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Maternal death rate 'up to four times higher than CSO figures'

A report by a HSE-endorsed body on maternal deaths says our maternal death rate is significantly higher than official figures show.

IRELAND’S RATE of maternal deaths is still among the lowest in the world – but is up to four times higher than may be suggested by figures from the Central Statistics Office, a new report has claimed.

A triennial report from the Maternal Death Enquiry (MDE), which aims to apply international standards to figures for maternal deaths in the UK and Ireland, says there were 25 maternal deaths in the three years between 2009 and 2011.

In the same period, the CSO’s figures for deaths in ‘pregnancy, childbirth or puerperium’ (the period following childbirth) show that only six women had died in the same period – with three deaths in 2009, one in 2010 and two in 2011.

Of the 25 maternal deaths suggested by the MDE, six are classified as direct maternal deaths and thirteen as indirect maternal deaths, while the remaining six are attributed to ‘coincidental causes’.

When the third category is discounted, MDE believes Ireland’s maternal death rate for 2009 and 2010 is about 8.0 per 100,000 maternities – twice the CSO’s official figure for 2009.

Of the six deaths which came directly as as a result of maternity, three were caused by a pulmonary embolism, one by an amniotic fluid embolism, one by a uterine rupture, and one who suffered the failure of multiple organs as a result of HELLP syndrome, which is similar to pre-eclampsia.

MDE said it was encouraged to see that there were no deaths attributable to haemorrhage, complications from anaesthetic or hypertensive disease, which are all longstanding and more common causes of maternal deaths.

However, the presence of deaths as a result of various types of thrombosis posed a concern, it said.

Of the 13 indirect deaths, five were caused by cardiovascular disease and two by suicide. Two died from the H1N1 (‘swine flu’) strain of influenza, two from epilepsy, two from chronic and obstructive pulmonary disease, and one from excessive bleeding from esophageal varices.

Two of the six women who died coincidentally to maternity died of metastatic cancer, two from substance abuse, one from lymphoma and one died in a traffic accident.

Though non-Irish women account for a quarter of all Irish maternities, MDE Ireland’s report said they accounted for 40 per cent of the deaths identified in its 2009-2011 report – a similar figure to the previous report in for 2006-2008.

The report makes six recommendations, one of which is the inclusion of a question on pregnancy status at the death on a coroner’s death certificate.

The report also recommends considering the founding of a perinatal psychiatry mother-and-baby unit in Ireland.

Read: Birth rate falls, but Irish women remain Europe’s most fertile

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18 Comments
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    Mute ponythegringo
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    Feb 29th 2012, 9:54 AM

    well , i hate to say it but how big would our collective blinkers be if it wasn’t for anon?

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    Mute Multi talentless
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    Feb 29th 2012, 10:24 AM

    I love how easily people seem to blindly accept these faceless “organisations” as the saviours of “free speech”
    How exactly does anonymous brand of censorship differ to SOPA censorship.
    Ever Wonder who is really behind Anon & Wikileaks ?
    Trust no one

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    Mute Richard Brownebacher
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    Feb 29th 2012, 1:52 PM

    an apt name

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    Mute Aaron Burns
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    Feb 29th 2012, 2:07 PM

    Don’t talk about what you don’t know.

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    Mute Paddy McGowan
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    Feb 29th 2012, 11:30 AM

    In response to an “apparent” cyber attack on interpol they arrested 25 people they suspected… …of using computers? of having an IT degree? of saying something out of line on the journal.ie forums? Its all so paper thin it could be a plot line from CSI! And yet interpols exec direc thinks it was a successful crack down on cyber crime. What a nice little work of fiction we are being force fed.

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    Mute Paddy O Donnell
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    Feb 29th 2012, 10:15 AM

    “i fought the law and the law won!” Bobby Fuller

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    Mute Oliver Clarke
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    Feb 29th 2012, 3:14 PM

    nothing but respect for anonymous, at the very least they have an excellent sense of humour. they will never be stopped

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    Mute Tom Neville
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    Feb 29th 2012, 10:38 AM

    I thought these guys all used IP address blockers, etc. How good are they if they get caught so easily?

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    Mute Brian Walsh
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    Feb 29th 2012, 10:50 AM

    Who said it was easy? They are known to use zombie machines etc but the folks chasing them can be just as good, and obviously are.

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    Mute Jason Doyle
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    Feb 29th 2012, 10:51 AM

    Or how good are they that the managed to hack INTERPOL.

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    Mute Tom Neville
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    Feb 29th 2012, 10:56 AM

    Comitting crime is easy. Evading capture is the hard part.
    I’m not an IT head, but from all I’ve read hacking is as easy as picking a car lock…something I also have no skill or training in.

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    Mute Sean Claffey
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    Feb 29th 2012, 11:07 AM

    @Jason I doubt they hacked anyone, I’m assuming it was another DDoS attack like all the others.

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    Mute Patrick Slattery
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    Feb 29th 2012, 11:46 AM

    These ‘cyber-attackers’ are just fools running LOIC pointed at an IP address. Hardly hackers.

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    Mute Aranthos Faroth
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    Feb 29th 2012, 12:49 PM

    Script Kids? Yeah, they make up most of Anonymous.
    Which is a shame really, considering that they don’t quite understand what they are getting themselves into.
    LulzSec & Anon and many other groups have dozens of guides on how to ghost yourself online. If the kids don’t want to read, who cares? I certainly don’t.

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    Mute Joost Bos
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    Feb 29th 2012, 4:38 PM

    Ghosting isn’t entirely foolproof, though. Even though there are networking programs that completely exclude your mahcine from the WWW.

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