School of Social Work, University of North Carolina, 325 Pittsboro Street, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3550, USA.
Duke Global Health Institute, Duke University, 310 Trent Dr, Durham, NC 27710, USA.
Health Policy Plan. 2021 Aug 12;36(7):1103-1115. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czab072.
Global and country-specific targets for reductions in maternal and neonatal mortality in low-resource settings will not be achieved without improvements in the quality of care for optimal facility-based obstetric and newborn care. This global call includes the private sector, which is increasingly serving low-resource pregnant women. The primary aim of this study was to estimate the impact of a clinical and management-training programme delivered by a non-governmental organization [LifeNet International] that partners with clinics on adherence to global standards of clinical quality during labour and delivery in rural Uganda. The secondary aim included describing the effect of the LifeNet training on pre-discharge neonatal and maternal mortality. The LifeNet programme delivered maternal and neonatal clinical trainings over a 10-month period in 2017-18. Direct clinical observations of obstetric deliveries were conducted at baseline (n = 263 pre-intervention) and endline (n = 321 post-intervention) for six faith-based, not-for-profit primary healthcare facilities in the greater Masaka area of Uganda. Direct observation comprised the entire delivery process, from initial client assessment to discharge, and included emergency management (e.g. postpartum haemorrhage and neonatal resuscitation). Data were supplemented by daily facility-based assessments of infrastructure during the study periods. Results showed positive and clinically meaningful increases in observed handwashing, observed delayed cord clamping, partograph use documentation and observed 1- and/or 5-minute APGAR assessments (rapid scoring system for assessing clinical status of newborn), in particular, between baseline and endline. High-quality intrapartum facility-based care is critical for reducing maternal and early neonatal mortality, and this evaluation of the LifeNet intervention indicates that their clinical training programme improved the practice of quality maternal and neonatal healthcare at all six primary care clinics in Uganda, at least over a relatively short-term period. However, for several of these quality indicators, the adherence rates, although improved, were still far from 100% and could benefit from further improvement via refresher trainings and/or a closer examination of the barriers to adherence.
在资源匮乏环境下,如果不改善产科和新生儿护理的优质服务,全球和各国降低孕产妇和新生儿死亡率的目标将无法实现。这一全球呼吁涵盖了私营部门,私营部门越来越多地为资源匮乏的孕妇提供服务。本研究的主要目的是评估一个由非政府组织[LifeNet International]实施的临床和管理培训项目的效果,该组织与诊所合作,旨在提高乌干达农村地区分娩和产后护理的全球临床质量标准。次要目标包括描述 LifeNet 培训对新生儿和产妇出院前死亡率的影响。LifeNet 项目于 2017-18 年在 10 个月内提供了母婴临床培训。在乌干达马萨卡地区的 6 个基于信仰的非营利性初级保健设施中,在基线(干预前 263 例)和终线(干预后 321 例)进行了直接的产科分娩观察。直接观察包括从最初的客户评估到出院的整个分娩过程,包括紧急管理(例如产后出血和新生儿复苏)。在研究期间,还通过每日对基础设施的基于设施的评估来补充数据。结果显示,在观察到的洗手、观察到的延迟脐带结扎、产程图使用记录以及观察到的 1 分钟和/或 5 分钟 Apgar 评分(评估新生儿临床状况的快速评分系统)方面,观察到积极且具有临床意义的增加,尤其是在基线和终线之间。高质量的产时产科护理对于降低孕产妇和早期新生儿死亡率至关重要,LifeNet 干预措施的评估表明,他们的临床培训项目至少在相对较短的时间内改善了乌干达所有 6 个初级保健诊所的优质母婴保健实践。然而,对于其中一些质量指标,虽然遵行率有所提高,但仍远未达到 100%,可以通过进一步的培训和/或更仔细地检查遵行障碍来进一步改进。