U\II'I-D ST.\TI]S DEPART\Itr\T OF LABOR FR.'\\CES PERKINS. Srcnrrrnr- CH ILDREN'S BUREAU Katharine F. Lenroot. Chief Comparabilityof Maternal Mortality Rates in the United Statesand Certain Foreign Countries A Sruoy oF THE Errrcrs or Varrarrows rN Assrcwunxt Pr.oceruRns, DerrNr::roNs or LrvB BrnrHS, AND ColrplrrrNrss or Brnrn Rncrstne.rrow BY ELIZABETH C. TANDy, D. Sc- Bureau Publication TINITED GOVERNMENT 7t{o. 229 STATES PRINTING OFFICE \1ASHI\GTON : 1935 MCH Collection Vashington,D. C, Pricc 5 ceotr Document Number 212 Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Litrrary, Georgetown University CO\IPAR.\BILITY OF \f..\TER\AL \IORTALITY RATE S CONTENTS l , e t t e r o f t r a n s m i t t a l __ - _ - \ r e t n o oo 1 s t u d ) - _ _ - -__ _ Proportion of deaths assignedto puerperal and nonpuerperal causes by the difierent countries___-__ Differences in methods of assignment to puerperal and nonpuerperar causes in the difrerent countries____ __ \{aternal mortality rates that would have obtained in the united states under m e t h o d so f a s s i g n m e n o t f v a r i o u s f o r e i g nc o u n t r i e s _ - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ comparison of the united states rate for deaths assigned to the puerperal state with those for all deaths associatedwith pregnancy and childbirth in ,i* r"."ig" countries---___ Trend of maternal mortality in the United states and certain foreign countries---Efect of differencesin definitions of live births and in compreteness of registration_ Summary and conclusions R e c o m m e n d a t i o n s-- - - - - - - - - - - _ List of references Pog" I 5 8 l3 14 t6 19 11 22 (nr) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Litrrary, Georgetown University IORT.{LITY R.{TE S LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL UNnnp SrarBs DcpenrrreNr or Lanon, Cnrr,onarv's Bunrau. December3, 1934. Maoau: There is transmitted trrrr*i(ot'ington' of\,{aternal lro.t"iityRates in ,r,"u,iii'le,i,'.t?ft*HT:?:1,:l countries' The st'rdy was initiated by the subcommittee on cn--o. abilitv of Maternal Mortarity R"t". oi the committee on ,r",.;ji'u":: Nlaternal care of the whitl House conference on ch'd Hearth and Protection' Dr. Elizabeth c. Tandy, Director of the statistical Division of the children's Bureau, who was'.hui.-rn of the ,ub.o-r'itt"e, r,vas in chargeof the study and has written the report. The study incruded.anarl.sis of foreign laws and registration practices and.the speciaranarysisof a representa-tive group of United states death certi{rcateson which pregnancy or chirdbirth ."vas*"ntio.rJ'by the certifying physician. These certificates had U""n by the Bureau of the cens'rs. At the request "rr._UtJ of the subcommitte"-ih., *... transmitted by the Bureau of the census to officials in charge of vital statistics in 24 foreign countries,with the request that they indicate in eachinstancewhether under their practice the ieath *.ur; ;; urirn"o ,o a puerperal or a nonpuerperal cause. Replies were received from 16 countries. The report has the approval of Dr. F. L. Adair, chairman of the committee on prenatar and Maternal care, and that cf the membersof the subcommittee: Or. y. J. V. Deacon, Director of the Bureau of Records and Statistics, Staie Department of Health, Michigan; Dr. Haven Emerson, professorof pubiic Health Administration, co'ege of Physicians and surgeons, columbiauniversity;r"rrr o. spl;ir,x.;rt"nt Director,Divisionof Vital Statistics, st"t. D.pur,.rr.n,oi-uliirr, x"* York; Dr. T. F. Murphy,ChiefSt"Urtl.i"r,f., Vii"f-S,"iiril*,.Uri,.a states Bureau of the census,.and Dr. Tandy. valuable suggestionswere also received from the f.l!.Tilr, who the report: b?." alUo.r, "pprorr"d formerly chief of the cliildrer,', Bu*"u; Dr. Robert B.-crr"aao.r., Professorof Sociology and Statistics,Columbia University; Dr. James R. \{cCord, Professorof Obsterricsand Gynecology,Emory lniu.rri,y School of \fedicine; Dr. Lowell;. neea,proL*o. oi il;*i",i.ri.., 11f Schoot publicHealthjJohns of Hygieneand ilopkinsi;;;rt,r. Respectfully submitted. Hon. Fnescrs pnnrrNs Secretaryof Labor. ATHARINEF' LnNnoor, chief' (v) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University C1lqurlbility of Maternal Mort ality Ratesin the United Statesand CertainForeignCountri..;' Method of Study This report deals with the similarities and differencesin methods of assigningcauseto deaths certified to be associatedwith pregnancy and childbirth in the united.States and 16 foreign countriesand discussesthe effect of the differenc, ciarmaternar-.,,"riiili.1::''iffi;Jii,""'ti,!iTffi *,l,j'JiiI;.f; of variations in the definition of live births and in the completenessof birth registration. The term "deaths associatedwith pregnancy or childbirth,, is used to -pr.grr"n.y include all deathsin which a-condition of or childbirth is stated on the death certificateby the physician *ho."gi.tered the death. Such deaths are of two main tyDes: (1) Deaths due direcily to the puerperar state. These incrude alr deaths in which the condition of p."gn"ncy or ch'dbirth is the onrv causementioned on the death certificate, and deaths ir, *lrl.t a ;;;r;";: peral diseaseis mentioned jointly with ihe puerperal, the nonpuerperar diseasebeing one which probably would not have proved fatar .*..p, to. the pregnancyor childbirth. (2) Deaths due to nonpuerperalcauses in which the puerperal condition existedconcurrently but in which the nonpuerperal condition wourd probably have proved fatal even if the condition oi pr.gnr".y .rr'abirth had not been present. ", It is obvious that the great majority of deaths associatedwith preg_ nancy and childbirth would everywherebe classifiedin the n.ri-group. certain types of deaths, ho*.r..r, such as abortions induced forI ttullnontherapeuticreasonswhich would be classified as puerperali; ,;;; ..rrI This report covers one sectron of an investigation initiated through a subcommittee oi the committee on prenatal and Maternal carJ of the white House conference on child Health and Protection, of which Dr. Fred L. Adair was chairman. This subcommittee on comparability and trend of maternal mortality rates was charged *itr, in*.tig;,i* ,f tlr" factors underlying the similarities and diferences in the officlal figures of .h? l^po.."n, countries of the world and exposition of the general characteristicsof the rates. The com_ p.lereinvestigation is expected ultimately to th" definitions of live births and stillbirths "lrre. :hat obtain in the various countries, description of the procedure of.egistratiof -",rroa, or assigning cause of death to deaths certified as associated *ith p*g,i"o.f .rrriaui*r,, description of the trend of the rates, and interpretation of the findings. "ri The study was bcgun during the early months of the white House conf"..n.", but it was impossibreto com_ :lere an' part oI it in time for incrusion in the report of the committee on prenatal an,l \[aternal Care. (l) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University CO}IPARABILITY OF X'IATERNAL \IORT^\LITY R.\TES on account o{ differencesin tries, would be called nonpuerPeralin others in procedurervith regard l.gui p.o."d,-,r". There wtuld also be difierences causeswere certified puerperal and to deaths in which nonpuerperal to the causatir-e regard with opinion jointly, due to variation i" *"dit"l u'itfr the concurrent was that condition i-pora"n." of the nonpuerperal years have called attenp-..*urr.y or childbirth' Many reports in recent in procedure, difierences from arising tion to the lack of comparability butnonesofarhasattemptedtoevaluatetheefiectofthesedifferences upon the maternal mortality rates' upon the effect of diiIn order to obtain dut, ih^t would throw light of maternal morcomparability the on ferencesin assignmentprocedure t"lityr*terit*"rpi^rr.redtosendtothebureausofvitalstatisticsinthe the pertinent information from 1,073 United principal 'sa"a", foreign countries 2 or childbirth rn"as death certificates f.ot 1927 on which Plegnancy as puerperal death each mark office each mentioned, with a request that of cause' assignm-ent of method own to its o, .otpn"rp"r"l "..ordi,'g TheBureauoftheCensushadcodedalldeathslor]-92Tinaccordance of Causesof Death and rvith the 1920 revision of the International List latter being used for the Death' of the 1925 Manual of Joint Causes Of the simultaneousiy' reported are causeswhen two or more assigning "g.orrp as physician attending the by of 1'073 deaths certified ."