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Injuries During Pregnancy Tracking

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Title: Injuries During Pregnancy Tracking


1
Injuries During PregnancyTracking
Understandingthe Hidden Epidemic
AMCHP 2005 Conference
  • Hank Weiss PhD, Associate Professor
  • Center for Injury Research and Control
  • University of Pittsburgh

2
Pop Quiz
  • The leading cause of pregnancy-related serious
    injury is
  • Falls?
  • Violence?
  • Motor vehicle crashes?
  • Poisonings?
  • Parachute jumps?

3
Parachute Jumps?
2005
4
Headlines
December 19, 2004
5
1. The Role of Place Leading Causes of Death,
2002, All Races, Females 15-39
Utah (n462,282) Unintentional Injury 61 Malignan
t Neoplasms 31 Suicide 28 Heart
Disease 10 Homicide 10
  • District of Columbia (n121,798)
  • 1 HIV 27
  • 2 Homicide 19
  • 3 Unintentional Injury 13
  • 4 Malignant Neoplasms 6
  • 5 Heart Disease 5

0.7 X
6 X
US Unintentional Injury 9,015 Malignant
Neoplasms 5,702 Heart Disease 2,770 Suicide
2,146 Homicide 2,011
Ratio Unintentional/Homicide
4.5 X
6
2. The Role of Autopsy Bias
7
Pop Quiz Answer
  • The leading cause of pregnancy-related serious
    injury is
  • Motor vehicle crashes
  • Falls
  • Poisonings
  • Violence
  • Parachute jumps

8
3 days of Google News US crashpregnant
  • Man, Pregnant Woman Seriously Injured In Crash -
    Turn to 10.com, RI - 4 hours ago. TAUNTON, Mass.
    -- A man and a pregnant woman were seriously
    injured in a car crash in Taunton Sunday night.
    The car went off the ...
  • Mother Of Unborn Baby Killed In Crash Clings For
    Her Life - WCPO, OH - 11 hours ago. ...
    Overnight, Tameka's aunts say doctors tried to
    induce Tameka's pregnancy without success -- and
    throughout the day, tameka's health began to
    fail. ...
  • Woman forced to have C-section after car accident
    - Longview Daily News, WA - Feb 12, 2005. An
    eight-month pregnant Auburn, Wash., woman was
    thrown from a pickup in a Thursday morning
    freeway crash, leading doctors to deliver her
    baby in an emergency ...
  • RAPOZA JURY SELECTION DELAYED UNTIL FEB. 22 -
    KPIX-TV 5, CA - Feb 11, 2005. ... plunge near
    Moss Beach on Oct. 6, 2002. The crash killed
    Rapoza's seven-months-pregnant wife, Raye, 34,
    and daughter Tehani, 4. ...
  • SCC Freshman Died In Crash of Pickup - Nebraska
    StatePaper.com, NE-Feb 11, 2005. ... Benham was
    ejected from the truck. Her body was found in the
    bed of the pickup. Benham was approximately one
    month into a pregnancy. ...
  • Neurologist Toss lawsuit in blackout driver case
    - Beaver County Times, PA - Feb 11, 2005. ...
    sentenced to three to six years in prison for an
    October 2000 crash that killed Patricia Schick,
    54, and Sherri Zeis, 27, who was nine weeks
    pregnant with her ...

Feb 11-13, 2005
9
Objectives
  • Overview of Epidemiology of Maternal injury.
  • Nature and importance of maternal injuries to the
    Fetus and Infant.
  • Deficiencies of existing data systems.
  • Focus on motor vehicle injuries.
  • Discuss ways to better understand and address the
    problem.

10
Maternal Injury
  • The Basis of the Threat to Fetuses

11
Injury Severity Pyramid
12
Level of Injury Pyramid
13
Lack of data
  • New Item on Death Certificate
  • Geographical Bias of Reports
  • Autopsy Bias of Reports

14
Leading Causes of DeathU.S. All Women Ages
15-34, 2002
  • Unintentional Injury 6,908 ? MV Traffic
    4,979
  • 2. Malignant Neoplasms 2,718
  • 3. Homicide 1,565
  • Suicide 1,489
  • Heart Disease 1,370
  • Total Reproductive Age Deaths 21,267Total
    Reproductive Age Injury Deaths 10,341

