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A recommended interdisciplinary guideline the diagnosis and treatment of sepsis during pregnancy

Publication at First Faculty of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine in Hradec Králové |
2016

Abstract

Sepsis during pregnancy is a serious cause of maternal mortality. Severe sepsis with acute organ failure is the cause of around 15-30% of in-hospital mortality, and if septic shock develops than maternal mortality can reach about 40%.

The goal of this new recommended procedure is a guide for the organized care of pregnant women with signs of sepsis. Any significant changes in the health status and/or basic physiological functions of pregnant women that are unexplained by other causes should be considered to be signs of the possible development of sepsis until this is ruled out.

Pregnant women with possible sepsis should be transferred to a department where their basic physiological functions can be monitored. An intravenous infusion of an adequate anti-infectious therapy (antibiotics) should be started as soon as possible, no later than within an hour of identifying severe sepsis.

As part of organizational arrangements it is recommended to draw up a formalized protocol for the timely identification of pregnant women with signs of sepsis, and to define a process for treatment after activation of a system for early warnings at specific workstations. It is also important to introduce a rapid response system (RRS), which can be activated through the suspicions of even intermediate-level medical personnel.

The goal of such a system is to ensure the start of treatment without delay. Such delays in the start of treatment procedures worsen clinical outcomes exponentially.