Maternal and Newborn Health, Comprehensive Community Based Rehabilitation in Tanzania, Dar es Salaam, United Republic of Tanzania
Global Health Section, Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Kobenhavn, Denmark.
BMJ Glob Health. 2021 Jan;6(1). doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2020-004022.
Rapid urbanisation in Dar es Salaam, the main commercial hub in Tanzania, has resulted in congested health facilities, poor quality care, and unacceptably high facility-based maternal and perinatal mortality. Using a participatory approach, the Dar es Salaam regional government in partnership with a non-governmental organisation, Comprehensive Community Based Rehabilitation in Tanzania, implemented a complex, dynamic intervention to improve the quality of care and survival during pregnancy and childbirth. The intervention was rolled out in 22 public health facilities, accounting for 60% of the city's facility births.
Multiple intervention components addressed gaps across the maternal and perinatal continuum of care (training, infrastructure, routine data quality strengthening and utilisation). Quality of care was measured with the Standards-Based Management and Recognition tool. Temporal trends from 2011 to 2019 in routinely collected, high-quality data on facility utilisation and facility-based maternal and perinatal mortality were analysed.
Significant improvements were observed in the 22 health facilities: 41% decongestion in the three most overcrowded hospitals and comparable increase in use of lower level facilities, sixfold increase in quality of care, and overall reductions in facility-based maternal mortality ratio (47%) and stillbirth rate (19%).
This collaborative, multipartner, multilevel real-world implementation, led by the local government, leveraged structures in place to strengthen the urban health system and was sustained through a decade. As depicted in the theory of change, it is highly plausible that this complex intervention with the mediators and confounders contributed to improved distribution of workload, quality of maternity care and survival at birth.
坦桑尼亚主要商业中心达累斯萨拉姆的快速城市化导致医疗设施拥挤、护理质量差,以及不可接受的高机构性孕产妇和围产期死亡率。达累斯萨拉姆地区政府与非政府组织全面社区基础康复坦桑尼亚合作,采用参与式方法,实施了一项复杂而动态的干预措施,以提高妊娠和分娩期间的护理质量和生存。该干预措施在 22 家公立卫生机构中实施,占该市机构分娩的 60%。
多个干预组件解决了孕产妇和围产期护理连续体中的差距(培训、基础设施、常规数据质量加强和利用)。护理质量使用基于标准的管理和认可工具进行衡量。对 2011 年至 2019 年期间常规收集的、关于机构利用和机构性孕产妇和围产儿死亡率的高质量数据进行了时间趋势分析。
在 22 家卫生机构中观察到显著改善:在最拥挤的 3 家医院中,拥堵程度降低了 41%,同时使用较低级别的设施的比例也相应增加,护理质量提高了六倍,机构性孕产妇死亡率(47%)和死产率(19%)总体下降。
由地方政府领导的这种协作、多伙伴、多层次的真实实施,利用现有结构加强了城市卫生系统,并持续了十年。正如变革理论所描绘的那样,这种具有中介和混杂因素的复杂干预措施极有可能有助于改善工作负荷分配、产妇护理质量和出生时的生存。