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Dive into the research topics where Mary Ellen Stanton is active.

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Featured researches published by Mary Ellen Stanton.


The Lancet | 2013

Moving beyond essential interventions for reduction of maternal mortality (the WHO Multicountry Survey on Maternal and Newborn Health): a cross-sectional study

João Paulo Souza; Ahmet Metin Gülmezoglu; Joshua Vogel; Guillermo Carroli; Pisake Lumbiganon; Zahida Qureshi; Maria José Costa; Bukola Fawole; Yvonne Mugerwa; Idi Nafiou; Isilda Neves; Jean José Wolomby-Molondo; Hoang Thi Bang; Kannitha Cheang; Kang Chuyun; Kapila Jayaratne; Chandani Anoma Jayathilaka; Syeda Batool Mazhar; Rintaro Mori; Mir Lais Mustafa; Laxmi Raj Pathak; Deepthi Perera; Tung Rathavy; Zenaida Recidoro; Malabika Roy; Pang Ruyan; Naveen Shrestha; Surasak Taneepanichsku; Nguyen Viet Tien; Togoobaatar Ganchimeg

BACKGROUND We report the main findings of the WHO Multicountry Survey on Maternal and Newborn Health (WHOMCS), which aimed to assess the burden of complications related to pregnancy, the coverage of key maternal health interventions, and use of the maternal severity index (MSI) in a global network of health facilities. METHODS In our cross-sectional study, we included women attending health facilities in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East that dealt with at least 1000 childbirths per year and had the capacity to provide caesarean section. We obtained data from analysis of hospital records for all women giving birth and all women who had a severe maternal outcome (SMO; ie, maternal death or maternal near miss). We regarded coverage of key maternal health interventions as the proportion of the target population who received an indicated intervention (eg, the proportion of women with eclampsia who received magnesium sulphate). We used areas under the receiver operator characteristic curves (AUROC) with 95% CI to externally validate a previously reported MSI as an indicator of severity. We assessed the overall performance of care (ie, the ability to produce a positive effect on health outcomes) through standardised mortality ratios. RESULTS From May 1, 2010, to Dec 31, 2011, we included 314,623 women attending 357 health facilities in 29 countries (2538 had a maternal near miss and 486 maternal deaths occurred). The mean period of data collection in each health facility was 89 days (SD 21). 23,015 (7.3%) women had potentially life-threatening disorders and 3024 (1.0%) developed an SMO. 808 (26.7%) women with an SMO had post-partum haemorrhage and 784 (25.9%) had pre-eclampsia or eclampsia. Cardiovascular, respiratory, and coagulation dysfunctions were the most frequent organ dysfunctions in women who had an SMO. Reported mortality in countries with a high or very high maternal mortality ratio was two-to-three-times higher than that expected for the assessed severity despite a high coverage of essential interventions. The MSI had good accuracy for maternal death prediction in women with markers of organ dysfunction (AUROC 0.826 [95% CI 0.802-0.851]). INTERPRETATION High coverage of essential interventions did not imply reduced maternal mortality in the health-care facilities we studied. If substantial reductions in maternal mortality are to be achieved, universal coverage of life-saving interventions need to be matched with comprehensive emergency care and overall improvements in the quality of maternal health care. The MSI could be used to assess the performance of health facilities providing care to women with complications related to pregnancy. FUNDING UNDP-UNFPA-UNICEF-WHO-World Bank Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction (HRP); WHO; USAID; Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan; Gynuity Health Projects.


PLOS Medicine | 2018

Progression of the first stage of spontaneous labour : a prospective cohort study in two sub-Saharan African countries

Olufemi T. Oladapo; João Paulo Souza; Bukola Fawole; Kidza Mugerwa; Gleici Castro Perdoná; Domingos Alves; Hayala Cristina Cavenague de Souza; Rodrigo Reis; Livia Oliveira-Ciabati; Alexandre Maiorano; Al Akintan; Francis E. Alu; Lawal Oyeneyin; Amos Adebayo; Josaphat Byamugisha; Miriam Nakalembe; Hadiza A. Idris; Ola Okike; Fernando Althabe; Vanora Hundley; Robert Clive Pattinson; Harshadkumar Sanghvi; Jen E. Jardine; Özge Tunçalp; Joshua P. Vogel; Mary Ellen Stanton; Meghan A. Bohren; Jun Zhang; Tina Lavender; Jerker Liljestrand