*"pt. ruies' States United the under pu"ip"ru1, the Bureau of the Census, 3 76 (7'l percent) 9g7 (92.g percent) to the puerperal state and "r.igt"d to nonpuerperal conditions' to each cause rubric The number and percentageof deaths assigned table 1 lor the 997 in shown are included under the puerperal state puerperal deaths in all for and in the sample fn..p..ut deaths included ' The differences t927 dttitg area the United States birth-registration the sample and in in causes various the in ait" p.r."ntage of deaths from that they are demonstrates test the toial are unimportant. Statistical -'fft"r..*incateshadbeenselectedatrandombythelateDr'W'H'Davis'thenChief for United States Bureau of the Census, from transcripts Statistician for Vital S,*i*i.r, purpose of studying comparability of United the for bureau, that at onlile l9z7 year the a.d Wule.. Through cooperatio' with Dr' T' F' States methods *i,fr ,f,"." .in.gland United States Bureau of the Census,certifilirrpfry, Chie{ Statistici", i., ViLf Statistics, c a t e s r e p r e s e n t i n g e v e r y , r ' t i n t f u a t a i n t h e t o t a l w e r e c h o s e n f r o m t h i s o r i g i n a l g rfore o u pign and The lists were transmitted to the the pertinent information'."t .p i, list Jorm. . bureausofvitalstatistics,and.theoriginaltabulationsofthereturnsweremadeinthe of the Census. Bureau childbirth iirri, percentaSe (g2.g) of the 1,073 deaths^associatedwith pregnancy and difierent from the.percentage(90'7) sign-ificantly i, arr"lu..p.."l.i"t" assigned,o were that the l"t"rt ,vear{or which the Bureau o{ so assignedfor the birth-iJg-J.urlo. "rg" l.rigzs, both primary and contributory cause' by the Census has tabulated ieaths for the area o{ the usual situation in the representative not perhaps is however, percentage' The 1925 UnitedStates.Forthereisalsoasig'ifi.antdillerencebetweenTg25andT9TTandbetween 1925and|925_29inthedistributionbyca.s"groupsofthedeathswitlrinthepuerperal (2) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University CO]IP.\R.\BILITY OF XI\TERNAL X,IORTAI, ITY RATES rvithin the limits of expectationon the basisof chance in the processof dran'ing the sample from the total group.a Therefore the distribution by- ."ui" of tne 997 deaths assignedto pregnancy and childbirth which aie included in this sampleis typical of that o{ all deaths assignedto the puerperalstate in the united states birth-registration area dvng 1927. oJ puerperal c/uset amon-gthe deaths included in the sample and l.-Dlrtribution Tasla '""-among oll purrpiroi i"liths in the (Inited siater bith-registration area; 1927 United States birthregistration area 2 Cause of death I 1 , 2 5 9I 1 , 4 5 6| 1 , 5 4 2| q tqi I 6 1 sI 3 ,5 5 6| 491 ------l 9.r 10.5 111 . 38.7 +.+ 23.7 0.3 0 .1 1 Accordirg ro the Irtcrnational List o[ Cau'e. of Death. 1920, 2 U. S, Birreru o{ the Census. Among the 1,073 certificatesincluded in the sample were many that were identical or very similar. For transmittal to foreign countries' there{ore, 477 certificateswere carefully selectedso as to include at least 1 death of every type in the sample. For some of these477 deathsoniy 1 causehad been certified,as puerperalsePsisor eclampsiaor self-induced abortion, but for by far the greater proportion 2 or even 3 causesr'vere mentionedby the physicianwho made out the certificate' The in{ormation from the 477 certificates, set up in list form u,'ith each line representingone death (see sample, p. 4), consisted of the case ,rumb"i, age of mother' primaqr and contributory cause of death, and performanceor nonperformanceof an operation and of an autopsy' At the right two blank columns v/ere provided. It was asked that the first of these columns be checkedif the death would be classedas puerperal and the secondif it would be classedas nonpuerperalby the statistical bureau in charge of coding causeof death in each country. No in{ormation was given with regard to the causeassignedin the United States. These lists urere sent to 24 f.oreigncountries during January 1931, and were checkedand returned by 16 countriesby the middle of April of the same year. r The similarity of the distributions has been determined by the chi-square test deF o r f o r m u l a a n d m e t h o d s e e :T a b l e s f o r S t a t i s v e l o p e db y P e a r s o n :x 2 - 1 0 . 5 1 , P : 0 . 1 1 . ticians and Biometricians, edited by Karl Pearson, pp. xxxi-xxxiii (Cambridge Universitt' P r e s s ,L o n d o n , 1 9 1 4 ) . (3) 10t39Lo_35-Z Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University RATES lIORTALITY \IATERNAL OF CO]IP.\R.{BILITY 6 A @ 6 oaao >"> rttl tltl rlrl rlrl r;rr ii i; il b: o! ; e r.{ ;tr t a o >G q < 6 r \ N I \s o 9.PGY o o O o 6 coat 'o N M : ! b E Btr rl@A t d c 6 @ =->s :isd9 'o :iid i;.FF E b Fg ,Ep:ds a = o ho p (.) a IE s CA ru. | o P.E I | I | J O :: -l ? ' i' :9 € F g 1' e 9 i ';e' t r 3 il ,o *5E0 Ii ; i I sU i '?,9 a ,o ; ; .e i E* E ; 'o li JU ot'-,8 o!,=,2 = ri l v ! i L qtt== o ;N i , .l d L - d ' Y . > +E!.zaE+ :.=< -ri . 9 H a / = ^^ : c d c li ; ;i x ? !l; e d^ > sa as : 3 i .Eho^-2ii=* o tr "^'i o ;i -Y ; 2 ! X t C . ='F -= a !! E I E 1 ! i u tr -E :E]Id< h .- s ? s\OmqO\ N $ N ct|h\ONAO\O Zl-HN d &c-o'O .+t L... 50 ".: i 'A: o = t O. u d tr =5 H9 .= H y = !9 '9 h xc. I h O r) E d ia ; d 'tr '7> ad E@ o.= o o m a 'Fe &P E>\ c,odd\O<> .+dt+dN$ NS*4h\o dNNdNN Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University COIIPARABILITY OF MATERNAL MORTALITY RATES Upon the return of the lists the 596 deaths in the original group not sent abroad but identical with those sent were classedas puerperal or nonpuerperalin accordancewith the assignmentsmade by the foreign countries for those that had been transmitted. The groups of deaths were then thrown together, and a tabulation of the 1,073certificateswas prepared showing the assignmentof the United States Bureau of the Census and the classificationas puerperal or nonpuerperal by each foreign bureau that complied with the request. Proportion of Deaths Assigned to Puerperal and Nonpuerperal Causesby the Diferent Countries Tabie 2 showsthe number of deathsclassifieCas puerperal and as nonpuerperal by the United States and by each country that furnished information. No decision was reached by some countries with regard to the classificationof a few of the deaths,as under their proceduremore information would have been required before the classification could be determined. As has been noted, the United States had assignedto the puerperal state 997 (92.9 percent) of the 1,073 deaths associated with pregnancy and childbirth. Denmark, the only country that would have so assigned more deaths than the United States, ciassified1,054 (99.4 percent) as puerperal. Norway would have assignedthe fewest,825 (76.9 percent), and England and Wales came next to Norway with 844 (78.7 percent). The proportion of deaths assignedto nonpuerperalcausesvaried from 23.1 percent for Norway to six-tenthsof 1 percent for Denmark. The proportions (in the United States) assignedto puerperal causes (92.9 percent) and to nonpuerperalcauses(7.1 percent) are not significantly different from those for Australia, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and Scotland.5 These countries must be considered to have made assignmentsin approximately the same ratio to puerperal and nonpuerperal causesas the United States. Italy, Canada, Chile, Czechoslovakia, Northern Ireland, France, Irish Free State, Sweden,Estonia, England 6 The probable errors of the respective percentageshave been computed by the formula P*'*t) p.s.: g.67a5 {P=+sI!rcm: ' l\umoer rn sampre The probable error of the difference of two percentages,by the formula: r P. E. of ain.:-/ A difrerence between percentagesis considered significant whenever it exceeds 3 times its probable error. (s) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University CO\TP.