OBJECTIVE To assess whether HIV in associated with an increased risk of mortality from direct maternal complications. DESIGN Population-based cohort study using data from three demographic surveillance sites in Eastern… Click to show full abstract
OBJECTIVE To assess whether HIV in associated with an increased risk of mortality from direct maternal complications. DESIGN Population-based cohort study using data from three demographic surveillance sites in Eastern and Southern Africa. METHODS We use verbal autopsy data, with cause of death assigned using the InSilicoVA algorithm, to describe the association between HIV and direct maternal deaths amongst women aged 20-49. We report direct maternal mortality rates by HIV status, and crude and adjusted rate ratios (RRs) comparing HIV-infected and uninfected women, by study site and by ART availability. We pool the study-specific RRs using random-effects meta-analysis. RESULTS There was strong evidence that HIV increased the rate of direct maternal mortality across all the study sites in the period ART was widely available, with the RR varying from 4.5 in Karonga, Malawi [95% confidence interval (CI): 1.6-12.6] to 5.2 in Kisesa, Tanzania (95% CI: 1.7-16.1) and 5.9 in uMkhanyakude, South Africa (95% CI: 2.3-15.2) after adjusting for socio-demographic confounders. Combining these adjusted results across the study sites, we estimated that HIV-infected women have 5.2 times the rate of direct maternal mortality compared with HIV-uninfected women (95% CI: 2.9-9.5). CONCLUSIONS HIV-infected women face higher rates of mortality from direct maternal causes, which suggests that we need to improve access to quality maternity care for these women. These findings also have implications for the surveillance of HIV/AIDS related mortality, as not all excess mortality attributable to HIV will be explicitly attributed to HIV/AIDS on the basis of a verbal autopsy interview.
               
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