Pelvic Inflammatory Disease during the Post-Partum Year
Date Issued
2005Publisher Version
10.1080/10647440500097577Author(s)
Mahon, Barbara E
Temkit, M'hamed
Wang, Jane
Rosenman, Marc B
Katz, Barry P
Metadata
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https://hdl.handle.net/2144/3264Citation (published version)
Mahon, Barbara E, M'hamed Temkit, Jane Wang, Marc B Rosenman, Barry P Katz. "Pelvic inflammatory disease during the post-partum year." Infectious Diseases in Obstetrics and Gynecology 13(4): 191-196. (2005)Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the occurrence of, and risk factors for, pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) occurring during the post-partum year. METHODS: Demographic and clinical data for women who delivered a term infant with 5-minute Apgar score > or = 8 from 1992 through 1999 at a large urban hospital were extracted from an electronic medical record system. RESULTS: During the study period, 15 206 deliveries occurred among 12 549 women. PID was diagnosed during the post-partum year of 148 (1.0%) deliveries. In univariate analysis, young age, black race, and both pre-delivery history and post-partum diagnosis of chlamydial and gonococcal infection were associated with PID. In multivariate analysis, only young age and a positive test for gonorrhea before delivery or post-partum were independent predictors of PID. CONCLUSIONS: Pelvic inflammatory disease was diagnosed during the post-partum year in 1% of women studied. Young maternal age was an important demographic risk factor. Further investigation of post-partum STD acquisition and progression to PID is needed to determine whether women are at increased risk following delivery.
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