Maternal and Child Survival Program, KN 8 Avenue, Rwanda National Police (RNP) Road, Kigali, Rwanda.
Rwanda Biomedical Centre, KG 203 St, Kigali, Rwanda.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2020 Oct 6;20(1):583. doi: 10.1186/s12884-020-03181-7.
Helping Babies Breathe (HBB) is a competency-based educational method for an evidence-based protocol to manage birth asphyxia in low resource settings. HBB has been shown to improve health worker skills and neonatal outcomes, but studies have documented problems with skills retention and little evidence of effectiveness at large scale in routine practice. This study examined the effect of complementing provider training with clinical mentorship and quality improvement as outlined in the second edition HBB materials. This "system-oriented" approach was implemented in all public health facilities (n = 172) in ten districts in Rwanda from 2015 to 2018.
A before-after mixed methods study assessed changes in provider skills and neonatal outcomes related to birth asphyxia. Mentee knowledge and skills were assessed with HBB objective structured clinical exam (OSCE) B pre and post training and during mentorship visits up to 1 year afterward. The study team extracted health outcome data across the entirety of intervention districts and conducted interviews to gather perspectives of providers and managers on the approach.
Nearly 40 % (n = 772) of health workers in maternity units directly received mentorship. Of the mentees who received two or more visits (n = 456), 60 % demonstrated competence (received > 80% score on OSCE B) on the first mentorship visit, and 100% by the sixth. In a subset of 220 health workers followed for an average of 5 months after demonstrating competence, 98% maintained or improved their score. Three of the tracked neonatal health outcomes improved across the ten districts and the fourth just missed statistical significance: neonatal admissions due to asphyxia (37% reduction); fresh stillbirths (27% reduction); neonatal deaths due to asphyxia (13% reduction); and death within 30 min of birth (19% reduction, p = 0.06). Health workers expressed satisfaction with the clinical mentorship approach, noting improvements in confidence, patient flow within the maternity, and data use for decision-making.
Framing management of birth asphyxia within a larger quality improvement approach appears to contribute to success at scale. Clinical mentorship emerged as a critical element. The specific effect of individual components of the approach on provider skills and health outcomes requires further investigation.
帮助婴儿呼吸(HBB)是一种基于能力的教育方法,用于在资源匮乏的环境中管理出生窒息。HBB 已被证明可以提高卫生工作者的技能和新生儿的结局,但研究记录了技能保留方面的问题,并且在常规实践中几乎没有大规模有效性的证据。本研究检查了在卢旺达十个地区的所有公立卫生机构(n=172)中补充提供者培训与临床指导和质量改进(如 HBB 第二版材料中所述)的效果。这种“面向系统”的方法于 2015 年至 2018 年在实施。
一项在前后混合方法研究中,评估了与出生窒息相关的提供者技能和新生儿结局的变化。在培训前后(HBB 客观结构化临床考试(OSCE)B)以及培训后的 1 年内的指导访问期间,评估了学员的知识和技能。研究团队在整个干预地区提取了健康结果数据,并对提供者和管理人员对该方法的看法进行了访谈。
在产科单位直接接受指导的卫生工作者中,近 40%(n=772)。在接受两次或更多次访问的学员中(n=456),60%的人在第一次指导访问中表现出能力(OSCE B 得分超过 80%),100%的人在第六次访问中表现出能力。在对 220 名平均在表现出能力后随访 5 个月的卫生工作者进行的一个子集中,98%的人保持或提高了他们的分数。十个地区中有三个跟踪的新生儿健康结果得到改善,第四个结果则刚好错过统计学意义:因窒息而住院的新生儿(减少 37%);新鲜死胎(减少 27%);因窒息导致的新生儿死亡(减少 13%);和出生后 30 分钟内死亡(减少 19%,p=0.06)。卫生工作者对临床指导方法表示满意,指出在信心、产妇在产科中的流动以及数据用于决策方面有所改善。
将出生窒息的管理框架置于更大的质量改进方法内,似乎有助于大规模取得成功。临床指导成为一个关键因素。该方法对提供者技能和健康结果的具体影响需要进一步研究。