\RA.BILITY OF I{ATERNAL ITORTALITY RATES and \\-ales, and Norwayr on the other hand, assignedsignificantly more to nonpuerperaland significantlylessto puerperalcausesthan the United States. Of the 4 countries which assignedthe deaths to puerperal and nonpuerperalcausesin approximately the same ratio as the United States,3 (Australia, New Zealand, and the Netherlands) have officially adopted the United States Manual of Joint Causesof Death, and the fourth, Scotland, uses this manual, although it has never adopted it officially. Canadausesthe United StatesManual of Joint Causesto supplementthe trnglish rules wheneverthe latter do not seemto apply.6 The percentage of deaths assignedto puerperal causesby the Canadian o{fice (89.6) is more similar to that of the United States (92.9) thao to that of England and Wales (78.7). Testn2.-Assignmen! to puerp.rul and nonpuerperalcausesby tp t!{11( Slatesand rertain foreisn countriesl o{ 1.073 dcathsassociatidwith pregnancvand childbirth that ortwred in lhe UnrteditaleJ durtnf lY4/ Puerperal causcs Total Count.y United States---- 1,073 997 92.9 A u s t r a l i a 3- -- - - - C a n a d a - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - l Chile-------------- - ----- -------i t,073 1,073 1,073 1,073 1,073 1,073 1,073 r,073 1,073 1,073 1,073 1,073 1,073 t,073 r,073 1,073 995 953 950 899 l, 054 844 857 884 869 971 986 996 899 825 989 8# 92.7 89.6 88.6 8 5 .3 99.+ 78.7 79.9 82.7 81.0 90.5 9t.9 92.8 83.9 76.9 92.3 80.5 Czechoslovakia --- -- --::--: Denmark-----------,, England and Wales------------------1 D-.^-: - -------l lrance----------I r i s h F r e e S t a t e -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ---- -----:----l ii"rt ------------3j - -- --- - --- - - - - - - -- - -- Netherlands NewZealand3---Northern Ireland--------------------l -- -- ---------] Norway--------S c o t l a n d3 - - - - - - - Sweden-----------------------------I I I Countries to which lists were scnt but from which no rcturns were received were Belgium' Finland, Hungary' -J a p a n , L i t h u a n i a , S a l c a d o r , S w i t z e r l a n d , a n d U r u g u a y . r Based on total dealhs classified. 3 Percentages assigned not significantly difierent from those of the Unitcd States' With regard to the assignmentby the Danish ofice of 99.4 percent to the puerperal group and 0.6 percent to the nonpuerperal,it should be noted that the deaths were assignedin 1931 and that several changes have been made in the last few years in the Danish classificationof cause of death. The statistical reports for Denmark published annually by the National Health Service (D/dsaarsagernei Kongeriget Danmark) show that in 1928 and earlier the Danish nomenclature included only ttFebris puerperalis" and "In aut brevi two types of puerperal causes: 6Macphail, E. s.: Rules for choice of causes of Death in the Dominion Bureau o{ Statistics. Canadian Public Health Journal, vol. 24, oo. 9 (Sept' 1933)' pp' 413419' Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University CO},IPA RABILITY OF MATERNAL MORTALITY RATE S postpartllm mort. (Fb. puerp. excl.)." In 1929, however, the inclusion was broadenedand the number of titles was increased;and the nomenclature used in 1930 and 1931 shows even more detail for the puerperal state than the latest revision of the international list (1929). This developmentof the nomenclatureof Denmark is no doubt due, at least in part, to the interest in comparability that has becomewidespread in recent years. The stimulus was probably brought to a focus by the Committee on Maternal Mortality and Morbidity of the British Ministry o{ Health, which has made a specialinvestigation of the comparability of the statistical aspects of Danish and English maternal mortality.T Tesrn 3.-Assi.gnment to puerperal.and no.np.uuperal causcs; deaths associatedwith pr€Knancy and childbirth that occuned in thc United Statet and in six Joreign countricst Znd-dtatis included in the United States samplcz classif.cd according to the mcthods of thesecountries Percentage of dcaths associated with pregnancy and childbirth- Country Occurring in thc rcspectivc countries I assigned to- Puerperal causes Includcd in the United Statcs samplc assigncd top,,--^--^l . causea I Nonpuerperal cauSes 92.9 7.1 89.6 78.7 81.0 92.8 839 . 92.3 10.4 21.3 1 90 . 7.2 16.I 7.7 r Figures Jor the United States are for 1925, the latcst ycar for which the Burcau of the Ccnsus has tabulated deaths.byborh primary ar-d.contribut-ory causc: those for foreign countries arc for the following periods: Cenada, E-n-gland and Wales and New Zealand, L925-3O; Irish Free Statc and Nonhern-Iieland, fQlJ-Jf; 1925-J2; Scodand,1931-32. z 1,073 dcaths that occurred in the United Statcs during 1927. In connectionwith the classificationof the 1,073deaths in the sample, it is of interest to examinethe percentagesof their own deathsassociated with pregnancy and childbirth which the countries assign to puerperal causes. Table 3 presentsthis information for the six foreign countries that publish the basic material and for the United States, and also the percentagesof the United States sample assignedto puerperaicausesby these countries. The Irish Free State assignedto puerperal causesa Iarger proportion of its own maternal deathsthan of the sample; Canada and Scotland assigneda smaller proportion; and New Zealand, England and Wales, and Northern Ireland assigned approximately the same proportions of their own deaths and of the sample. This suggeststhat the various types of nonpuerperal causesmay be certified in approxi7 Final report of Departmental Committee on Maternal N{ortality and Morbidity. Britain Ministry of Health. London, 1932. Great (7) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University CO\IPARA,BILITY OF }TATERNAL MORTALITY RATES mately the sameproportion as that of the united states, in the countries n'hich assignto the puerperal state apProximately the same percentage of their own deathsand of the sampleand that thesetypes may be certified in in a somewhat difierent proportion from that of the united States of countries which assign to the puerperal state difierent percentages percentage their own deaths and of the sample. The differencesin the of the sample and of their own deaths assignedin the various countries to nonpuerperalcausesindicate either difierences.infrequency of occurcomrence of the causative diseasesand conditions or differencesin the pleteness with which physicians certifying cause of death describe the morbid conditions. Diferences in Methodsof Asignment to.Puerperal and Nonbuerqeral Causesin the Diferint Countries Thenumberofdeathcertificates(+77)inthegroupsentabroadwas procedtoo small to warrant final conclusionsregarding the assignment Horvever' received. were ures of the countries from which returns that study of these certificates in connection with the correspondence of available examination with and accompanied them upon their return mater.n"nuui. for assigningcauseof death, and study of tables showing published are that cause nal deaths by blth primary and contributory real differby a few countries in their annual reports, demonstrate that mortaiity, high in resulting diseases .rr.., io procedureexist. Infectious given precedence invariably such as pn"rr*oni" and influenza,are almost given precedence by ..rt"in countries,whereasin other countriesthey are was no evithere when or only *h"., the onset followed normal delivery would pregnancy that or dence that an abortion would have occurred haveterminatedotherthannormally,exceptfortheintercurrentdisease. by some countries Heart conditions are given frecedence more frequently to the pregnancy prior existing than by others. Pulmonary tuberculosis favor the countries but some *1. g*.."tty considered a primary cause, countries most by considered prrerf,"ral condition. Acute nephritis is but by convulsions and *"r.ly another name for puerperal albuminuria of tissue functional the of some as a distinct diseasein which destruction in country' One death' the for the kidney is primarily responsible puerto be specif,ed when even contrast to all others, assignsembolism, AII countries include the majority of peral, to the nonpuerp"r"i.l"tt' by " self or party unifr. i""th. from aborlion, but abortions induced small country, which one and known,, are excludedby severalcountries; of death' adopted the international classification of causes ,...ntly class' places abortions due to accidentsin the nonpuerperal previously stated The United States Manual of Joint Causesof