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Quality of care and outcome of patients with pregnancy-induced hypertension: a retrospective observational study before and during the COVID-19 pandemic along the Wesfleur-New Somerset Hospital Axis, Cape Town, South Africa

Background: The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted global healthcare systems and may have affected care for non-COVID conditions like pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH), which is a leading cause of maternal and perinatal deaths. This study aimed to evaluate the quality of care and outcomes for PIH patien...

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Main Author: Fakir, Abdul Waaghied
Other Authors: Ras, Tasleem
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Division of Family Medicine 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Fakir, Abdul Waaghied
author2 Ras, Tasleem
author_browse Fakir, Abdul Waaghied
Ras, Tasleem
author_facet Ras, Tasleem
Fakir, Abdul Waaghied
author_sort Fakir, Abdul Waaghied
collection Thesis
description Background: The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted global healthcare systems and may have affected care for non-COVID conditions like pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH), which is a leading cause of maternal and perinatal deaths. This study aimed to evaluate the quality of care and outcomes for PIH patients along a single district-level referral pathway in Cape Town, South Africa, during the pandemic. Methods: A retrospective clinical study of clinical records was conducted on all 57 PIH cases identified over six months (January to June 2021) at Wesfleur and New Somerset Hospitals. We assessed the quality of care using the Donabedian framework, which includes structure, process, and outcomes. Analysis focused on demographics, adherence to clinical protocols, and maternal and foetal outcomes. We then compared these against pre-pandemic benchmarks. Statistical analyses included descriptive statistics, chi-square tests, and exploratory multivariate logistic regression. Results: The prevalence of PIH was 9.7%. Process indicators showed resilient care, with 100% adherence to clinical monitoring and referral protocols. This was a substantive improvement from the 66.1% compliance before the pandemic. Maternal complication rates were low, with eclampsia and HELLP syndrome both at 1.75%. However, rates of foetal distress were high at 23.0%, and preterm delivery was at 16.0%. Within the constraints of the sample size, multivariate analysis suggested un-booked status was a strong, independent predictor of maternal complications (aOR=4.3, p=0.010), while late antenatal booking predicted foetal distress (OR=2.9, p=0.022). The cohort showed high rates of modifiable risk factors, including smoking at 38.5% and obesity at 42.0%. Conclusion: This facility-level audit indicates that, within this specific pathway, adherence to essential PIH management protocols leads to low maternal complication rates. However, the consistently high adverse perinatal outcomes, related to late antenatal care seeking, highlight a significant gap in early intervention. These findings emphasise the need for early antenatal booking and strengthening community-oriented interventions to overcome patient-related barriers to care during public health emergencies.
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language English
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last_indexed 2026-07-01T04:02:30.723Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2026
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/43362 Quality of care and outcome of patients with pregnancy-induced hypertension: a retrospective observational study before and during the COVID-19 pandemic along the Wesfleur-New Somerset Hospital Axis, Cape Town, South Africa Fakir, Abdul Waaghied Ras, Tasleem Pregnancy-Induced Hypertension PIH COVID-19 Quality of Care Maternal Health Perinatal Outcomes Clinical Audit South Africa Background: The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted global healthcare systems and may have affected care for non-COVID conditions like pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH), which is a leading cause of maternal and perinatal deaths. This study aimed to evaluate the quality of care and outcomes for PIH patients along a single district-level referral pathway in Cape Town, South Africa, during the pandemic. Methods: A retrospective clinical study of clinical records was conducted on all 57 PIH cases identified over six months (January to June 2021) at Wesfleur and New Somerset Hospitals. We assessed the quality of care using the Donabedian framework, which includes structure, process, and outcomes. Analysis focused on demographics, adherence to clinical protocols, and maternal and foetal outcomes. We then compared these against pre-pandemic benchmarks. Statistical analyses included descriptive statistics, chi-square tests, and exploratory multivariate logistic regression. Results: The prevalence of PIH was 9.7%. Process indicators showed resilient care, with 100% adherence to clinical monitoring and referral protocols. This was a substantive improvement from the 66.1% compliance before the pandemic. Maternal complication rates were low, with eclampsia and HELLP syndrome both at 1.75%. However, rates of foetal distress were high at 23.0%, and preterm delivery was at 16.0%. Within the constraints of the sample size, multivariate analysis suggested un-booked status was a strong, independent predictor of maternal complications (aOR=4.3, p=0.010), while late antenatal booking predicted foetal distress (OR=2.9, p=0.022). The cohort showed high rates of modifiable risk factors, including smoking at 38.5% and obesity at 42.0%. Conclusion: This facility-level audit indicates that, within this specific pathway, adherence to essential PIH management protocols leads to low maternal complication rates. However, the consistently high adverse perinatal outcomes, related to late antenatal care seeking, highlight a significant gap in early intervention. These findings emphasise the need for early antenatal booking and strengthening community-oriented interventions to overcome patient-related barriers to care during public health emergencies. 2026-06-23T11:39:26Z 2026-06-23T11:39:26Z 2026 2026-06-23T11:32:30Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/43362 en eng application/pdf Division of Family Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Pregnancy-Induced Hypertension
PIH
COVID-19
Quality of Care
Maternal Health
Perinatal Outcomes
Clinical Audit
South Africa
Fakir, Abdul Waaghied
Quality of care and outcome of patients with pregnancy-induced hypertension: a retrospective observational study before and during the COVID-19 pandemic along the Wesfleur-New Somerset Hospital Axis, Cape Town, South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Quality of care and outcome of patients with pregnancy-induced hypertension: a retrospective observational study before and during the COVID-19 pandemic along the Wesfleur-New Somerset Hospital Axis, Cape Town, South Africa
title_full Quality of care and outcome of patients with pregnancy-induced hypertension: a retrospective observational study before and during the COVID-19 pandemic along the Wesfleur-New Somerset Hospital Axis, Cape Town, South Africa
title_fullStr Quality of care and outcome of patients with pregnancy-induced hypertension: a retrospective observational study before and during the COVID-19 pandemic along the Wesfleur-New Somerset Hospital Axis, Cape Town, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Quality of care and outcome of patients with pregnancy-induced hypertension: a retrospective observational study before and during the COVID-19 pandemic along the Wesfleur-New Somerset Hospital Axis, Cape Town, South Africa
title_short Quality of care and outcome of patients with pregnancy-induced hypertension: a retrospective observational study before and during the COVID-19 pandemic along the Wesfleur-New Somerset Hospital Axis, Cape Town, South Africa
title_sort quality of care and outcome of patients with pregnancy induced hypertension a retrospective observational study before and during the covid 19 pandemic along the wesfleur new somerset hospital axis cape town south africa
topic Pregnancy-Induced Hypertension
PIH
COVID-19
Quality of Care
Maternal Health
Perinatal Outcomes
Clinical Audit
South Africa
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/43362
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