The Last Ten Kilometers (L10K) 2020 Project, JSI Research & Training Institute, Inc., Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
PLoS One. 2020 Feb 5;15(2):e0228137. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0228137. eCollection 2020.
We implemented a participatory quality improvement strategy in eight primary health care units of Ethiopia to improve use and quality of maternal and newborn health services.
We evaluated the effects of this strategy using mixed-methods research. We used before-and-after (March 2016 and November 2017) cross-sectional surveys of women who had children 0-11 months to compare changes in maternal and newborn health care indicators in the 39 communities that received the intervention and the 148 communities that did not. We used propensity scores to match the intervention with the comparison communities at baseline and difference-in-difference analyses to estimate intervention effects. The qualitative method included 51 in-depth interviews of community volunteers, health extension workers, health center directors and staff, and project specialists.
The difference-in-difference analyses indicated that 7.9 percentage points (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.8-13.9%) increase in receiving skilled delivery care between baseline and follow-up surveys in the intervention area that is attributable to the strategy. The intervention effect on postnatal care in 48 hours of the mother was 15.3% (95% CI: 7.4-23.2). However, there was no evidence that the strategy affected the seven other maternal and newborn health care indicators considered. Interview participants said that the participatory design and implementation strategy helped them to realize gaps, identify real problems, and design appropriate solutions, and created a sense of ownership and shared responsibility for implementing interventions.
Community participation in planning and monitoring maternal and newborn health service delivery improves use of some high-impact maternal and newborn health services. The study supports the notion that participatory community strategies should be considered to foster community-responsive health systems.
我们在埃塞俄比亚的 8 个初级卫生保健单位实施了一项参与式质量改进策略,以改善孕产妇和新生儿卫生服务的利用和质量。
我们使用混合方法研究评估了该策略的效果。我们使用了 2016 年 3 月和 2017 年 11 月两次针对有 0-11 个月儿童的妇女的横断面调查,比较了接受干预的 39 个社区和未接受干预的 148 个社区在孕产妇和新生儿保健指标方面的变化。我们使用倾向评分在基线时匹配干预组和对照组,并采用差值差异分析估计干预效果。定性方法包括对社区志愿者、卫生推广工作者、卫生中心主任和工作人员以及项目专家进行了 51 次深入访谈。
差值差异分析表明,干预组接受熟练分娩护理的比例在基线和随访调查之间增加了 7.9 个百分点(95%置信区间[CI]:1.8-13.9%),这归因于该策略。干预对母亲产后 48 小时内进行产后护理的效果为 15.3%(95% CI:7.4-23.2)。然而,没有证据表明该策略影响了其他七个考虑的孕产妇和新生儿保健指标。访谈参与者表示,参与式设计和实施策略帮助他们发现差距、确定实际问题并设计适当的解决方案,并为实施干预措施创造了归属感和共同责任意识。
社区参与规划和监测孕产妇和新生儿卫生服务的提供可提高一些高影响力的孕产妇和新生儿卫生服务的利用率。该研究支持了这样一种观点,即应该考虑参与式社区战略来促进对社区有响应的卫生系统。