Background Escalation in the global rates of labour interventions, particularly cesarean section and oxytocin augmentation, has renewed interest in a better understanding of natural labour progression. Methodological advancements in statistical and computational techniques addressing the limitations of pioneer studies have led to novel findings and triggered a re-evaluation of current labour practices. As part of the World Health Organizations Better Outcomes in Labour Difficulty (BOLD) project, which aimed to develop a new labour monitoring-to-action tool, we examined the patterns of labour progression as depicted by cervical dilatation over time in a cohort of women in Nigeria and Uganda who gave birth vaginally following a spontaneous labour onset. Methods and findings This was a prospective, multicentre, cohort study of 5,606 women with singleton, vertex, term gestation who presented at ≤ 6 cm of cervical dilatation following a spontaneous labour onset that resulted in a vaginal birth with no adverse birth outcomes in 13 hospitals across Nigeria and Uganda. We independently applied survival analysis and multistate Markov models to estimate the duration of labour centimetre by centimetre until 10 cm and the cumulative duration of labour from the cervical dilatation at admission through 10 cm. Multistate Markov and nonlinear mixed models were separately used to construct average labour curves. All analyses were conducted according to three parity groups: parity = 0 (n = 2,166), parity = 1 (n = 1,488), and parity = 2+ (n = 1,952). We performed sensitivity analyses to assess the impact of oxytocin augmentation on labour progression by re-examining the progression patterns after excluding women with augmented labours. Labour was augmented with oxytocin in 40% of nulliparous and 28% of multiparous women. The median time to advance by 1 cm exceeded 1 hour until 5 cm was reached in both nulliparous and multiparous women. Based on a 95th percentile threshold, nulliparous women may take up to 7 hours to progress from 4 to 5 cm and over 3 hours to progress from 5 to 6 cm. Median cumulative duration of labour indicates that nulliparous women admitted at 4 cm, 5 cm, and 6 cm reached 10 cm within an expected time frame if the dilatation rate was ≥ 1 cm/hour, but their corresponding 95th percentiles show that labour could last up to 14, 11, and 9 hours, respectively. Substantial differences exist between actual plots of labour progression of individual women and the ‘average labour curves’ derived from study population-level data. Exclusion of women with augmented labours from the study population resulted in slightly faster labour progression patterns. Conclusions Cervical dilatation during labour in the slowest-yet-normal women can progress more slowly than the widely accepted benchmark of 1 cm/hour, irrespective of parity. Interventions to expedite labour to conform to a cervical dilatation threshold of 1 cm/hour may be inappropriate, especially when applied before 5 cm in nulliparous and multiparous women. Averaged labour curves may not truly reflect the variability associated with labour progression, and their use for decision-making in labour management should be de-emphasized.


Health Policy and Planning | 2017

Realizing the promise of The Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health

Hareya Fassil; John Borrazzo; Richard Greene; Troy Jacobs; Maureen Norton; Mary Ellen Stanton; Nana Taona Kuo; Kate Rogers; Luwei Pearson; Ted Chaiban; Anshu Banerjee; Shyama Kuruvilla; Marta Seaone; Ann Starrs; Betsy McCallon; Stefan Germann; Anshu Mohan; Flavia Bustreo; Helga Fogstad; Ck Mishra

Abstract Reflecting on Storeng and Béhague (“Lives in the balance”: the politics of integration in the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health. Health Policy and Planning Storeng and Béhague (2016).) historical ethnography of the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (PMNCH), this commentary provides a more current account of PMNCHs trajectory since its inception in 2005. It highlights PMNCHs distinct characteristics and how it is positioned to play an instrumental role in the current global health landscape.


Journal of Health Population and Nutrition | 2013

Financial incentives and maternal health: where do we go from here?

Lindsay Morgan; Mary Ellen Stanton; Elizabeth S. Higgs; Robert L. Balster; Ben Bellows; Neal Brandes; Alison B. Comfort; Rena Eichler; Amanda Glassman; Laurel Hatt; Claudia Morrissey Conlon; Marge Koblinsky


Journal of Health Population and Nutrition | 2013

Investigating Financial Incentives for Maternal Health: An Introduction

Mary Ellen Stanton; Elizabeth S. Higgs; Marge Koblinsky


Journal of Health Population and Nutrition | 2012

A New Perspective on Maternal Ill-health and Its Consequences

Mary Ellen Stanton; Neal Brandes


Global health, science and practice | 2018

Beyond the Safe Motherhood Initiative: Accelerated Action Urgently Needed to End Preventable Maternal Mortality

Mary Ellen Stanton; Barbara E. Kwast; Theresa Shaver; Betsy McCallon; Marge Koblinsky


Studies in Family Planning | 2013

Julia Hussein, Affette McCaw-Binns, and Roger Webber, editors: Maternal and Perinatal Health in Developing Countries

Mary Ellen Stanton


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2008

Two Decades of the Safe Motherhood Initiative. Authors' reply

John Yeh; Neal Brandes; Mary Ellen Stanton; Alan Tita; Jeffrey S. A. Stringer; Robert L. Goldenberg; Dwight J. Rouse


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2008

Two decades of the safe motherhood initiative.

John Yeh; Neal Brandes; Mary Ellen Stanton

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Neal Brandes

United States Agency for International Development

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Elizabeth S. Higgs

National Institutes of Health

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John Yeh

State University of New York System

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Alan Tita

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Amanda Glassman

Center for Global Development

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