-
The NASG is a low-cost, evidence-based, first-aid device used to stabilize women experiencing obstetric hemorrhage (bleeding before or after childbirth). The NASG is easy to use and can be applied by non-medical people (e.g. members in the community), if they have received basic training on using it. The NASG can be used in everywhere, including low-resource and humanitarian contexts.
The most common type of obstetric bleeding is postpartum hemorrhage. With 1 death every 4 minutes postpartum hemorrhage is the leading cause of death during childbirth globally. A woman can lose her life within hours if she is bleeding and is not provided timely, quality, life-saving care. The risk is even higher if a woman is malnourished or anemic even before labor.
Without intervention, a woman can quickly go into hypovolemic shock (the loss of more than 15% of the body’s blood volume), which can lead to organ failure and even death in a matter of a few hours. Often women die in health facilities that cannot provide the required level of care or during referral to a higher-level facility.
But what if you could ‘buy time’ to stabilize the woman until she reaches a higher level facility and has access to comprehensive care? This is the idea behind the NASG.
The NASG is a lightweight compression suit made of neoprene and closed with Velcro. It has six segments that are wrapped around the woman’s lower body: segments 1-3 compress the legs, segment 4 is around the pelvis, segments 5 and 6 compress the abdomen, with a ball sewn into the abdominal segment to reduce bleeding through uterus and aorta compression. Through the compression, venous blood is pushed from the legs into the blood circulation and helps to provide essential organs (like heart, brain, liver) with oxygen. The NASG can be worn for up to 48 hours, which allows for enough time to treat the causes of the bleeding.
Many approaches to stopping hemorrhage require advanced clinical skills and training. In contrast, the NASG can be applied by a non-medically trained person. The NASG reverses shock and can dramatically improve the odds of survival without any side effects (like infection or laceration).
These are not for sale in the United States as of now.
When do you use a Non-pneumatic Anti-Shock Garment?
The NASG can be used for all types of obstetric hemorrhage. Obstetric hemorrhage can take place antepartum (before delivery), peripartum (during delivery), with postpartum (after delivery) being the most frequent. Using the NASG especially after delivery is highly recommended when a woman is diagnosed with postpartum hemorrhage. It can also be used during a referral (the transport of a woman to a higher level health facility), to stabilize a woman while she receives medical treatment (e.g. uterotonics) and even during and after vaginal surgery.
The NASG should NOT be placed on a woman before delivery, who still has a viable baby inside her uterus, unless there is no other way to save the woman. Do not use it in pulmonary hypertension, congestive heart failure, mitral stenosis, or in patients with a bleeding above the diaphragm.
How do you use a Non-pneumatic Anti-Shock Garment?
How do you clean and reuse a Non-pneumatic Anti-Shock Garment?
When to use a Non-pneumatic Anti-Shock Garment:
After the delivery of a newborn, a woman’s blood pressure, pulse and blood loss are monitored routinely. If there are signs for extensive bleeding (estimated blood loss of 500 ml or more) the provider is recommended to call a senior for help and start the management for postpartum hemorrhage. Next to insertion of iv fluid, iv uterotonics (usually Oxytocin; if not available Misoprostol sublingual) and Tranexamic Acid, the NASG should be applied as a first-aid measure to improve the woman’s chance for survival.
Who can put the NASG on a patient?
The NASG can be wrapped around the woman in the community by a community health worker, ambulance team, medic or midwife. It is an obstetric first aid device meaning that in an emergency, a bystander or family member could also help to apply the device.
Step-by-step use of a Non-pneumatic Anti-Shock Garment:
Step 1: Open the NASG and align it in length, so that segment 4 is around the woman’s pelvis, and segments 5 and 6 on her abdomen.
Step 2: Put the NASG evenly under the women; the dotted line that indicates the midline of the NASG should be aligned with the woman’s spine.
Step 3: Stepwise close segments 1, 2, and 3 both sides simultaneously (1 person on each leg). Note: if segment 1 is above the woman’s ankle then fold it in, and start closing at segment 2.
Step 4: 1 person closes segment 4 (around the pelvis), and segments 5 (with the sewed-in ball) and 6 around the abdomen.
When can I remove the Non-pneumatic Anti-Shock Garment?
The NASG should only be removed once the bleeding has (nearly) stopped, and the woman’s vital signs (pulse and blood pressure) are stable for 2 hours. The removal is gradual (segment after segment, starting with segment1) with a 15 min break between each segment, and careful monitoring of the vital signs. In case the vital signs change significantly, the NASG needs to be quickly reapplied, to prevent shock.
Important: the NASG should only be removed by a midwife, nurse or physician. The person removing the NASG must be a trained health professional and is ideally specifically trained on the correct removal of the NASG.
What size NASG should I order?
The NASG comes in 2 sizes:
Is there enough evidence for the effectiveness of the Non-pneumatic Anti-Shock Garment?
There is a significant body of evidence available that shows the effectiveness of the NASG, this includes multiple implementation and comparison studies, and meta-analyses in the Cochrane Library. Before and after studies conducted in different parts of the world revealed a 55% reduction in maternal mortality, 80% reduction in blood loss, emergency hysterectomy decreased from 8.9% to 4.0%, and severe adverse outcomes lessened from 12.8% to 4.1% due to the application of NASG.
The WHO and FIGO recommend its use as part of the management of PPH treatment and leading organizations like UNICEF, promote the use of the NASG.
The guidelines and evidence based studies include:
Maternova Instructions For Use (IFU) are available in French, Spanish and English. For orders of over 500 units, IFU will be translated into other languages. Each booklet includes a tracking sheet for the device to track how many times it has been used.
Example story from the field of recent use
Pricing is based on shipping location and the number of units ordered. To request a price, please use the Request a Quote button below. A sales representative will respond to you quickly.
