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Worldwide increase in stillbirths, maternal deaths, as collateral damage of pandemic, study shows

The study also found an increase in postnatal depression, maternal anxiety, or both.

Staff Writers
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A woman in Caracas, Venezuela, has an ultrasound at a clinic, Sept 7, 2020. An international data review has found an overall increase in the risks of stillbirth and maternal death during the pandemic, with a disproportionately greater impact on poorer countries. Photo: AP
A woman in Caracas, Venezuela, has an ultrasound at a clinic, Sept 7, 2020. An international data review has found an overall increase in the risks of stillbirth and maternal death during the pandemic, with a disproportionately greater impact on poorer countries. Photo: AP

Rates of stillbirth and maternal deaths rose by around 30% during the Covid-19 pandemic, with pregnancy outcomes getting worse overall for both babies and mothers worldwide.

This is according to an international data review published on Wednesday in the Lancet Global Health journal.

Pooling data from 40 studies across 17 countries, the review found that lockdowns, disruption to maternity services, and fear of attending healthcare facilities all added to pregnancy risks.

“The pandemic has had a profound impact on healthcare systems,” said professor Asma Khalil, who co-led the research at St George’s, University of London, the UK’s only university dedicated to medicine, science and health.

“The disruption has led to the avoidable deaths of both mothers and babies, especially in low- and middle-income countries,” she said.

The review found an overall increase in the risks of stillbirth and maternal death during the pandemic, and found the impact on poorer countries was disproportionately greater, reports Reuters.

It also found significant harm to maternal mental health.

Of the 10 studies included in the analysis that reported on maternal mental health, six found an increase in postnatal depression, maternal anxiety, or both.

The study did not analyse the direct impact of Covid-19 infection itself during pregnancy, but was designed to look at the collateral impact of the coronavirus pandemic on antenatal, birth and postnatal outcomes.

Commenting on the findings, Jogender Kumar of the Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research in India said they highlighted worrying disparities in healthcare.

“In resource-poor countries, even under normal circumstances, it is a challenge to provide adequate coverage for antenatal checkups, obstetric emergencies, universal institutional deliveries and respectful maternity care,” he wrote in a commentary. “The Covid-19 pandemic has widened this gap.”