Summary
Maternal critical care is a developing area of clinical practice. Looking after a critically ill woman requires a multidisciplinary team that must endeavour to maintain the relative normality of pregnancy. Whilst consideration of the fetus should be taken when making clinical decisions regarding maternal care, unfounded concerns for the fetus can contribute to therapeutic inertia such that potentially life‐saving therapies are denied to pregnant women. The management of a critically ill obstetric patient must reflect, as closely as possible, the management of critical illness outside pregnancy. We will discuss some of the current evidence and concepts around this emerging area in obstetrics, including enhanced maternity care, maternal medicine networks and clinical care.
Managing women who are pregnant with severe COVID-19
is complex. This paper focuses on the debate surrounding steroid use in
this group. Unfortunately, despite international efforts to identify
treatments for COVID-19, there is very little research which has
focussed specifically on pregnant women. Therefore current guidance is
based on consensus and expert opinion, with variation in these
guidelines worldwide, and reports that 73% of pregnant women do not
receive steroids at all. There is an assumption of a steroid
class-effect implicit within the UK guidelines for the mother with
COVID-19 which is at odds with established within-class differences for
effects on the foetus. This now warrants further discussion given the
increasing numbers of pregnant women being admitted to hospital with
COVID-19.
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