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Perinatal Morbidity clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03928795 Completed - Perinatal Morbidity Clinical Trials

Perinatal Morbidity Factors During Cesarean Section

Start date: August 27, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Caesarean section is one of the most common surgeries in the world and the increasing rate of cesarean delivery is associated with increased maternal and fetal morbidity when compared to vaginal delivery. With this dramatic increase in caesarean section rates, it is urgent to identify factors that may affect perinatal morbidity. Indeed, such factors can be classified into: - Modifiable factors: surgical technique, anesthesia technique, operator experience, operative time - Not modifiable factors: characteristics inherent to the mother: BMI, gravidic pathology, number of caesareans... Majority of previous studies focused on anesthetic factors. A global vision integrating all parameters is necessary in order to best guide the preventative measures to be put in place. our Objectives were : To Identify and to Analyze Perinatal Morbidity Factors During Caesarean Section

NCT ID: NCT03151070 Completed - Pre-Eclampsia Clinical Trials

Scaling Up an Integrated Approach to Improve Delivery Care in North Guatemala With Stepped Wedge Design

QVLM
Start date: December 15, 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

"¡Que Vivan las Madres!: Venga a tener su parto al CAP" (QVLM) is a guatemalan quasi-experimental study that has been performed from January 2014 to January 2017 by the Epidemiological Research Center in Sexual and Reproductive Health (CIESAR) in Guatemala in coordination with PRONTO International and University of San Francisco, California. This project has been financed by Grands Challenges Canada' "Save Lives at Birth, A Grand Challenge for Development" partnership that includes USAID, Norwegian ministry of foreign affairs, Bill&Melinda Gates foundation, UKaid. This project has applied a stepped wedge design (SWD) over 6 zones or clusters. Each one of the zones contains from 4 to 6 communities, each one with the presence of one second level health facility (known in Spanish as CAP, Centro de Atención Permanente). These health centers are the next level in attention after home, traditional and empirical attention. Communities around the selected health centers are mostly rural and have the worst maternal health indicators in the country. These health centers are expected to have enough equipment and personnel to attend the deliveries that occur in their communities. This study was performed in Huehuetenango and Alta Verapaz districts in north Guatemala. Each one with 3 zones for a total of 6 zones. The study follows a Stepped Wedge Design, in which all 6 zones are eventually intervened, but at different regular periods of time (each period is 4 months long). This project applies a package of 3 simultaneous interventions in each zone with the purpose of increasing institutional deliveries and improving deliveries attention in public health centers. This intervention plan has been implemented in a pilot study reported in (Kestler et. al, 2013).

NCT ID: NCT00385229 Completed - Perinatal Morbidity Clinical Trials

Post Term Pregnancy - Induction of Labor or Monitoring of Pregnancy

Start date: September 2002
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Post term pregnancy is a risk pregnancy. Aim of the study was to investigate whether induction of labor at gestational age 289(41 weeks+2 days) reduces neonatal morbidity compared to expectant management. Secondary aims was to assess the effect on mode of delivery and maternal complications, as well as assess women's views and experiences. Our 0-hypothesis was that induction of labor at gestational age 41+2 did not result in better outcome of pregnancy, measured as perinatal morbidity. Following inclusion, women were randomly allocated to induction of labor or to monitoring of pregnancy every third day until delivery