Using Observational Data to Estimate the Effect of Hand Washing and Clean Delivery Kit Use by Birth Attendants on Maternal Deaths after Home Deliveries in Rural Bangladesh, India and Nepal
Globally, puerperal sepsis accounts for an estimated 8-12% of maternal deaths, but evidence is lacking on the extent to which clean delivery practices could improve maternal survival. We used data from the control arms of four cluster-randomised controlled trials conducted in rural India, Bangladesh and Nepal, to examine associations between clean delivery kit use and hand washing by the birth attendant with maternal mortality among home deliveries. We tested associations between clean delivery practices and maternal deaths, using a pooled dataset for 40,602 home births across sites in the three countries. Cross-sectional data were analysed by fitting logistic regression models with and without multiple imputation, and confounders were selected a priori using causal directed acyclic graphs. The robustness of estimates was investigated through sensitivity analyses. Hand washing was associated with a 49% reduction in the odds of maternal mortality after adjusting for confounding factors (adjusted odds ratio (AOR) 0.51, 95% CI 0.28-0.93). The sensitivity analysis testing the missing at random assumption for the multiple imputation, as well as the sensitivity analysis accounting for possible misclassification bias in the use of clean delivery practices, indicated that the association between hand washing and maternal death had been over estimated. Clean delivery kit use was not associated with a maternal death (AOR 1.26, 95% CI 0.62-2.56). Our evidence suggests that hand washing in delivery is critical for maternal survival among home deliveries in rural South Asia, although the exact magnitude of this effect is uncertain due to inherent biases associated with observational data from low resource settings. Our findings indicating kit use does not improve maternal survival, suggests that the soap is not being used in all instances that kit use is being reported.
Keywords
Labor and delivery, Death rates, Hands, India, Morbidity, Nepal, Bangladesh, SepsisItem Type | Dataset |
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Capture method | Experiment |
Date | 21 August 2015 |
Geographical area covered (offline during plugin upgrade) |
North Latitude East Longitude South Latitude West Longitude 24.5787 92.016 24.1082 91.3129 23.6562 90.1813 23.2631 89.566 23.126 88.591 22.7415 88.0801 27.4806 86.6327 26.6686 85.3583 |
Language(s) of written materials | English |
Creator(s) |
Seward, N, Prost, A, Copas, A, Corbin, M, Li, L, Colbourn, T, Osrin, D, Neuman, M |
LSHTM Faculty/Department |
Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health > Dept of Infectious Disease Epidemiology (-2023) Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health > Dept of Medical Statistics |
Participating Institutions | London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom |
Funders |
Project Funder Grant Number Funder URI |
Date Deposited | 05 Apr 2017 11:25 |
Last Modified | 27 Apr 2022 18:20 |
Publisher | Figshare |
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- Figshare digital repository (Data)
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