Death' Scotland' and Zealand' New to be used by the lJnited States,Australia, (8) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University COI,IPARABILITY OF MATERNAL MORTALITY R.ATES the Netherlands,and also by canada wheneverthe Engrish rules do not seemto apply, (p. 6), designatesin great detail the causeto which the death should be assignedwhen two or more causesare certified jointry. In England and wales 8 and in Italy e much effort is directedtoward facilitating an expressionof opinion by the certifying practitioner as to which of two or more causesis the primary causeof death. Generar rures for precedence are in usein the statisticalofices, but it is considereddesirable that the selectionof the primary causeshould be determinedin the main by the opinion of the certifier rather than by rigid rules. In sweden, at the other extreme from the united states, the doctor,s certification as to the main causeis usually taken as correct.ro The differencesin methodsof assignmentjust discussedusually resulted in charging to the nonpuerperalclasscertificatesclassifiedin the United states as puerperal. certain combinations of joint causesassigned in this country to the nonpuerperalgroup, however,werefrequently assigned by other countriesto the puerperalstate. Maternal Mortality Rates That wourd Haae obtained in the United Statesunder Methods of Assignment of Various Foreign CountriesTable 4 shows the total number of deaths in the sampre that were assignedto the puerperal state and the number assignedto sepsis and other puerperalcausesin the united states, the number th"t *ould h"rr. been so assignedby each foreign country under its assignmentprocedure, and the percentagechangethat would have obtained in the united States under the assignmentprocedureof each of the foreign countries. In this connectionit should be called to mind that the foreign ofices were not askedto specifythe type of puerperalcauseto which the death rvould be assigned. Sepsis,however, generally has preferenceover other types of puerperalcauses,and the deathsthat were consideredpuerperalgenerally would have been assignedto the sepsisrubric ,"hen"v"r that causeu,as mentionedand to other puerperalcauseswhen there was no mention of a septiccondition. since the puerperal-causedistribution of the deaths included in the samplewas typical of that of all deaths of the year 1927 assignedby the E Manual of the International List of causes of Death, as adapted for use in ungland and wales, scotland, and Northern Ireland, pp. vi-viii. Registrar General, London, r931. e Nomenclature Nosologiche per la Statistica delle Cause di NIorte e Dizionario delle Malattie, p. 58. Istituto cenrrale di statistica del Regno d'Italia. Rome, 1933. l0Hultquist, Gustaf : Nigra Anmirkningar till vir Nya Dcidsorsaksstatistik. Allminna _ s v e n s k a L l k a r t i d n i n g e n , l l t h y e a r , n o . 5 l ( D e c . 1 8 ,l g l a ) , p . l l z 9 . s e e a l s o F i n a l Reportof Departmental committee on Maternal Mortarity and Morbidity, p. 95 (Great Britain Ministry of Health, London, 1932). (e) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University CO\IP.\R.,\BILITY OF }TATERNAL XIORTALIl'Y RATtrS Bureau of the Censusto the puerperalstate,the proportionsof the sample classedas "puerperal" under the methods of assignmentof the different countries indicate the variations that wouid have occurred had all the deathsof that year associatedwith pregnancyand chitrdbirthbeen transmitted for assignment. On the basisof the percentagechangesshown in table 4 therefore it is legitimate to estimate the total deaths in the United Statesin 1927 that would have been assignedto puerperalcauses by eachforeign country and to compute the maternal mortality rates that would have obtained in this country under the assignmentprocedureof the various foreign offices. Te,3Ln 4.-Perccntage change that would hau obtained in the mortality. d.ueto putrperal causcs in the tlnitci Stales-tnder the assignment procedure oJ the diferent countries t _l h.e I t'- DuerDeral stalc l-r- I Number ofl Percentof Number of deaths deaths I charge I -- U n i t e dS t a t e s - - - - ] 997 392 995 953 950 899 l,054 844 857 88,1 869 971 986 996 899 825 98 86.1 388 L Australia---------- -----------------l ---------l Canada-----------------Chile-------------- - -----L Czechoslovakia-------Denmark----- Ii,igi".Jl.i-rv"r"r----------,-----' l'lstonia-----------, - -- -- ----:--] L.- - ^- i , i l i ' i ' i .3. i " , " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Itall'---- - - - - - ------ - -. - -- -- - --- --- -l Netherlands- - -,New Zealand----Northera lreland--------------- __---:-N;;"t- ____ __-____-__-____ Scotland--------. LI Sweden----------- 382 370 393 338 311 367 328 386 389 387 374 364 390 3& Percent of ^L"--- " ;- ;5;. 0 -o_ I -12.6 +9.3 -16. 4 -9. I -1+.5 -10.6 -3.3 -t.3 +-0.7 -13.2 -23.8 -1.0 -17.+ Because of the variation that occurs in the different countrles in certification of cause as weli as the possible differencesin the relative frequency of the occurrenceof the various diseasesin eonnectionwith deathsassignedto pregnancyand childbirth, the effectsof the similarities and difierencesin assignmentprocedureare measurableonly in terms of what the United Statesrate would have beenhad its deathsbeen classified in the foreign bureausof vital statistics. The rates thus obtained for the United Statesmay, of course,be comparedrvith the ratesof the countries themselves. Table 5 showsthe actuai ratesof the United Statesfrom deathsassigned to the puerperal state and from puerperal sepsisand other puerperal causes,and estimatedrates for the United Statesbasedon the assignment methodsof eachof the foreignofilces. In juxtaposition to theseestimated rates for the United States the actual rates of the foreign countries are sholvr,. For each country except France the official rate is computed cn the basis of total live births. The French rate is basedon the total (10) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University CO\IP.\RABILITY OF IIATERNAL I,fORTALITY RAT I - ]S births of infants reported as living at the time of registration,but is not significantly different from the rate that would result from using total live births.1l The differencesbetweenthe estimatedrates for the United Statesbased on the foreign methods of assignmentand the rates of the foreign countriesthemselvesmust be consideredas representativeof real differencesin mortality arising from variation in such factors as social and economic conditions, racial and physiologicaltypes, general public health, community provision for maternal welfare,and obstetric practice. 'ltsre S.-Maternal mortality rates that would haae obtained in thc Unitcd States under thc methorls of asstgnment of certain foreign counbict and thc oficial rates oJ these countries; 1927 Dcaths assigoed to the pucrpcral Puerperal Cruntry I I i i I I Kate ot I United Statesi lunder methodi Olficial lof assignmenti rate of j of.spccificd country Iorergtr. I r l I couotry state per 10.000 livc births scpticcmia All other puerperal causes Ratc of States ,method I asslgnmcnt of spccificd forcign country I 64.7 39.7 59.2 55.5 57.7 35.8 r40.5 4 1 .I 4 1 .I 528.7 45.1 26.4 29.0 49.1 48. 0 24.5 64.3 27.8 37.7 36.4 38.1 1 6 .0 127.9 1 Estimate based on sample of 1,073 deaths that occurred in the Unitcd ! Figures fron olicial sources. 3 Not significantly difierent from the United Statcs omcial rate, I Rate for 1931. 6 Based on total births rcported as livc, 2 5+ . 32.5 | 17.3 32.3 1 7+ . 