Pregnancy-related Deaths

Photo of a pregnant woman laying down and a female doctor examining her abdomen (belly).

Pregnancy-related deaths

Saving women’s lives before, during and after delivery

About 700 women die from pregnancy-related complications each year in the US.
About 700 women die from pregnancy-related complications each year in the US.

About 3 in 5 pregnancy-related deaths could be prevented.
About 3 in 5 pregnancy-related deaths could be prevented.

About 1 in 3 pregnancy-related deaths occur 1 week to 1 year after delivery.

About 1 in 3 pregnancy-related deaths occur 1 week to 1 year after delivery.

Overview

Every pregnancy-related death is tragic, especially because about 60% are preventable. Still, about 700 women die each year from complications of pregnancy. A pregnancy-related death can happen during pregnancy, at delivery, and even up to a year afterward (postpartum).

For 2011-2015:

    • about 1/3 of deaths (31%) happened during pregnancy;
    • about 1/3 (36%) happened at delivery or in the week after; and
    • about 1/3 (33%) happened 1 week to 1 year postpartum.
  • Heart disease and stroke caused more than 1 in 3 deaths (34%). Other leading causes of death included infections and severe bleeding.
  • Black and American Indian/Alaska Native women were about 3 times as likely to die from a pregnancy-related cause as White women.

Preventing pregnancy-related death every step of the way.

Preventing pregnancy-related death every step of the way. Death can happen up to a year after delivery: 31% of pregnancy-related deaths occur during pregnancy, 36% occur during delivery and up to 1 week afterward, and 33% occur 1 week to 1 year after delivery.  Photo of a woman holding her baby.

View Text Description

SOURCE: CDC Vital Signs, May 2019

During Pregnancy: Improve access to and delivery of quality prenatal care, which includes managing chronic conditions and educating about warning signs.
At Delivery: Standardize patient care, including delivering high-risk women at hospitals with specialized providers and equipment.
Postpartum: Provide high-quality care for mothers up to one year after birth, which includes communicating with patients about warning signs and connecting to prompt follow-up care.
Problem
Pregnancy-related death can happen throughout pregnancy and after.
Every death reflects a web of missed opportunities.
  • Factors playing a part can include:
    • access to care;
    • missed or delayed diagnoses;
    • not recognizing warning signs.
  • Most deaths are preventable, no matter when they occur.
  • We can better identify and close gaps in access to quality care.
The Way Forward
Healthcare Providers Can:
  • Help patients manage chronic conditions.
  • Communicate with patients about warning signs.
  • Use tools to flag warning signs early so women can receive timely treatment.
Hospitals and Health Systems Can:
  • Standardize coordination of care and response to emergencies.
  • Improve delivery of quality prenatal and postpartum care.
  • Train non-obstetric providers to consider recent pregnancy history.
States and Communities Can:
  • Assess and coordinate delivery hospitals for risk-appropriate care.
  • Support review of the causes behind every maternal death.
Women & Their Families Can:
  • Know and communicate about symptoms of complications.
  • Note pregnancy history any time medical care is received in the year after delivery.
Leading causes of death differ throughout pregnancy and after.
  • Heart disease and stroke cause most deaths overall.
  • Obstetric emergencies, like severe bleeding and amniotic fluid embolism (when amniotic fluid enters a mother’s bloodstream), cause most deaths at delivery.
  • In the week after delivery, severe bleeding, high blood pressure and infection are most common.
  • Cardiomyopathy (weakened heart muscle) is the leading cause of deaths 1 week to 1 year after delivery.
Issue Details

For More Information
1-800-CDC-INFO (232-4636)
TTY: 1-888-232-6348
Web: www.cdc.gov

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
1600 Clifton Road NE
Atlanta, GA 30333
Publication date: May 7, 2019

Page last reviewed: May 7, 2019
Content source: Office of the Associate Director for Communication