Year 2002, Source CDC, WISQARS, PRMSNational
Vital Statistics Reports Volume 53, Number 5
(October 12, 2004)
15
About one-half of all female reproductive age
deaths are due to injury and half of those are
due to MV crashes
Therefore
16
Maternal deaths
  • Defined by the World Health Organization as the
    death of a women while pregnant or within 42 days
    of termination of pregnancy, irrespective of the
    duration and the site of the pregnancy, from any
    cause related to or aggravated by the pregnancy
    or its management, but not from accidental or
    incidental causes

17
Maternal Mortality Ratio, U.S.
http//www.cdc.gov/epo/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/00054
602.htm
18
U.S. Maternal Mortality (2002)
  • 357

19
U.S. Birth Rate
7.8 pregnant X 10341 injury deaths 806 X
9/12 605
20
More pregnant women die from intentional
unintentional injury than all maternal
mortality related conditions combined and motor
vehicles are probably the leading cause of
pregnancy-associated maternal injury death
(assuming little pregnancy effect on injury risk).
Therefore
21
Next Level of Injury Pyramid
22
Pregnancy-associatedInjury Hospital
Discharges19 States, 97
19 State Data, Weiss HB, Lawrence BA and Miller
TR. "Pregnancy associated assault
hospitalizations," Obstet Gynecol, 2002 100(3)
773-780.
23
Pregnancy Assocaited Rate versus Rate Ratio
24
Next Level of Injury Pyramid
25
Leading Causes of ED Injury Visits Pregnant
Women, Utah
(Source Weiss, Cook, Unpublished)
26
Intent of ED Injury Visits Pregnant Women, Utah
(Source Weiss, Cook, Unpublished)
27
U.S. Births vs. ED Treated Female MV Occupant,
Falls Assault Injuries
Injury Data 2002 CDC WISQARS (non-fatal)
28
U.S. Births vs. ED Treated FemaleMV Occupant,
Overexertion and Unintentional Struck-by/Against
Injuries
Injury Data 2002 CDC WISQARS (non-fatal)
29
Leading Cause of Maternal Injury
30
Total Miles (in billions) Driven by Women of
Reproductive Age, 1969 to 1990
Bureau of Transportation Statistics, Omnibus
Survey US Department of Transportation
31
Impact on the Fetus
32
Fetal Birth Related Threats
  • Fetal death
  • Prematurity
  • Low birth weight
  • Obstetric complications
  • Placental injury
  • Uterine rupture
  • Amniotic rupture
  • Trauma-related elective and therapeutic abortion

33
Threats to the Baby
  • Neonatal death
  • Direct and indirect neural and other organ and
    structural damage
  • Mental retardation?
  • ADHD?
  • Autism?
  • Cerebral palsy?
  • Epilepsy?
  • ???

34
Fetal Injury Mortality
35
ICD-9 Classification
  • 760.5 Fetus or newborn affected by maternal
    conditions classifiable to 800-995

E code should be used as the primary code if,
and only if, the morbid conditionis classifiable
to Chapter XVII (injury) (Injury and Poisoning)
(WHO, 1977)
36
ICD-10 Classification
  • P00.5 Newborn (suspected to be) affected by
    maternal injury
  • P01.6 Newborn (suspected to be) affected by
    maternal death (all types)

37
Out of Sight Out of Mind?
38
What Gets MeasuredGets Done
  • James Marks MD, MPH
  • (Commentary on Safe Motherhood)

39
Fetal Death Registries
  • Most but not all states
  • Only 20 weeks are greater included
  • ICD limitations (no mechanism codes)
  • Reliance on written cause narratives

40
Traumatic Fetal DeathsBy MechanismSelected
States, 1995-1997
Weiss et al , JAMA, 2001, October
17286(15)1862-1868
41
Fetal Crash Death Comparisons, 1998
42
MorbidityPrimary and Secondary Impacts on the
Baby
43
Population Based Fetal Trauma Outcome Studies
  • Trauma during pregnancy outcomes at birth
  • Schiff et al (J Trauma, 2002) (89-97) Birth
    outcome after hospitalized injury in Wash. State
  • Outcomes one or more years after birth
  • None

