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基层医院孕产妇脓毒症的转诊与紧急处理流程
Referral and emergency treatment process for maternal sepsis in primary hospitals
孕产妇脓毒症起病隐匿、进展迅速,基层医院在早期识别、经验性抗菌药物使用、转诊启动和院际交接等环节发生延误时,母儿不良结局风险明显增加。结合县域基层救治实际与危重孕产妇管理经验,文章围绕“首诊识别-诊断评估-早期治疗-转诊转运-院际交接”的救治链条进行阐述。强调重视主诉与现病史,系统评估生命体征与器官灌注;尽快完成感染相关指标、血气分析及乳酸检测等关键检查并复测与再评估;在氧合与循环支持基础上尽早启动经验性抗菌治疗,实施抗休克与器官功能支持;明确分层转诊指征,规范转诊前准备与转运途中监护;通过标准化交接与医联体协同提高接续救治效率。旨在为基层医院建立可操作的孕产妇脓毒症紧急处置与转诊流程提供参考,以减少救治延误并改善母儿结局。
Maternal sepsis has a insidious onset and progresses rapidly, and delayed recognition, delayed empirical antimicrobial therapy, delayed initiation of referral, and delayed inter-hospital handover in the primary hospitals may increase the risk of adverse maternal and fetal outcomes. Based on county-level practice and experience in managing critically ill obstetric patients, this article outlines a management pathway covering initial recognition, diagnostic assessment, early treatment, referral/transfer preparation, and inter-hospital handover. It emphasizes chief complaints and the present disease history and systematic assessment of vital signs and organ perfusion; prompt completion of key testing (including infection-related indexes, blood gas analysis and lactate detection) should be done with repeated measurement and reassessment; initiate empirical antibiotic therapy as soon as possible based on oxygenation and hemodynamic support and implement anti-shock and organ function support; clarify stratified referral indications and standardize pre-referral preparation and in-transfer care; increase efficacy of continuity of care through standardized structured handover and referral process. The aim is to provide referrences for the primary hospitals to establish a practical workflow of emergency management and referral of maternal sepsis, in order to reduce management delays and improve maternal and fetal outcomes.
孕产妇脓毒症 / 基层医院 / 紧急处理 / 转诊 / 流程管理
maternal sepsis / primary hospitals / emergency management / referral / workflow
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There is a need for a clear and actionable definition of maternal sepsis, in order to better assess the burden of this condition, trigger timely and effective treatment and allow comparisons across facilities and countries. The objective of this study was to review maternal sepsis definitions and identification criteria and to report on the results of an expert consultation to develop a new international definition of maternal sepsis.All original and review articles and WHO documents, as well as clinical guidelines providing definitions and/or identification criteria of maternal sepsis were included. A multidisciplinary international panel of experts was surveyed through an online consultation in March-April 2016 on their opinion on the existing sepsis definitions, including new definition of sepsis proposed for the adult population (2016 Third International Consensus Definitions for Sepsis and Septic Shock) and importance of different criteria for identification of maternal sepsis. The definition was agreed using an iterative process in an expert face-to-face consensus development meeting convened by WHO and Jhpiego.Standardizing the definition of maternal sepsis and aligning it with the current understanding of sepsis in the adult population was considered a mandatory step to improve the assessment of the burden of maternal sepsis by the expert panel. The literature review and expert consultation resulted in a new WHO consensus definition "Maternal sepsis is a life-threatening condition defined as organ dysfunction resulting from infection during pregnancy, child-birth, post-abortion, or post-partum period". Plans are in progress to validate the new WHO definition of maternal sepsis in a large international population.The operationalization of the new maternal sepsis definition requires generation of a set of practical criteria to identify women with sepsis. These criteria should enable clinicians to focus on the timely initiation of actionable elements of care (administration of antimicrobials and fluids, support of vital organ functions, and referral) and improve maternal outcomes.
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Frequency and management of maternal infection in health facilities in 52 countries (GLOSS):a 1-week inception cohort study[J]. Lancet Glob Health, 2020, 8(5): e661-e671. DOI: 10.1016/s2214-109x(20)30109-1.
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Sepsis in obstetric care is one of the leading causes of maternal death in the United States, with Black, Asian/Pacific Islander, and American Indian/Alaska Native obstetric patients experiencing sepsis at disproportionately higher rates. State maternal mortality review committees have determined that deaths are preventable much of the time and are caused by delays in recognition, treatment, and escalation of care. The "Sepsis in Obstetric Care" patient safety bundle provides guidance for health care teams to develop coordinated, multidisciplinary care for pregnant and postpartum people by preventing infection and recognizing and treating infection early to prevent progression to sepsis. This is one of several core patient safety bundles developed by AIM (the Alliance for Innovation on Maternal Health) to provide condition- or event-specific clinical practices that should be implemented in all appropriate care settings. As with other bundles developed by AIM, the "Sepsis in Obstetric Care" patient safety bundle is organized into five domains: Readiness, Recognition and Prevention, Response, Reporting and Systems Learning, and Respectful, Equitable, and Supportive Care. The Respectful, Equitable, and Supportive Care domain provides essential best practices to support respectful, equitable, and supportive care to all patients. Further health equity considerations are integrated into the elements of each domain.Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.
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NICE. Suspected sepsis in pregnant or recently pregnant people: recognition, diagnosis and early manLondon[M/ON]// National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence: Clinical Guidelines. London: NICE. 2025. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41875254.
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The Society of Australia and New Zealand (SOMANZ) published its first sepsis in pregnancy and the postpartum period guideline in 2017 (Aust N Z J Obstet Gynaecol, 57, 2017, 540). In the intervening 6 years, maternal mortality from sepsis has remained static.
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利益冲突 所有作者均声明不存在利益冲突
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