Division of Reproductive Health, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA.
U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, Rockville, MD, USA.
Glob Health Sci Pract. 2019 Mar 13;7(Suppl 1):S48-S67. doi: 10.9745/GHSP-D-18-00343. Print 2019 Mar 11.
Saving Mothers, Giving Life (SMGL), a 5-year initiative implemented in selected districts in Uganda and Zambia, was designed to reduce deaths related to pregnancy and childbirth by targeting the 3 delays to receiving appropriate care at birth. While originally the "Three Delays" model was designed to focus on curative services that encompass emergency obstetric care, SMGL expanded its application to primary and secondary prevention of obstetric complications. Prevention of the "first delay" focused on addressing factors influencing the decision to seek delivery care at a health facility. Numerous factors can contribute to the first delay, including a lack of birth planning, unfamiliarity with pregnancy danger signs, poor perceptions of facility care, and financial or geographic barriers. SMGL addressed these barriers through community engagement on safe motherhood, public health outreach, community workers who identified pregnant women and encouraged facility delivery, and incentives to deliver in a health facility. SMGL used qualitative and quantitative methods to describe intervention strategies, intervention outcomes, and health impacts. Partner reports, health facility assessments (HFAs), facility and community surveillance, and population-based mortality studies were used to document activities and measure health outcomes in SMGL-supported districts. SMGL's approach led to unprecedented community outreach on safe motherhood issues in SMGL districts. About 3,800 community health care workers in Uganda and 1,558 in Zambia were engaged. HFAs indicated that facility deliveries rose significantly in SMGL districts. In Uganda, the proportion of births that took place in facilities rose from 45.5% to 66.8% (47% increase); similarly, in Zambia SMGL districts, facility deliveries increased from 62.6% to 90.2% (44% increase). In both countries, the proportion of women delivering in facilities equipped to provide emergency obstetric and newborn care also increased (from 28.2% to 41.0% in Uganda and from 26.0% to 29.1% in Zambia). The districts documented declines in the number of maternal deaths due to not accessing facility care during pregnancy, delivery, and the postpartum period in both countries. This reduction played a significant role in the decline of the maternal mortality ratio in SMGL-supported districts in Uganda but not in Zambia. Further work is needed to sustain gains and to eliminate preventable maternal and perinatal deaths.
拯救母亲,赋予生命(SMGL)是在乌干达和赞比亚的选定地区实施的一个为期 5 年的计划,旨在通过针对分娩时接受适当护理的 3 个延迟来减少与妊娠和分娩相关的死亡。虽然最初的“三延迟”模型旨在专注于包含紧急产科护理的治疗服务,但 SMGL 将其应用扩展到了产科并发症的初级和二级预防。预防“第一延迟”的重点是解决影响在医疗机构分娩决策的因素。许多因素会导致第一延迟,包括缺乏分娩计划、对妊娠危险信号不熟悉、对医疗机构护理的看法不佳以及经济或地理障碍。SMGL 通过社区参与安全孕产、公共卫生外展、识别孕妇并鼓励在医疗机构分娩的社区工作者以及在医疗机构分娩的激励措施来解决这些障碍。SMGL 使用定性和定量方法来描述干预策略、干预结果和健康影响。合作伙伴报告、医疗机构评估(HFAs)、医疗机构和社区监测以及基于人群的死亡率研究用于记录 SMGL 支持地区的活动和衡量健康结果。SMGL 的方法在 SMGL 地区开展了前所未有的关于安全孕产问题的社区外展。乌干达约有 3800 名社区卫生保健工作者和赞比亚的 1558 名社区卫生保健工作者参与其中。HFAs 表明,SMGL 地区的医疗机构分娩量显著增加。在乌干达,在医疗机构分娩的比例从 45.5%上升到 66.8%(增长 47%);同样,在赞比亚的 SMGL 地区,医疗机构分娩量从 62.6%增加到 90.2%(增长 44%)。在这两个国家,在能够提供紧急产科和新生儿护理的医疗机构分娩的妇女比例也有所增加(乌干达从 28.2%增加到 41.0%,赞比亚从 26.0%增加到 29.1%)。这两个国家的记录都表明,由于在妊娠、分娩和产后期间无法获得医疗机构护理,孕产妇死亡人数有所减少。这一减少在乌干达 SMGL 支持地区的孕产妇死亡率下降中发挥了重要作用,但在赞比亚没有。需要进一步努力以维持成果并消除可预防的孕产妇和围产期死亡。