‘Maternal Intensive Care’: a systematic literature review
PDF
Cite
Share
Request
Review
VOLUME: 2 ISSUE: 3
P: 161 - 167
September 2010

‘Maternal Intensive Care’: a systematic literature review

Facts Views Vis ObGyn 2010;2(3):161-167
1. From the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Ghent University Hospital
No information available.
No information available
PDF
Cite
Share
Request

Abstract

Objective

The objective of this systematic literature review is to review current scientific knowledge on the definition of and the indications for maternal/obstetric intensive care (MIC). Methods: We conducted a extensive search in OVID MEDLINE, EMBASE, COCHRANE, CINHAL and CEBAM using the keywords: maternal/obstetric intensive care, subacute care, intermediate care, postacute care, critical care, sub intensive care, progressive patient care, postnatal care, perinatal care, obstetrical nursing, neonatology, pregnancy, maternal mortality/morbidity and pregnancy complication. A total of 180 articles and one guideline were identified and supplemented by a hand search. After title, abstract and full text evaluation, the articles and guideline were subjected to critical appraisal.

Results

Out of 180 potentially relevant articles, we identified 44 eligible articles of which 14 relevant MIC-articles of relatively good quality were selected. The concept ‘maternal intensive care’ was not found elsewhere, “high-dependency care” and “obstetrical intermediate care” appeared to be best comparable to what is understood as a MIC-service in Belgium. This thorough literature search resulted in a limited amount of scientific literature, with most studies retro- spective observational tertiary centre based. No clear definition and admission criteria for maternal intensive care were found.

Conclusion

This systematic literature review revealed that 1) there is no standard definition of maternal intensive care and 2) that admission criteria to a MIC unit differ widely. Further research is needed to create an evidence-based triage system to help clinicians attribute women to the appropriate level of care and thus stimulate an efficient utilization of maternal/obstetric intensive care services.       

Keywords:
maternal/obstetric intensive care, intermediate care, high risk obstetric service/unit, maternal mortality/ morbidity, pregnancy complication