Mangwi Ayiasi Richard, Atuyambe Lynn Muhimbuura, Kiguli Juliet, Garimoi Orach Christopher, Kolsteren Patrick, Criel Bart
Department of Community Health and Behavioural Sciences, Makerere University College of Health Sciences, School of Public Health, P.O Box 7072, Kampala, Uganda.
Institute of Tropical Medicine, Nationalestraat 155, B 2000, Antwerp, Belgium.
BMC Public Health. 2015 Jun 18;15:560. doi: 10.1186/s12889-015-1939-3.
Home visits by Community Health Workers [In Uganda Community Health Workers are given the collective term of Village Health Teams (VHTs). Hereafter referred to as VHTs] is recommended to improve maternal and newborn care. We investigated perceived maternal and newborn benefits of home visits made by VHTs, combined with mobile phone consultations with professional health workers for advice.
A qualitative study was conducted in Masindi and Kiryandongo districts, Uganda, in December-2013 to March-2014. Study participants were drawn from the intervention arm of a randomised community-intervention trial. In-depth interviews were conducted with 20 prenatal and 16 postnatal women who were visited by VHTs; 5 group discussions and 16 key informant interviews were held with VHTs and 10 Key Informant Interviews with professional health workers. Data were analysed using latent content analysis techniques.
Majority women and VHTs contend that the intervention improved access to maternal and newborn information; reduced costs of accessing care and facilitated referral. Women, VHTs and professional health workers acknowledged that the intervention induced attitudinal change among women and VHTs towards adapting recommended maternal and newborn care practices. Mobile phone consultations between VHTs and professional health workers were considered to reinforce VHT knowledge on maternal newborn care and boosted the social status of VHTs in community. A minority of VHTs perceived the implementation of recommended maternal and newborn care practices as difficult. Some professional health workers did not approve of the transfer of promotional maternal and newborn responsibility to VHTs. For a range of reasons, a number of professional health workers were not always available on phone or at the health centre to address VHT concerns.
Results suggest that home visits made by VHTs for maternal and newborn care are reasonably well accepted. Our study highlights potential benefits of combining home visits with phone consultations between VHTs and professional health workers. However, the challenge of attitudinal change among VHTs towards certain strongly culturally-embedded behavioural post-partum practices, resistance from part of the professional health workforce to collaborate with VHTs and the problematic availability of professional health workers are important systemic problems that need to be addressed.
Current Controlled Trials NCT02084680. Registered 14 March 2014.
建议社区卫生工作者进行家访(在乌干达,社区卫生工作者被统称为乡村卫生团队,以下简称VHTs)以改善孕产妇和新生儿护理。我们调查了VHTs家访以及与专业卫生工作者进行手机咨询以获取建议对孕产妇和新生儿带来的益处。
2013年12月至2014年3月在乌干达的马辛迪和基里安东戈区进行了一项定性研究。研究参与者来自一项随机社区干预试验的干预组。对接受VHTs家访的20名产前妇女和16名产后妇女进行了深入访谈;与VHTs进行了5次小组讨论和16次关键 informant访谈,与专业卫生工作者进行了10次关键 informant访谈。使用潜在内容分析技术对数据进行了分析。
大多数妇女和VHTs认为该干预改善了获取孕产妇和新生儿信息的机会;降低了就医成本并促进了转诊。妇女、VHTs和专业卫生工作者承认,该干预促使妇女和VHTs对采用推荐的孕产妇和新生儿护理做法的态度发生了变化。VHTs与专业卫生工作者之间的手机咨询被认为加强了VHTs在孕产妇和新生儿护理方面的知识,并提高了VHTs在社区中的社会地位。少数VHTs认为实施推荐的孕产妇和新生儿护理做法很困难。一些专业卫生工作者不赞成将孕产妇和新生儿宣传责任转移给VHTs。由于一系列原因,一些专业卫生工作者并不总是能通过电话或在卫生中心解决VHTs的问题。
结果表明,VHTs进行的孕产妇和新生儿护理家访得到了较好的接受。我们的研究强调了将家访与VHTs和专业卫生工作者之间进行电话咨询相结合的潜在益处。然而,VHTs对某些强烈植根于文化的产后行为做法态度转变的挑战、部分专业卫生工作人员对与VHTs合作的抵触以及专业卫生工作者难以随时提供服务是需要解决的重要系统性问题。
当前对照试验NCT02084680。2014年3月14日注册。