and underlying cause of death, associated
obstetric conditions, and the outcome of were pregnancy.
A woman's
death is classified as pregnancy-related if it occurred during
pregnancy or within one year of pregnancy and resulted from:
1) complications of the pregnancy, 2) a chain of events that was
initiated by the pregnancy, or 3) the aggravation of an unrelated
condition by the physiologic effects of the pregnancy or its management.
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