Mansoor G Farooq, Hashemy Pashtoon, Gohar Fatima, Wood Molly E, Ayoubi Sadia F, Todd Catherine S
Health Protection and Research Organization, House ♯ P 186, Street 4 Taimany, District 10, Kabul, Afghanistan.
Midwifery. 2013 Oct;29(10):1088-94. doi: 10.1016/j.midw.2013.07.021. Epub 2013 Aug 14.
to measure the rate of and determine factors associated with community midwifery education (CME) graduate retention in public sector health care in Afghanistan.
cross-sectional.
performed in public health facilities of 11 Afghan provinces purposively selected by geographic location and security conditions, between October 2011 and April 2012. Facilities were selected by one of two criteria: either a registered deployment site for a CME graduate or randomly selected through population-proportionate sampling.
facility managers and midwives employed in public facilities at the time of data collection.
three quantitative instruments were used: a facility checklist assessed staffing and service volume, and two separate questionnaires for midwives and facility managers, which measured employment duration and perceived barriers to midwife retention.
at 456 surveyed facilities, 570 midwives were interviewed. Overall, 61.3% (n=209/341) of CME graduates deployed in surveyed provinces were working in public sector facilities, whereas 36.8% were working at their assigned site. Facilities without midwife staff had lower average monthly volumes of antenatal care visits (14.6 (SD ± 22.7) versus 71.5 (SD ± 72.5)), family planning visits (10.4 (SD+13.9) versus 56.8 (SD+85.0)), or facility-based deliveries (0.55 (SD ± 2.2) versus 15.7 (SD ± 18.7)). Perceived reasons for leaving employment were insecurity (civil unrest/armed conflict) (46.4%), family disagreement (28.1%), increased workload without compensation (9.9%), and lack of appropriate housing (7.8%).
CME graduate retention in public sector positions was relatively low and significantly impacted by insecurity and cultural issues related to women working outside the home.
culturally appropriate measures are needed to attract and retain skilled female health care providers for rural public facilities in Afghanistan and similar settings. Advocacy to encourage family and community support for midwives working in rural facilities and providing amenities such as housing, education for children, and employment for the accompanying male family member are measures most likely to improve midwife retention.
衡量阿富汗公共部门医疗保健领域社区助产士教育(CME)毕业生的留存率,并确定与之相关的因素。
横断面研究。
于2011年10月至2012年4月期间,在根据地理位置和安全状况有目的地选取的阿富汗11个省份的公共卫生设施中开展。设施的选取依据以下两个标准之一:要么是CME毕业生的注册工作地点,要么是通过按人口比例抽样随机选取。
数据收集时在公共设施中工作的设施管理人员和助产士。
使用了三种定量工具:一份设施清单评估人员配备和服务量,以及两份分别针对助产士和设施管理人员的问卷,测量就业时长以及助产士留存的感知障碍。
在456个接受调查的设施中,对570名助产士进行了访谈。总体而言,部署在接受调查省份的CME毕业生中有61.3%(n = 209/341)在公共部门设施工作,而36.8%在其指定地点工作。没有助产士工作人员的设施,产前检查平均月就诊量较低(14.6(标准差±22.7)对71.5(标准差±72.5)),计划生育就诊量较低(10.4(标准差 + 13.9)对56.8(标准差 + 85.0)),或机构分娩量较低(0.55(标准差±2.2)对15.7(标准差±18.7))。离职的感知原因包括不安全(内乱/武装冲突)(46.4%)、家庭分歧(28.1%)、工作量增加却无薪酬(9.9%)以及缺乏合适住房(7.8%)。
公共部门职位中CME毕业生的留存率相对较低,且受到不安全因素以及与女性外出工作相关的文化问题的显著影响。
需要采取符合文化习俗的措施,以吸引和留住阿富汗及类似环境中农村公共设施的熟练女性医疗保健提供者。倡导鼓励家庭和社区支持在农村设施工作的助产士,并提供诸如住房、子女教育以及为陪同的男性家庭成员提供就业等便利设施,这些措施最有可能提高助产士的留存率。