EVALUATION OF THE EFFECTIVENESS OF THE METHOD OF THE STEP-BY-STEP CONTROL AND TREATMENT OF HEMORRHAG
In this article, a surgical hemostasis of haemorrhaging in pregnant women giving delivery by caesarean section is described. The establishment of risk groups for obstetric haemorrhaging, complete screening, and coagulopathy prophylaxis, as well as the timely discovery of placental position and attachment defects, are all given special emphasis. There includes a review of recent surgical techniques for preventing obstetric haemorrhage, as well as blood-saving technologies. The results of caesarean section in two groups of women who had obstetric haemorrhage are examined in this study. The separation of the usually placed placenta and placental disease account for the majority of obstetric bleeding. A prospective study was done to evaluate the efficacy of phased bleeding management and therapy during caesarean birth. The authors separated all of the patients into two groups based on how they were treated intraoperatively. Hemorrhaging was treated in group I using the proposed step-by-step control and treatment tactics (caesarean section indications were haemorrhaging due to premature detachment of a low or normally located placenta in the first group), while haemorrhaging in group II was treated using the hospital's haemorrhage treatment protocol (indications for caesarean section was central placenta previa and uterine scar).
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