Litcius/Paper detail

Usefulness of the Hospital Information System for maternal mortality surveillance in Brazil

Olívia Tavares Ranzani, Maria de Fátima Marinho de Souza, Ana Luiza Bierrenbach

2023Revista Brasileira de Epidemiologia11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT Objective: To evaluate the capability of hospital records in the Hospital Information System (SIH) to add valuable and complementary information to the Mortality Information System (SIM) in studies on maternal mortality. We calculated and compared the maternal mortality ratio from the SIH and SIM databases, by age group and region, to highlight differences between groups and assess the coverage of maternal deaths using SIH compared with SIM. Methods: Obstetric hospitalizations were defined based on three sources (codes ICD-10 in diagnoses; procedures; billing information). Hospital and SIM mortality ratios were calculated by dividing maternal deaths in hospitals affiliated to the Unified Brazilian Health System (SUS) per live births (SINASC) in the same hospitals. Results: In 2019, we identified 2,497,957 obstetric admissions, 0.04% (946) with in-hospital mortality as outcome. The presence of three criteria identified 98% of obstetric hospitalizations and 83% of obstetric hospitalizations with death as outcome. The comparison of mortality ratios between SIH (45.5 MMR; 95%CI 42.7 – 48.5) and SIM (49.7 MMR; 95%CI 46.7 – 52.8) was not statistically significant (p-value: 0.053). Conclusion: The analysis of SIH was able to provide additional information for the monitoring and surveillance of maternal health in Brazil. Although there are differences between the mortality rates, the SIH, as a complementary information system to the SIM, may be valid in studies on maternal mortality and morbidity.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMaternal morbidityPediatricsDemographyStandardized mortality ratioMortality rateObstetricsPregnancyInternal medicineBiologySociologyGeneticsMaternal and Neonatal HealthcareGlobal Maternal and Child HealthMaternal and fetal healthcare