Linda Bartlett
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2004
Linda Bartlett; Cynthia J. Berg; Holly B. Shulman; Suzanne B. Zane; Clarice A. Green; Sara Whitehead; Hani K. Atrash
OBJECTIVE: To assess risk factors for legal induced abortion–related deaths. METHODS: This is a descriptive epidemiologic study of women dying of complications of induced abortions. Numerator data are from the Abortion Mortality Surveillance System. Denominator data are from the Abortion Surveillance System, which monitors the number and characteristics of women who have legal induced abortions in the United States. Risk factors examined include age of the woman, gestational length of pregnancy at the time of termination, race, and procedure. Main outcome measures include crude, adjusted, and risk factor–specific mortality rates. RESULTS: During 1988–1997, the overall death rate for women obtaining legally induced abortions was 0.7 per 100,000 legal induced abortions. The risk of death increased exponentially by 38% for each additional week of gestation. Compared with women whose abortions were performed at or before 8 weeks of gestation, women whose abortions were performed in the second trimester were significantly more likely to die of abortion-related causes. The relative risk (unadjusted) of abortion-related mortality was 14.7 at 13–15 weeks of gestation (95% confidence interval [CI] 6.2, 34.7), 29.5 at 16–20 weeks (95% CI 12.9, 67.4), and 76.6 at or after 21 weeks (95% CI 32.5, 180.8). Up to 87% of deaths in women who chose to terminate their pregnancies after 8 weeks of gestation may have been avoidable if these women had accessed abortion services before 8 weeks of gestation. CONCLUSION: Although primary prevention of unintended pregnancy is optimal, among women who choose to terminate their pregnancies, increased access to surgical and nonsurgical abortion services may increase the proportion of abortions performed at lower-risk, early gestational ages and help further decrease deaths. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II-2
The Lancet | 2005
Linda Bartlett; Shairose Mawji; Sara Whitehead; Chadd Crouse; Suraya Dalil; Denisa Ionete; Peter Salama
BACKGROUND Maternal mortality in Afghanistan is uniformly identified as an issue of primary public-health importance. To guide the implementation of reproductive-health services, we examined the numbers, causes, and preventable factors for maternal deaths among women in four districts. METHODS We did a retrospective cohort study of women of reproductive age (15-49 years) who died between March 21, 1999, and March 21, 2002, in four selected districts in four provinces: Kabul city, Kabul province (urban); Alisheng district, Laghman province (semirural); Maywand, Kandahar province (rural); and Ragh, Badakshan province (rural, most remote). Deaths among women of reproductive age were identified through a survey of all households in randomly selected villages and investigated through verbal-autopsy interviews of family members. FINDINGS In a population of 90 816, 357 women of reproductive age died; 154 deaths were related to complications during pregnancy, childbirth, or the puerperal period. Most maternal deaths were caused by ante-partum haemorrhage, except in Ragh, where a greater proportion of women died of obstructed labour. All measures of maternal risk were high, especially in the more remote areas; the maternal mortality ratio (per 100,000 livebirths) was 418 (235-602) in Kabul, 774 (433-1115) in Alisheng, 2182 (1451-2913) in Maywand, and 6507 (5026-7988) in Ragh. In the two rural sites, no woman who died was assisted by a skilled birth attendant. INTERPRETATION Maternal mortality in Afghanistan is high and becomes significantly greater with increasing remoteness. Deaths could be averted if complications were prevented through optimisation of general health status and if complications that occurred were treated to reduce their severity--efforts that require a multisectoral approach to increase availability and accessibility of health care.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2001
Sonja J. Olsen; Gail R. Hansen; Linda Bartlett; Collette Fitzgerald; Anais Sonder; Renu Manjrekar; Tammy Riggs; Jamie Kim; Robert Flahart; Gianfranco Pezzino; David L. Swerdlow
In 1998, an outbreak of Campylobacter jejuni infections occurred in Kansas among persons attending a school luncheon; community cases were also reported. In a cohort study of luncheon attendees, 27 (17%) of 161 persons reported illness. Consuming gravy (relative risk [RR], 4.2; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.5-11.7) or pineapple (RR, 2.4; 95% CI, 1.0-5.7) was associated with illness. Both foods were prepared in a kitchen that served 6 other schools where no illness was reported. A cafeteria worker at the luncheon had a diarrheal illness and was the likely source of the outbreak. The pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) patterns of the isolates from the food handler and those of 8 lunch attendees were indistinguishable. Isolates from 4 community patients differed. This was the first use of PFGE in a Campylobacter outbreak in the United States; its use was critical in determining that community cases were not linked.
The Lancet | 2002
Linda Bartlett; Denise J. Jamieson; Tila Kahn; Munawar Sultana; Hoyt G. Wilson; Ann Duerr
BACKGROUND Estimated at 3.6 million, Afghans are the largest population of refugees in the world. Information on the magnitude, causes, and preventable factors of maternal deaths among Afghan refugees may yield valuable information for prevention. METHODS Deaths were recorded between Jan 20, 1999, and Aug 31, 2000, during a census carried out in 12 Afghan refugee settlements in Pakistan. Deaths among women of reproductive age (15-49 years) were further investigated by verbal autopsy interviews to determine their cause, risk factors, and preventability, and to ascertain the barriers faced to obtaining health care. FINDINGS The census identified 134406 Afghan refugees and 1197 deaths; a crude mortality rate of 5.5 (95% CI 5.2-5.8) per thousand population. Among the 66 deaths among women of reproductive age, deaths due to maternal causes (n=27) exceeded any other cause (41% [95% CI 29-53]). 16 liveborn and nine stillborn infants were born to women who died of maternal causes; six of the liveborn infants died after birth. Therefore, 60% (15 of 24) of infants born to these women were either born dead or died after birth. Compared with women who died of non-maternal causes, women who died of maternal causes had a greater number of barriers to health care (p=0.001), and their deaths were more likely to be preventable (p<0.05). INTERPRETATION Maternal deaths account for a substantial burden of mortality among Afghan refugee women of reproductive age in Pakistan. The high prevalence of barriers to health care access indicates opportunities for reducing maternal deaths in refugee women and their children.
The Lancet | 2004
Linda Bartlett; Susan Purdin; Therese McGinn
Worldwide more than 35 million people live as forced migrants. These are people displaced from their homes by complex humanitarian emergencies—crises that result from environmental hazards or armed conflict combined with adverse social economic and political influences. Forced migrants may find refuge within the boundaries of their own country (internally displaced persons) or across an international border (refugees). Some of these refugees are granted asylum to resettle in other countries. In this paper we focus on the right of access to reproductive health care for forced migrants and in particular for the majority who live in conflict zones in the developing world. We discuss the extraordinary risks to reproductive health faced by forced migrants and the obligation of humanitarian agencies to respond to reproductive and sexual health needs. (authors)
Annals of Tropical Paediatrics | 2001
Cynthia J. Berg; Isabella Danel; Hani K. Atrash; Suzanne B. Zane; Linda Bartlett
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report | 1999
Linda Bartlett; Camaryn E. Chrisman; Lisa M. Koonin; Myra A. Montalbano; Jack C. Smith; Lilo T. Strauss
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report | 2002
Joy L. Herndon; Lilo T. Strauss; Sara Whitehead; Wilda Y. Parker; Linda Bartlett; Suzanne B. Zane
Archive | 2003
Divya A. Patel; Linda Bartlett; Nancy M. Burnett; Kathryn M. Curtis; Isabella Danel
The Lancet | 2005
Linda Bartlett; Suraya Dalil; Peter Salama; S. Mawji; Sara Whitehead