14 research outputs found
Improving newborn care practices through home visits: lessons from Malawi, Nepal, Bangladesh, and Uganda.
Background: Nearly all newborn deaths occur in low- or middle-income countries. Many of these deaths could be prevented through promotion and provision of newborn care practices such as thermal care, early and exclusive breastfeeding, and hygienic cord care. Home visit programmes promoting these practices were piloted in Malawi, Nepal, Bangladesh, and Uganda.
Objective: This study assessed changes in selected newborn care practices over time in pilot programme areas in four countries and evaluated whether women who received home visits during pregnancy were more likely to report use of three key practices.
Design: Using data from cross-sectional surveys of women with live births at baseline and endline, the Pearson chi-squared test was used to assess changes over time. Generalised linear models were used to assess the relationship between the main independent variable – home visit from a community health worker (CHW) during pregnancy (0, 1–2, 3+) – and use of selected practices while controlling for antenatal care, place of delivery, and maternal age and education.
Results: There were statistically significant improvements in practices, except applying nothing to the cord in Malawi and early initiation of breastfeeding in Bangladesh. In Malawi, Nepal, and Bangladesh, women who were visited by a CHW three or more times during pregnancy were more likely to report use of selected practices. Women who delivered in a facility were also more likely to report use of selected practices in Malawi, Nepal, and Uganda; association with place of birth was not examined in Bangladesh because only women who delivered outside a facility were asked about these practices.
Conclusion: Home visits can play a role in improving practices in different settings. Multiple interactions are needed, so programmes need to investigate the most appropriate and efficient ways to reach families and promote newborn care practices. Meanwhile, programmes must take advantage of increasing facility delivery rates to ensure that all babies benefit from these practices
Implementing facility-based kangaroo mother care services : lessons from a multi-country study in Africa
BACKGROUND : Some countries have undertaken programs that included scaling up kangaroo mother care. The aim
of this study was to systematically evaluate the implementation status of facility-based kangaroo mother care
services in four African countries: Malawi, Mali, Rwanda and Uganda.
METHODS : A cross-sectional, mixed-method research design was used. Stakeholders provided background information at
national meetings and in individual interviews. Facilities were assessed by means of a standardized tool previously applied
in other settings, employing semi-structured key-informant interviews and observations in 39 health care facilities in the
four countries. Each facility received a score out of a total of 30 according to six stages of implementation progress.
RESULTS : Across the four countries 95 per cent of health facilities assessed demonstrated some evidence of kangaroo
mother care practice. Institutions that fared better had a longer history of kangaroo mother care implementation or had
been developed as centres of excellence or had strong leaders championing the implementation process. Variation existed
in the quality of implementation between facilities and across countries. Important factors identified in implementation are:
training and orientation; supportive supervision; integrating kangaroo mother care into quality improvement; continuity of
care; high-level buy in and support for kangaroo mother care implementation; and client-oriented care.
CONCLUSION : The integration of kangaroo mother care into routine newborn care services should be part of all maternal
and newborn care initiatives and packages. Engaging ministries of health and other implementing partners from the
outset may promote buy in and assist with the mobilization of resources for scaling up kangaroo mother care services.
Mechanisms for monitoring these services should be integrated into existing health management information systems.http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmchealthservreshb201
Reaching mothers and babies with early postnatal home visits: the implementation realities of achieving high coverage in large-scale programs.