20.0 2+.O 30.0 t+.3 +5.3 15.1 States in 1927. The lowest maternal mortality rate for the United States would have occurred if the practice in assignmentof causeof death of Norway had 1 1U n d e r t h e l a w o f F r a n c e a l l b i r t h s m u s t b e r e g i s t e r e dw i t h i n 3 d a y s , and'it must be specifiedwhether the child was alive at date of registration (pr6:entl vitant) or dead at that time (mort-ni). It is not obligatory to specify whether the mort-n6s were born alive or born dead, but spacefor this information is provided on the certificate, and the information is generally given for statistical use. Every year there are from 3,000 to 4,000 mort-n6s for which there is no report as to condition of life at birth. In the rates shown in tables 5 and 7 these births are not included. I{ all of them were considered born alive-thev unquestionably include many still-born fetuses-the total live births would be increased from 0.4 to 0.5 percent annually, and the maternal mortality rates would be decreasedat most 0.2 per 10,000. (I I ) ts-Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University CO\TPARABILITY OF }TATERNAL I,TORTALITY RATES beenused (53.5per 10,000livebirths). If England and Wales had made the assignments,the rate would have been 54'8. These minimums are to be contrastedwith the maximum rate (68.4) which would have obtained under the procedureof Denmark, and with the oficial rate of the United Statesitself (6+.7). The rates that would have obtained for the United States from assignment by countries in which the percentage of deaths associatedwith pregnancyand childbirth that were assignedto the puerperal state was approximately the same12as that of the United States were: Austr alia, 64.6;New Zealand, 64.6; Scotlar^d,64.2; and the Netherlands, 64.0. The rates {or the United States if the assignmentsof cause had been made in accordance with the ofRcial practice in the respective foreign ofices were, with but one exception (Scotland), in excessof the oficial flgures of the respective countries. Under the procedure of Scotland the United States rate would have beer. 64.2 and the Scottish rate was 64.3. After adjustment of assignment procEduresthe United States rates exceeded the ofrcial rates of five countries (Norway, Sweden, France, Italy, and the Netherlands) by at least 100 percent. In discussionsof official maternal mortality rates the United States is often referred to as heading the list; that is, having the highest rate. The United States rate under the assignmentproceduresof Australia, New Zealand, and Denmark would maintain this position with respect to the official rates of those countries. The best position that the United States could have achieved would be fifth from the highest, when its rate is determined under the system of Norway and of England and Wales. (Countries with .higher rates would be Scotland, Australia, Chile, and Canada.) Under every system of assignmentthe United States has a very high maternal mortality rate in comparisonwith other countries. The oficial United States rate from puerperal sepsiswas 25'0 per 10,000 live births, a figure in excessof that of every country except New Zealand (25.1). The United states rates from sepsisestimated on the basis of the foreign procedures varied from a minimum of 19.8 per 10,000 live births, which would have obtained if the assignmentshad been made by Estonia, and 20.9under the procedureof the Irish Free State, to a maximum of 25.1 under the Danish procedure. The offlcial rates o{ these countriesfor deathsfrom sepsiswere 8.6 (Estonia), 12.8 (Irish Free State), and 12.6' (Denmark). The rates are for the same year as the sample, 1927, exceptthat of Denmark, which is for 1931, a year when classification was more nearly similar to that of the United States (seep. 7). The estimates for the United States when the foreign method of classification was used were, in every instance excePt New Zealand, higher than the oficial rates of the countries themselves. The adjusted United States. r?As tesied by tl;e method described for significanceof differences. Seep' 5, footnote 5 (r2) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University COMPARABILITY OF IVIATERNAL }IORT,\LITY R.{TES rates were more than double the rates of Estonia, France, Italy, the Netherlands, and Norway. Under the proceduresof Estonia and the Irish Free state the United states would have stood third from the highest in its maternal mortality rate from sepsis,New Zealand and Australia being higher. Under the assignmentprocedureof every other countr\the United Stateswould have had the highestor next to the highestsepsis rate with respectto the oficial rates of the countriesthemselves. The estimated rates for the United States from all other oueroeral causesvaried from 30.3 basedon the procedureof Norway to 43.4 basecl on the procedureof Denmark, the oftcial rate for the United Statesbeing 39.7. In contrast to theserates, the oficial rates of the foreign countries varied from 14.3 for Norway to 38.1 for Chile and 45.3 for Scotland,the last two being the only countrieswhoseown figuresexceedthe comparable rates estimated for the United States. Five foreign countries had rates lessthan 20, nine had rateslessthan 30 per 10,0@live births. The official United Statesrate is next to the highest. If the deathshad been assigned by the procedureof Norway, which affords the minimum estimate, the United States rvould have been seventh in the list as comDaredwith the oftcial rates of the foreisn countries. Comparison of the United StatesRate for Deaths ,4ssigned to the Puerperal Statewith Thosefor All Deaths Associatedutith Pregnancy and Childbirth in Six Foreign Countries Further evidencethat the height of the maternal mortality rates in the United States is not due solely to the method of assignmentof cause appears in table 6, which gives for the years l92S-32 the mortality rates from all deaths associatedwith pregnancy and childbirth in six foreign countriesthat publish the basic facts, and the United Statesrates for deaths assignedto puerperal causes. The United States figures of course exciude deaths in which pregnancy or childbirth was mentioned on the death certificate together with a nonpuerperalcause considered primary under the rules,whereasthe ratesfor the foreign countriesinclude ail deaths in which pregnancyor childbirth was mentioned on the death certificate. In each year the United States rate for deaths assignedto the puerperal state either exceededor was approximately the same as those of the other countriesfor all deaths in connectionwith which the puerperalstate was mentioned,exceptCanadain 1925 an.d1926and Scotland in I93l and 1932. (l 3 ) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University CO}IPARABILITY OF MATERNAL RATES MORTALITY Taglg6.-jllorralityratest'rorndeathsassigned.tothepuerpefalstateintheUniudStaxsand fromallt]tathsassociated'with?r,gnoncyandchitdbirthinsixforeigncountrics,l92S_32 I Deaths associated with pregnaocv and childbirth Coutrtry !927 65.6 64.7 67.5 51.4 53.8 45.0 (4. + 54.3 48.5 5 1 6. OL. L Lgro I tnrt 1928 1e3z ltl 69.5 I 66. 0 56.2 6 8 .9 I 5 8 . 2| 48. 6 I 50.7 6 5 .1 62.6 I 5J. I 1 lliff;::1::t:t'*l;'tl:','; no!puerpe!alcauses. per 10'@0 live births t r.r l 6 6 . 1 16 3 . 3 6 6.3 ( ( 5 7 . 9l - - - - - - - - ! d .i 4 i : 6 - i - - - - 48c Q 5 3 . 7\ - _ - - - - - - l - - - - - - - 63.7 6 0 . 7I 6 5 . s I 1 72.t177.7 that were aesignedto erclude deaths associatedwith pregnancv and childbirth Trend'ofMaternalMortalityinthe(JnitedStatesand Certain F oreign Countries and t9 puerperal The trend of mortality assignedto the puerperalstate figures' is official by sepsisand all other prl..p"t"1 causesas indicated area, birth-registration ,ho*., in table 7 for the united states expanding years the for country foreign for the years 1925 to 1933 and for each rn'ithint.hisperiodforwhichtheinformationisavailable.Itisevident from this tJle that the rates for the yeat 1927 are' for most countries' fairlytypicaloftheperiod.IntheUnitedStatesexpandingbirth.regisfrom deaths assigned tration area and in most foreign countriesthe rates by fluctuation' mainly to the puerperai state have been characterized significantly been have there In Chiie, Czechoslovakia,and Denmark, The consideration' under t'rirtt". rates in the later years of the period morthe where is Canada oniy country showing a significant decrease previous years' tulity hu, been markedly lower since 1931 than in Inmostofthe{oreigncountriesbirthsanddeathswbreregisteredeach ur"u, comprisedwithin the political boundaries' y"r. ir-, practicaily "lf TheUnitedStatesbirth.registrationarea,insharpcontrast'includeda from 33 Statesin 1925 constantly increasingnumber of States,expanding the United Stateswould of area to 48 in 1933' The rates for a constant bemuchmorecomparablewiththefiguresforforeigncountriesthan Table 8 shows the those for the expanding areaof the United States' sepsisand puerperal from and mortality rates from tlie puerperal state the during area all other puerperal causesin the 1925 birth-registration of the area this countries' Unlike most foreign y"^r, wiS;9T. lower considerably were that United states had rates from these causes in|g32thaninlg25.Duringtheperiodunderreviewfluctuationisof (14) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University CONIPARABILITY '[a,etE 7.