The NASG is a low-cost, evidence-based, first-aid device used to stabilize women experiencing obstetric hemorrhage (bleeding before or after childbirth). The NASG is easy to use and can be applied by non-medical people (e.g. members in the community), if they have received basic training on using it. The NASG can be used in everywhere, including low-resource and humanitarian contexts.
The most common type of obstetric bleeding is postpartum hemorrhage. With 1 death every 4 minutes postpartum hemorrhage is the leading cause of death during childbirth globally. A woman can lose her life within hours if she is bleeding and is not provided timely, quality, life-saving care. The risk is even higher if a woman is malnourished or anemic even before labor.
Without intervention, a woman can quickly go into hypovolemic shock (the loss of more than 15% of the body’s blood volume), which can lead to organ failure and even death in a matter of a few hours. Often women die in health facilities that cannot provide the required level of care or during referral to a higher-level facility.
But what if you could ‘buy time’ to stabilize the woman until she reaches a higher level facility and has access to comprehensive care? This is the idea behind the NASG.
The NASG is a lightweight compression suit made of neoprene and closed with Velcro. It has six segments that are wrapped around the woman’s lower body: segments 1-3 compress the legs, segment 4 is around the pelvis, segments 5 and 6 compress the abdomen, with a ball sewn into the abdominal segment to reduce bleeding through uterus and aorta compression. Through the compression, venous blood is pushed from the legs into the blood circulation and helps to provide essential organs (like heart, brain, liver) with oxygen. The NASG can be worn for up to 48 hours, which allows for enough time to treat the causes of the bleeding.
Many approaches to stopping hemorrhage require advanced clinical skills and training. In contrast, the NASG can be applied by a non-medically trained person. The NASG reverses shock and can dramatically improve the odds of survival without any side effects (like infection or laceration).
These are not for sale in the United States as of now.
When do you use a Non-pneumatic Anti-Shock Garment?
The NASG can be used for all types of obstetric hemorrhage. Obstetric hemorrhage can take place antepartum (before delivery), peripartum (during delivery), with postpartum (after delivery) being the most frequent. Using the NASG especially after delivery is highly recommended when a woman is diagnosed with postpartum hemorrhage. It can also be used during a referral (the transport of a woman to a higher level health facility), to stabilize a woman while she receives medical treatment (e.g. uterotonics) and even during and after vaginal surgery.
The NASG should NOT be placed on a woman before delivery, who still has a viable baby inside her uterus, unless there is no other way to save the woman. Do not use it in pulmonary hypertension, congestive heart failure, mitral stenosis, or in patients with a bleeding above the diaphragm.
How do you use a Non-pneumatic Anti-Shock Garment?
How do you clean and reuse a Non-pneumatic Anti-Shock Garment?
When to use a Non-pneumatic Anti-Shock Garment:
After the delivery of a newborn, a woman’s blood pressure, pulse and blood loss are monitored routinely. If there are signs for extensive bleeding (estimated blood loss of 500 ml or more) the provider is recommended to call a senior for help and start the management for postpartum hemorrhage. Next to insertion of iv fluid, iv uterotonics (usually Oxytocin; if not available Misoprostol sublingual) and Tranexamic Acid, the NASG should be applied as a first-aid measure to improve the woman’s chance for survival.
Who can put the NASG on a patient?
The NASG can be wrapped around the woman in the community by a community health worker, ambulance team, medic or midwife. It is an obstetric first aid device meaning that in an emergency, a bystander or family member could also help to apply the device.
Step-by-step use of a Non-pneumatic Anti-Shock Garment:
Step 1: Open the NASG and align it in length, so that segment 4 is around the woman’s pelvis, and segments 5 and 6 on her abdomen.
Step 2: Put the NASG evenly under the women; the dotted line that indicates the midline of the NASG should be aligned with the woman’s spine.
Step 3: Stepwise close segments 1, 2, and 3 both sides simultaneously (1 person on each leg). Note: if segment 1 is above the woman’s ankle then fold it in, and start closing at segment 2.
Step 4: 1 person closes segment 4 (around the pelvis), and segments 5 (with the sewed-in ball) and 6 around the abdomen.
When can I remove the Non-pneumatic Anti-Shock Garment?
The NASG should only be removed once the bleeding has (nearly) stopped, and the woman’s vital signs (pulse and blood pressure) are stable for 2 hours. The removal is gradual (segment after segment, starting with segment1) with a 15 min break between each segment, and careful monitoring of the vital signs. In case the vital signs change significantly, the NASG needs to be quickly reapplied, to prevent shock.
Important: the NASG should only be removed by a midwife, nurse or physician. The person removing the NASG must be a trained health professional and is ideally specifically trained on the correct removal of the NASG.
What size NASG should I order?
The NASG comes in 2 sizes:
Is there enough evidence for the effectiveness of the Non-pneumatic Anti-Shock Garment?
There is a significant body of evidence available that shows the effectiveness of the NASG, this includes multiple implementation and comparison studies, and meta-analyses in the Cochrane Library. Before and after studies conducted in different parts of the world revealed a 55% reduction in maternal mortality, 80% reduction in blood loss, emergency hysterectomy decreased from 8.9% to 4.0%, and severe adverse outcomes lessened from 12.8% to 4.1% due to the application of NASG.
The WHO and FIGO recommend its use as part of the management of PPH treatment and leading organizations like UNICEF, promote the use of the NASG.
The guidelines and evidence based studies include:
Maternova Instructions For Use (IFU) are available in French, Spanish and English. For orders of over 500 units, IFU will be translated into other languages. Each booklet includes a tracking sheet for the device to track how many times it has been used.
Example story from the field of recent use