BACKGROUND: Nearly half of births in low-income countries occur without a skilled attendant, and even fewer mothers and babies have postnatal contact with providers who can deliver preventive or curative services that save lives. Community-based maternal and newborn care programs with postnatal home visits have been tested in Bangladesh, Malawi, and Nepal. This paper examines coverage and content of home visits in pilot areas and factors associated with receipt of postnatal visits. METHODS: Using data from cross-sectional surveys of women with live births (Bangladesh 398, Malawi: 900, Nepal: 615), generalized linear models were used to assess the strength of association between three factors - receipt of home visits during pregnancy, birth place, birth notification - and receipt of home visits within three days after birth. Meta-analytic techniques were used to generate pooled relative risks for each factor adjusting for other independent variables, maternal age, and education. FINDINGS: The proportion of mothers and newborns receiving home visits within three days after birth was 57% in Bangladesh, 11% in Malawi, and 50% in Nepal. Mothers and newborns were more likely to receive a postnatal home visit within three days if the mother received at least one home visit during pregnancy (OR2.18, CI1.46-3.25), the birth occurred outside a facility (OR1.48, CI1.28-1.73), and the mother reported a CHW was notified of the birth (OR2.66, CI1.40-5.08). Checking the cord was the most frequently reported action; most mothers reported at least one action for newborns. CONCLUSIONS: Reaching mothers and babies with home visits during pregnancy and within three days after birth is achievable using existing community health systems if workers are available; linked to communities; and receive training, supplies, and supervision. In all settings, programs must evaluate what community delivery systems can handle and how to best utilize them to improve postnatal care access
Malawi three district evaluation: Community-based maternal and newborn care economic analysis.
Malawi is one of few low-income countries in sub-Saharan Africa to have met the fourth Millennium Development Goal for child survival (MDG 4). To accelerate progress towards MDGs, the Malawi Ministry of Health's Reproductive Health Unit - in partnership with Save the Children, UNICEF and others - implemented a Community Based Maternal and Newborn Care (CBMNC) package, integrated within the existing community-based system. Multi-purpose Health Surveillance Assistants (HSAs) already employed by the local government were trained to conduct five core home visits. The additional financial costs, including donated items, incurred by the CBMNC package were analysed from the perspective of the provider. The coverage level of HSA home visits (35%) was lower than expected: mothers received an average of 2.8 visits rather than the programme target of five, or the more reasonable target of four given the number of women who would go away from the programme area to deliver. Two were home pregnancy and less than one, postnatal, reflecting greater challenges for the tight time window to achieve postnatal home visits. As a proportion of a 40 hour working week, CBMNC related activities represented an average of 13% of the HSA work week. Modelling for 95% coverage in a population of 100,000, the same number of HSAs could achieve this high coverage and financial programme cost could remain the same. The cost per mother visited would be US1.6 per home visit. The financial cost of universal coverage in Malawi would stand at 1.3% of public health expenditure if the programme is rolled out across the country. Higher coverage would increase efficiency of financial investment as well as achieve greater effectiveness
Country context.
<p><b>Note:</b> Data for proportion of health facility births in Malawi is from 2010; all other data under the columns marked 2011 is from 2011.</p
Newborn care content of postnatal home visits within 3 days after delivery.
1<p>In Malawi, women were asked what was done by an HSA during any home visit; it was assumed that all reported actions applied to visits that occurred within 3 days of delivery for newborns that received multiple visits.</p>2<p>Counseling on breastfeeding included observation, demonstration, or assessment of breastfeeding.</p>3<p>Check the cord, counsel on breastfeeding, check temperature, and weigh baby were collected in both countries. Counseling on danger signs is excluded since it was only collected in Malawi.</p
Relative risk for receiving a postnatal home visit within 3 days after birth.
<p>Relative risk for receiving a postnatal home visit within 3 days after birth.</p
Proportion of mothers<sup>1</sup> and newborns receiving CHW home visits in the first week after birth.
<p>This figure shows the percent of mothers and newborns that received a home visit from a community health worker within 0–3 days after birth and 4–7 days after birth in each of the 3 countries included in the analysis – Bangladesh, Malawi, and Nepal. <sup>1</sup>In Nepal, separate questions were asked about postnatal care for the mother and newborn. The woman was asked about only the first two post-discharge checks on her health, but was asked about the first three post-discharge checks for her newborn. Thus the percentage of women visited at home within three days after the birth appears lower than the percentage of newborns visited (41.3% versus 49.6%). Therefore, questions on post-discharge care for the baby were used to calculate the dependent variable in Nepal.</p
Community worker characteristics and home visit schedule, content, and incentives.
1<p>Catchment area population size varies in Nepal depending on terrain; 400 population is based on Terai region such as Bardiya.</p