-Trcnd OF MATERNAL RATES MORTALITY of maternal mortality in thc United States and certain foreign countrit:: 1925-33 Deaths assigncd to pregnancy and childbirth births ! per 10,000 live Country :l: 925 TEE United PUERPEM'- STATE & . 7 o). o 56.4 5 3 .0 Stateg 2---- 5 6 .4 6 1 .1 33.3 23.6 40. 8 38.2 23.8 46.9 28. I 26.3 46.5 44.4 26.8 6t.6 26.3 PVE&PERAL United Statce 56.6 5 8 .3 34. 0 26.6 41.2 40.5 24.4 48.9 2 5 .5 28.7 +2. 5 56. 1 31.8 64. 0 29.+ s9.2 59. 50.8 JJ. ) 56. 5 7 . 0 5 8 . 7 7. 8 JJ. d 39. + 2 . 8 31.7 30.6 27. 4 3 .+ 4 1 .I 50. 46.0 4 1 .I 29.3 2 8 . 7 29. 45. 1 49.3 i 4 1 . 0 2 8 .8 26.+ 28. . 29.0 3 3 . 3 35 48.2 +9. 49. I 49.2 4 8 .0 5 2 . 36.2 2+.5 30. 68.7 6 4 . 3 69. . i 37.9 2 7 . 8 3 30 l SEPTICEMIA r---- t7.+ Denmark -- - England and Wales-,---------- Italy-----------Netherlands-----New Zealand----Northern Ireland NT^-.-,-,, . 0 26.4 2 + . 3, 2 4 . 2 2 5 . 0 16.8 15.0 14.3 9. 1 15.6 3.9 9.3 t6.9 t0.2 8.6 1+.9 9.8 7.8 16.4 t2.2 t6.4 18.6 15.7 i3. I 10.9 16.0 4.0 9.7 18.8 8.4 9.3 13.7 17.4 10.0 16.9 16.0 21.5 1 9 .1 19.6 t9.7 10.5 t5.7 8.6 11.4 12.8 9. I 8.9 2 5 .I 180 . 10.2 1 90 . 12.7 20.5 l 1 8 .5 20. 2+. u. 17. 10. II. 17. 9. 9. 20. 15. 16. 24. 17. 1 7 .I 19.6 33.6 23.6 10.0 180 . 7.3 11.6 13.7 9.2 13.3 1 8 .3 14.6 1 90 . 23.8 20.6 1933 61.9 53.0 57.7 67.7 40.7 38.3 44.0 49.3 26.7 47.6 27.2 33.3 50.8 52.9 30.3 69.5 34.8 55.7 50.2 7 t . 0 -t4s. 42.8 3 5 . 0 36. + 2 . 1 3 43. +2.5 33.9 54.8 50.5 7 5 .0 41.+ 40.5 41.1 24.9 i;-;' 43.1 +i. ) 2 7 . 8 29.I 3 2 . 0 30.2 2 4 . 61 2 3 . 0| I I 1 8 . 8 2 r . rI 2r.91 20.6 r 8 . 0 1 7 . 3| i 32' '8 . 5 | 2 8 .1 - ) 1 . 0 2 s . 2| 22.6 1 1 . 8 t 2 . 6 1 0 . 7| t 9 . 2 1 6 . 6I 1 6 . 1 I 2 3 .I 1 3 . 3| 1 0 . 1 I 9 . 8 8 . 71 -, , , _ t 1 3 . 9 r 1 . 6l 1 3 . 9| 8 . 8 10.6 1 1 1 | 1 1 . 4 10.2 q t I 2 1 . 3 1 7 . 7| T J , I 1 5 . 1 1 6 . 7| 1 5 . 5 1 4 . 0 1 1 1. | 1 0 - 1 l 2 3+ . 2 2 . 6l 2 6 . 7 186 . 1 8 . 231 0 .1 I I ALL OTEER PUERPERAL CAUSES Unired Statcst--- 44.4 41.+ Au6tralia--------Canada---------- 39.0 39.6 46. I 19.0 1 4 .5 25.2 3+.Z 14.5 30.0 17.8 1 7 .8 3t.6 34.7 1 9 .I 45.2 14. I 36.6 380 . 42.6 21.0 15.7 25.2 r I I . I II 39.7 +4.2 4 3 . 2 4 3 . 3 4 1 . s1 4 0 _ 3| 37.7 36.+ 3 8 .1 16.0 20.1 2 5 .+ JO. ) 32.5 t+.7 t7.3 30.I 1 7 .I 1 9 .4 28. 8 38.7 21.8 47.1 13.4 i41.6 40.6 44.4 53.4 26.4 'si.1 63.3 26.6 5 1 .4 27.0 59. 1 36. 8 17.4 20.0 24.O 30.0 t+.3 +5.3 1 5 .I 39.3 37.7 380 . 15.4 15.3 26.3 39.9 18.0 3t.9 18.6 2+.I 28.7 37.4 14.0 44.2 19.2 2t.7 25.3 38.7 17.7 2 7. 3 t9.6 20.3 29.9 3+.6 t7.2 44.9 15.1 t7.3 34.1 3 7 .I 39.6 18.2 26.5 2+.8 26.2 16.9 33.8 18.4 22.0 29.5 37.9 16.3 +6.I 16.2 l 33.8 33.8 3 2 . 5i 3 2 . 9 4 2 .5 20.4 ?1 7. 6 27.9 2 4 . 5' l 26. t-) 2 9 . 2 2 1 .8 1 6 . 7 ;;-;3 15 . )t. / t 7. 3 1 80. 218 . 21.1 30.1 2 + . 9 . 3 + . 7' 3 7 S 1 5 . 9 1 6 .i 3 6 .5 : { , 6 l E . 6 31 6 .5 Fieures from oficial sources. Th"e Uoited States birth-registration area expandcd from 33 States iq 1925 to 48 Staces in l9iJ. Provieional. Bascd on total births rcported o livq (1s) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University CO]TP..\R^\BILITY OF IUORTALITY \{ATERNAL RATES courseapparent but on the whole an averagedecreaseof about I percent per annum 13is shown in the rates from all deaths assignedto pregnancy and childbirth, in the rates from puerperal sepsis,and in the rates from all other puerperalcauses. TaeLn8.-Trcnd oJ maternal mortality in tfu Unitcd Statcs birth-rcgistration arca oJ 1925; 1925-33 Cause o{ death or( r93l 1932| 1933 6 2 . 2 5 9 . 4 5 8 .5 ,n +3 2+.I t t t I t z z 2 + . 6 2 2 . 3 2 3 . 8 ,n 4 0 . 4i + 1 . 3 3 8 . 4I 4 0 . 4 3 9 . 6 3 9 . 7 3 8 . 4 3 7 . 31 3 6 . 3 64.7 I t Compiledfrom figuressuppliedby thc U' S. Bureau of the Ccnsus. Efect of Diferences in Def.nitions of Liae Births and oJ Registration in Completeness In addition to differencesin assignmentprocedure,two other matters are frequently discussedin connection with the comparability of the United States and foreign figures: (1) Differencesin definitions of live births and (2) variations in completenessof registration. These are factors of considerableimportance,sincethe total live births registeredconstitute the divisor in the computation of maternal mortality rates. The registration of live births is legally compulsory in every country i n c l u d e d i n t h e p r e s e n tr e p o r t e x c e p t F r a n c e ( s e ep . 1 1 , f o o t n o t e 1 1 ) , where it is only obligatory to report the condition of life at time of registration; but the distinctionbetweenlive-born and still-bornfetusesusually is made on the basis of rules and regulationsof the statistical bureau. Two types of definition of stillbirths, and conversely of live births, exist. The Health Committee of the League of Nations has recommendedthe international adoption of "breathing" as the evidenceof life to be used in distinguishing between live births and stillbirths, and this is the definition most frequently used. 1a Most of the statistical offices of the 13The average annual rate of change in the rates has been computed by the ordinary {ormula for geometric progression log Y: a1 6* in which y is the death rate and x is the time. la See Report o{ the Committee Studying the Definition of Dead-Birth, in Minutes oI Foulth Session,League oI Nations Health Committee, pp. 7G80 (Geneva,1925), (16) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University CO\TPARABILITY oF MATERNAL MoRTALITY RA-fES united states and canada, however,in accordwith the rule of the American Public Health Associationadopted in 1908 and further developedin 1913, differentiateon the basis of "any evidenceof life after complete separation of the child from the body of the mother, evidence of 1ife including action of heart, breathing, movement of voluntary muscle."15 The differentiation in England and wales under the Births and Deaths RegistrationAct of 1926 is similar to that of the United States. Information as to the determining factor is not available for all the foreign countries, but in at least chile, czechoslovakia, Denmark, Estonia, Norway, Sweden,and some of the States of Australia, the definition of stillbirth is in the generalterms ',born without signsof life.', 16 It is of legal and administrative importance to have a clear line of demarcation, and highly desirablefrom the statistical point of view to have uniformity, not only from State to state but from country to country. The League of Nations commission of Expert statisticians has acknowledged,however,that the practiceof the ljnited states and of England, although not identical with the commission'srecommendation, gives comparableresults.17 The committeeon the definition of stillbirth of the American Public Health Associationshowedby a specialstudy of l,74lrive births in the Boston Lying-in Hospital inigza th"t the use of action of the heart, breathing, movement of voluntary muscle, as com_ pared with breathing alone, as a test of life would increasethe number of live births only about four-tenths of 1 percent. 18 Many of the infants who fail to breathe but have heart action or movement of voluntary muscle are already registeredas live born in this country, so that the increasein live births would not amount to four-tenths oi 1 percent for the United states as a whole. Acceptance by all the states of the American Public Health Association rule and the establishment of uniformity in practice would not lower the maternal mortality rate of 15Replies from State officials to a letter asking information regarding the distinction between live births and stillbirths show general accord with the American public Hea6h A s s o c i a t i o nr u l e i n 3 6 S t a t e sa n d t h e D i s t r i c t o f c o l u m b i a . I n 2 o f t h e s e S t a t e s the defini_ tion is incorporared in the law, in at least 11 it is printed on the birth certificate, and in 9 others incorporated in the rules of the department or included in the instructions to phvsicians. Breathing was reported to be the test of life in only 5 states. Replies from 5 of the remaining 7 States for which no information was obtained as to the evijence of life i n u s e s t a t e d t h a t n o i n s t r u c t i o n sh a d b e e n i s s u e d . 