January/2002
44
Maternal Outcomes (Schiff)Hospitalized
Injury/Birth Linkage
Adjusted for smoking, education, PNC initiation
  • Schiff et al (J Trauma, 2002) (89-97) Birth
    outcome after hospitalized injury in Wash. State

45
Infant Outcomes (Schiff)
Adjusted for smoking, education, PNC initiation
46
Biomechanical ConsiderationsVirginia Tech
SimulationsMoorcraft, Duma, et al
  • Driver, no restraint, 16 22 MPH
  • Driver with seatbelt, 8 34 MPH
  • Driver with seatbelt airbag, 28 MPH
  • Front passenger improper belt use, 22 MPH
  • Front passenger proper belt use airbag, 22 MPH

47
Modeled Effect of Crash Factors on Risk of Fetal
Loss
Includes placental abruption, uterine rupture,
direct fetal injury, maternal death or fetal Loss
Moorcraft et al, Am J Obstet Gynecol, 2003
48
Population Based Fetal MV Trauma Outcome Studies
  • Crashes during pregnancy and outcomes at birth
  • Wolf (J Trauma, 1993) Non-seat-belt risk in
    Wash. State.
  • Hyde et al (ObGyn, 2003) Effect of motor vehicle
    crashes on birth fetal outcomes in Utah
  • Child outcomes one or more years after birth
  • None

49
Pregnancy-Related Crashes
  • 3 of births linked to driver MV police reported
    crash during pregnancy (Hyde et. al., Utah crash
    linkage, 2003)
  • Extrapolations to 4 million annual births
  • ? 160,000 pregnant crashes per year
  • ?7 times of infants in crashes

Hyde et al (ObGyn, 2003) Effect of motor vehicle
crashes on birth fetal outcomes in Utah
50
Utah Crash Linkage Birth Outcome Summary
  • Pregnant women not wearing a seatbelt during an
    MVC were more likely to
  • 1.3 times more likely to have low birth weight
    babies compared to pregnant women not involved in
    a MVC
  • nearly three times more likely to experience
    fetal death compared to pregnant women with
    seatbelts

Hyde et al (ObGyn, 2003) Effect of motor vehicle
crashes on birth fetal outcomes in Utah
51
Comparison to Infants in Crashes
Weiss Cook, 2005, Preliminary Extrapolations to
US and Infant Comparisons
52
Summary
  • Injury and motor vehicle injury is a surprisingly
    common occurrence during pregnancy
  • MV trauma to pregnant women has probably
    increased substantially over last 20 years
  • Critical gaps in reporting and surveillance of
    pregnancy related injury hide the problem
  • Fetal injury mortality represents a large
    proportion of childhood injury mortality
  • We are just beginning to understand and measure
    adverse birth outcomes due to trauma

53
General Recommendations
  • Maternal/fetal injury issues should be
    incorporated in national prevention and research
    objectives.
  • ICD coding guidelines need to be changed to allow
    coding external cause of maternal injury in vital
    stats.
  • Maternal injuries should be included an expanded
    definition of maternal mortality.
  • Pregnancy status fetal outcomes need to be
    added to injury surveillance systems.

54
General Recommendations
  • States should continuously link birth to hospital
    discharge and ED data to create a pregnancy
    morbidity surveillance system.
  • CDC should incorporate better injury experience
    in pregnancy risk assessment (PRAMS).
  • CDC should improve maternal injury details in
    their birth defects surveillance system.
  • NICHD should examine ways to study developmental
    outcomes in children exposed to in utero trauma.

55
Motor Vehicle Recommendations
  • States should continuously link birth and crash
    data.
  • The FHA should add pregnancy status to driver
    behavior surveys.
  • NHTSA should mandate pregnant crash dummies tests
    to understand crash dynamics on women fetuses.
  • States should enhance education belt laws to
    improve the use proper use of seat belts by
    pregnant women.
  • Research should explore ways to reduce pregnant
  • Driving
  • Motor vehicle travel
  • Crash risk
  • Occupant protection

56
The Hidden Epidemic
57
Conclusion
Questions?
Injury Prevention Begins at Conception!
58
Contact Information
Hank Weiss, MPH, PhD Associate Professor Phone
(412) 648-9290 Email hw_at_injurycontrol.comUnivers
ity of Pittsburgh Center for Injury Research and
Control (CIRCL) Links http//www.circl.pitt.edu/
home/
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