WHO recommendations: drug treatment for severe hypertension in pregnancy
Publication year: 2018
Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy are an
important cause of severe morbidity, long-term
disability and death among both pregnant women
and their babies, and account for approximately
14% of all maternal deaths worldwide. Improving
care for women around the time of childbirth is
a necessary step towards achievement of the
health targets of the Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs). Efforts to prevent and reduce
morbidity and mortality during pregnancy and
childbirth could also help address the profound
inequities in maternal and perinatal health
globally. To achieve these goals, healthcare
providers, health managers, policy makers
and other stakeholders need up-to-date and
evidence-based recommendations to inform
clinical policies and practices.
In 2017, the Executive Guideline Steering Group
(GSG) on WHO maternal and perinatal health
recommendations prioritized the updating
of the existing WHO recommendations on
antihypertensive drugs for severe hypertension
in pregnancy in response to important new
evidence on these interventions. These
recommendations are a revalidation of the
previous recommendations issued in 2011 in
the WHO recommendations on prevention and
treatment of pre-eclampsia and eclampsia.