16Period of uterogestation enters into the registration of stillbirths but not that of live births. All births of any period are required to be registered if the prescribed signs of life are evidenced by the fetus. 17See Report of the Second Sessionof the Commission of Expert Statisticians, in \,{inutes of Fourteenth session, League of Nations Health committee, pp. 97-103 (Geneva, l9z9). 18Definition of Stillbirth (report of the American Public Health Association committee t o c o n s i d e rt h e p r o p e r d e f i n i t i o n o f s t i l l b i r t h ) . A m e r i c a n Journal of public Healrh, vol. lE, no. 1 (January 1928), pp. 25*32. (Lt1 Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University C O . . . 1P , \ R A B I L I T Y OF ITATERNAL \IORTALITY R''\TES this country. The question is evidently not \,vorthseriousconsideiation in connectionwith comparability. rn completenessof registration is of greater statistical importance lir-e.orrrr".tio., with comparability than the iine of demarcation between has been born and stillborn infants. Sincethe registrationof live births and in all, compulsoryin most Europeancountriesfor severalgenerations, regime, ,r.l,rii.rg Estonia, wher. it was establishedunder the Russian be expected well before the beginning of the twentieth century' it is to countries these in registered be would the births of proportion that a larger estabnot was area birth-registration the where States, than in the Cnited the of lished until 1915. The standard of the united States Bureau perleast 90 census for inclusion in the birth-registration area is that at in Nelv particuiarly States, some In registered. be cent of the births just as in Europe' but in England, practically all births are registered, oficial figures *olt St"t", registration is at least partly defective' No in this country, but it is certainly have beenissuedregardingcompleteness 90 and the ideal in excessof the minimu- .trnd..d-5emsiMh61e between 100 percent.le Theefiectofincompletenessofbirthregistrationuponthecomparabil. that ity of maternal mortality rates may be gaged by postulating first a estimating and in 1927 complete percent 95 only birth registrationwas and second, to 100, raised were completeness if rate that would obtain similar by postulating 90 percent completenessin L927 and making a births. per live 10,000 64.7 was 1927 for rate estimate. The oftcial rate the lowers completeness percent of 95 Adjustment on the hypothesis it lorvers completeness percent of 90 basis the ao 61.5, and adjustment on on the adjustment and figure the official to 58.3. The difierencebetween the basisof 90 percent completeness(6.4 points) rePresentsthe maximum of birth oossibleexcessin the oficial rate arising from incompleteness show estimates Both less. probably is excess registration. The actual a few than more to explain inadequate is that defectivebirth registration United the postulate either Under rate. ooints of the maternal mortality The ba"a"* would retain a position near the top of the list of countries. is country this in existing registration degreeof incompletenessof birth the comwith in connection importance evidently not a matter of great parability o{ maternal mortality rates' tr *" in the 1927 area was probably about 94 percent complete in 1930' *-tration of Birth Registration in This is estimated on the basis of figures given in The completeness Statistical AssociaAmerican the of the in Whelpton, P. K' b1' Journal the United States, tion, vol. 29, no. 186 (June 1934),pp' 125-136' (18) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University C O\IPARABILITY OF tr'IATERNAL MORTALITY RATES SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS This study of the comparability of maternal mortality rates of th6 united states and foreigrrcountriesis based on 1,073 deaths associated with pregnancy and childbirth that occurred during the year 1927, including 997 deaths assignedto the puerperal state and 76 deaths assignedto nonpuerperal causesby the united States Bureau of the to C"rrsrrr. The distribution by cause of the 997 deaths was similar is, sampie The state. puerperal the to assigned in1927 that of all deaths there{ore,representativeof the deaths so classifiedin the United States during th" y"ur. Information in regard to 177 deaths that included one of every type and one of every combination of circumstances representedin the samplel,073 was sent abroad,and the deathswere classified as puerperalor nonpuerperalby the statistical officesin charge of classificatiorrof causeof death of 16 foreign countries'in accordancewith the rules in force in these ofices. The countries making the assignments were: Australia, Canada, Chile, Czechoslovakia,Denmark, EnglanJ and wales, Estonia, France, Irish Free State, Itai,v, Netherlands, Ne1r' Zealatd, Northern Ireland, Norway, Scotland' and Sr"'eden' In addition to this material, the study is basedon information obtained from the manuals for assigningcauseof death and the official reports of the statistical bureausof the various countries,the reports of the Health Committee of the Leagueof Nations and of the Committee on Definition of stillbirth of the American Public Health Association,and specialstudies of maternal mortality made by the British Ministry of Health and b1' individual investigators. The findings are particularly applicable to 1927, since the deaths included occurred during that year; but since the assignmentswere made in the spring of 1931,and a great deal of interpretative information has been brought together from other sources'the findings are believed to be indicative of the general situation with regard to comparability, not oniy f.or 1927 but also for the years preceding and immediately following the adoption of the 1929revisionof the international classification of causeof death. Unless radical changeshave been made verv recently with regard to which no information is available they arc indicative of the situation at the presenttime' The study shows: First: That the methods of assignmentin use in Australia, Netheriands,New Zealand,and Scotland are similar to that of the United States, and the ofiicial maternal mortality rates are directly (1e) FE._ Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University CO\IPARABILITY OF MATERNAL MORTALITY RATES comparablewithin a small margin of error; that under the method of Denmark a larger number of deaths would be assignedto the puerperal state and the rate for the united states would be significantly higher than it is now; that under the methodsof the other countriesincluded in the study-Canada, Chile, Czechoslovakia,England and Wales, Estonia, France,Irish Free State, Italy, Northern Ireland, Norway, and Swedena smaller number of deaths would be assignedto the puerperal state and the rates for the united States would consequentrybe somewhat lower. second: That differencesin methods of assignment are insuftcient to explain the high maternal mortality rate of the united states as compared with foreign countries. The oftcial figure of the united states, which in the last few years has exceededthat of every country except Scotland, remains high no matter what method of assignmentis used. Even if the method of the country assigningthe smallest proportion of deathsto the puerperalstate were in use in the United Stat"r, the United states figure would still exceedthat of all the countriesexcept Australia, canada, chile, and scotland. Rates for the united states estimated i. accordancewith the assignmentprocedure of the respective countries are in every instanceexcept Scotlandin excessof and are in five instances more than double the oftcial rates of the countries themselves. No matter what method of procedure is used the united states retains an exceedinglyhigh rate as comparedwith other countries. Difference in definition of live births is shown to have a negligible effect upon maternal mortality rates. Incompletenessof birth registration has more weight, but it, too, is insufficient to account for more than a few points of the excessof the united Statesrate over those of most foreign countries. Neither factor is of great importance in connection with comparability. (20) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University CO\IPARABILITY OF NfATERNAL N{ORTALITY R.A,TE S RECOMMENDATIONS Bureau of the Censusto 1. It would be desirablefor the United States with pregnancy and associated p.rltiJ annually a table showing deaths a table showing also and cause childbirth by primary and contributory by color' in States' by deaths associatedwith pregnancy and childbirth urban and in rural districts in the States' procedure and the 2. An investigation of the difierencesin assignment formulationofrulesuniformlyacceptabletoimportantcountries.should Institute at an early date. be undertaken by the Internaiional statistical is the first goal' procedure International uniformity in assignment Thisuniformityisanessentialbasisforreliablestatisticaljudgmentas tothecomparativeefiectuponmaternalmortalityofsuchfactorsas socio-economic g.ogr"pfti."i conditions, physiological. characteristics' provision' health i".trr, obstetric practice, and community (2t) l**-. Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University CO}IPARABILITY OF \'IATERNAL }IORTALITY RATES LIST OF REFERENCES GeneralReferences Definition of Stillbirth: Report of the Committee to Consider the Proper Definition of Stillbirth, American Public Health Association. American Journal of Public Health, vol. 28, no. I (January t92B), pp.25-32' Dudfield, Reginald: Stillbirths in Relation to Infantile Mortality. Royal Statistical Society, vol. 76, part I (December 1912), pp. 1-16. Ministry of Health: Great Britain. on l,laternal Mortality and Nlorbidity. \,Iorbidity. Journal of the Interim Report of Departmental Committee London, 1930. 151 pp. : Final Report of Departmental Committee on Nlaternal Mortality London, 1932. 156 pp. and Hultquist, Gustaf : Nigra Anmirkningar till Vir Nya Dcidsorsaksstatistik. Allmlnna S v e n s k aL a k a r t i d n i n g e n , e l e v e n t h y e a r , n o . 5 1 ( D e c . 1 8 , 1 9 1 4 ) , p ' 1 1 7 9 . Kerr, J. l{. Munro: \{aternal \,Iortality and Morbidity; E . & S . L i v i n g s t o n e ,E d i n b u r g h , 1 9 3 3 . 3 8 2 p p . League of Nations. Health Committee: a study of their problems. Minutes, 192+-1931. Macphail, E. S.: Rules for Choice of Causes of Death in the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. Canadian Public Health Journal , voL 24, no. 9 (September 1933), pp. 413419, Pearson, Karl, ed.: Tables for Statisticians and Biometricians. Cambridge University Press, London, 1914. 143 pp. de I'Etat Civil Actuelle des Statistiques sur I'Organisation Rensei!,nements dans Divers Pays. Ofice Permanent de l'Institut International de Statistique, The Hague, L929, 73 pp. Children's Bureau: Maternal Mortality; theriskof U. S. Department of Labor. death in childbirth and {rom all diseasescaused by pregnancy and confinement, by Robert lvlorse Woodbury. Publication No. 158. Washington, 1926. 163 pp. P. K.: The Completenessof Birth Registration in the United States. JourWhelpton, nal of the American Statistical Association, vol. 29, no. 186 (June 1934), pp. 125-136, Manuals of Cauvs of Death Australia. Commonwealth Bureau of Censusand Statistics: The Nomenclature of Diseasesand Causes of Death as Revised and Adopted in 1900 by the International Commission, together with a Guide for Tabulation in CasesWhere N{ore than One Cause of Death Is Assigned. Nlelbourne, 1907. 93 pp. Nomenclatures Internationales des MinistBre des Affaires ftrangbres: France. \Iaiadies et des Causes de D6cds devant servir i l'6tablissement des Statistiques Nosologiques arr€tEespar la Commission internationale charg6e de la revision decennaledans s a t r o i s i d m es e s s i o n1 9 2 0 . P a r i s , 1 9 2 1 . 7 7 p p . Registrar General: \'Ianual of the International List of Causes of Great Britain. Death as Adapted {or Use in England and Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland. Based on the Irourth Decennial Revision by the International Commission. London, 1931. 146 pp. (22) Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University COMPARABILITY OF I\{ATERNAL \tORT.TLITT i'--:: --:e&:** x****del Regno d'Italia: \ centrale di statistica Istituto \l:l:::L. F-*rge* del]e p". la Statistica delle Cause di Morte e Dizionario *'|n+rulle disposizioni relative alle denuncie delle causedi mo:re 3 ft--q I"n'i.om-"ri infettive. Fourth edition, Rome, 1933' 274 pp' Italy. --,i.t'" Bureau of the Census: \la::e:' :f of Commerce' United States. Department T h i r d revision, 1920. Washington, 191{. D e a t h . o f the International List of Causes 302 pp. Manual of the International List of Causesof Death' Fourth r e v i s i o n ,1 9 2 9 ' W a s h i n g t o n , 1 9 3 1 ' 3 4 2 p p ' \fanual of Joint Causeso{ Death Showing Assignment to the pre. -i ferredTitleofthelnternationalListofCausesofDeathWhenTwoCausesAreSimulta. pp' neously Reported. Second edition' Washington, 1925' 209 Assignment to the Showing of Death Causes of Manuai Joint when Two Causes are SimulPreferred Title of the International List of Causesof Death 255 pp' taneously Reported. Third edition' Washington, 1933' Ofi.cial Statistical RePorts Australia. Commonwealth Bureau of Census and Statistics: Australian Demography. Bulletins43 to 51,1925to 1933' Canberra' Ottawa. Canada. Dominion Bureau of Statistics: Vital Statistics,L925to 1933. de la Repiblica Estadistico Anuario Estadistica: de General Direcci6n Chile. EstadisticaAnualdela Repriblicade chile, Demografia, dechile, Demografia,1925,1926; 1928; de chile, Demografiay Beneficencia, Repirblica de la Anual Estadistica 1g27; 1932; Estadistica 1930, 1929, Social, y Asistencia EstadisticaAnual, Demografia Chilena,monthly bulletins,1931' Santiagode Chile' NlitteilungendesStatistischen Czechoslovak Republic. St6tnl Uiad Statisticki: Repub1ik,1926to 1932. Prague. der iechoslovakischen Staatsamtes AnnuaireStatistiquedelaR6publiqueTch6coslovaque,1934.Prague. i KongerigetDanmark, 1925to hedsstyrelsen: Dgdsaarsagerne Sund Denmark. 1933. Copenhagen. StaRegistrar-General's England and Wales. Registrar General [GreatBritain]: London' L932' to parrI,1925 tistical Reviewof Englandand Wales, Kuukiri (RecueilMensuel Estonia. Riigi Statistika Keskbtiroo: Eesti Statistika 1932;Jatuary du Bureau central Statistiquede i'Estonie),December1930;February 1933;FebruarY1934. Tallinn. G6n6ralede la France, France. Bureau de la Statistique G6n6rale: Statistique to 1931;Annuaire S6rie,1925 Nouvelle la Population, de du Nlouvement Statistique Statig:ique,1927to 1932. Paris. Annual Report of the RegistrarIrish Free State. General Reglster Ofhce: General,SaorstatEireann,1931,193?' Dublin' delle Italy. Istituto Centrale di Statlstica del Re$no d'Italia: Statistica Causedi Mo:te, 1976. Rome. Annuario Statistico Italiano. Terza Serie,|928, |933; Quarta Serie, 193+. Rorne. Netherlands. Centraal Bureau voof de Statistiek: Jaarcijfersvoor Nederland (AnnuaireStatistiquedesPays-Bas),1929to 1933' The Hague' Dood, 1925tol932. The Hague. (23) 6aE- Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University CO\IPARABILITY OF MATERNAL MORTALITY RATES New Zealand. Census and Statistics Office: Reporton the Vital Statisticsof the Dominionof New Zealand,7925to 1933. Wellington. Ministry of Finance. Registrar-General's Division: Northern lreland. Annual Report for 1932. Bel{ast. Registrar-General's Statistisk Arbok for Kongeriket Norge Norway. Statistlske Centralbyri: (AnnuaireStatistiquede 1aNorvdge)1934: Sundhctstilstanden og Medisinalforholdene, NorgesOffisielleStatistikk,1925to 1931. Oslo. Scotland. General Register House: Annual Report of the Registrar-Generalfor Scotland, 1933. Edinburgh. Sweden. Statistiska Centralbyrdrn: Statistisk Arsbok for Sverige (Annuaire SverigesOftciella Statistik, 1925to L931. Statistiquede ia Suide ) 1933;Dodsorsaker, Stockholm. United States. Department of Commerce. Bureau of the Census: Mortality Statistics. Annuai Reports1925to 1930. Unpublishedfigures1931to 1933. Washington. Birth, Stillbirth,and Infant Mortality Statistics. AnoualReporta L925ro 1930. Unpublishedfiguresl93l to 1933. Washington. (2+) o Provided by the Maternal and Child Health Library, Georgetown University
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