Canada significantly undercounts maternal deaths, and doctors are concerned

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Kayla Farnan, left, and her mother Patti Farnan at Kayla’s baby shower in 2017. Kayla died a week after she gave birth to her daughter. (Submitted by Patti Farnan)

 

(Chelsea Gomez, Tara Carmen/ CBC News) — At five months pregnant, Claudia Wong knew it was normal to be uncomfortable some of the time. But she couldn’t shake the feeling something was wrong.

The Pickering, Ont., woman had already gained about 14 pounds, significant on her small frame. She’d become so swollen her legs were “like sausages” when she tried to put on pants. Her vision sometimes blurred.

Wong, who works in health care, mentioned everything to her obstetrician, but said she was told to “watch and wait.”

One night in October 2019, Wong had painful, fiery heartburn that no amount of antacid would dispel. She considered going to the hospital, but “it just felt like another thing that people would have brushed off,” she explained. (…)

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