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Quality care during labour and birth: a multi-country analysis of health system bottlenecks and potential solutions

BACKGROUND: Good outcomes during pregnancy and childbirth are related to availability, utilisation and effective implementation of essential interventions for labour and childbirth. The majority of the estimated 289,000 maternal deaths, 2.8 million neonatal deaths and 2.6 million stillbirths every y...

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Autores principales: Sharma, Gaurav, Mathai, Matthews, Dickson, Kim E, Weeks, Andrew, Hofmeyr, G Justus, Lavender, Tina, Day, Louise Tina, Mathews, Jiji Elizabeth, Fawcus, Sue, Simen-Kapeu, Aline, de Bernis, Luc
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2015
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4577867/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26390886
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-15-S2-S2
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author Sharma, Gaurav
Mathai, Matthews
Dickson, Kim E
Weeks, Andrew
Hofmeyr, G Justus
Lavender, Tina
Day, Louise Tina
Mathews, Jiji Elizabeth
Fawcus, Sue
Simen-Kapeu, Aline
de Bernis, Luc
author_facet Sharma, Gaurav
Mathai, Matthews
Dickson, Kim E
Weeks, Andrew
Hofmeyr, G Justus
Lavender, Tina
Day, Louise Tina
Mathews, Jiji Elizabeth
Fawcus, Sue
Simen-Kapeu, Aline
de Bernis, Luc
author_sort Sharma, Gaurav
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Good outcomes during pregnancy and childbirth are related to availability, utilisation and effective implementation of essential interventions for labour and childbirth. The majority of the estimated 289,000 maternal deaths, 2.8 million neonatal deaths and 2.6 million stillbirths every year could be prevented by improving access to and scaling up quality care during labour and birth. METHODS: The bottleneck analysis tool was applied in 12 countries in Africa and Asia as part of the Every Newborn Action Plan process. Country workshops engaged technical experts to complete the survey tool, which is designed to synthesise and grade health system "bottlenecks", factors that hinder the scale up, of maternal-newborn intervention packages. We used quantitative and qualitative methods to analyse the bottleneck data, combined with literature review, to present priority bottlenecks and actions relevant to different health system building blocks for skilled birth attendance and basic and comprehensive emergency obstetric care. RESULTS: Across 12 countries the most critical bottlenecks identified by workshop participants for skilled birth attendance were health financing (10 out of 12 countries) and health workforce (9 out of 12 countries). Health service delivery bottlenecks were found to be the most critical for both basic and comprehensive emergency obstetric care (9 out of 12 countries); health financing was identified as having critical bottlenecks for comprehensive emergency obstetric care (9 out of 12 countries). Solutions to address health financing bottlenecks included strengthening national financing mechanisms and removing financial barriers to care seeking. For addressing health workforce bottlenecks, improved human resource planning is needed, including task shifting and improving training quality. For health service delivery, proposed solutions included improving quality of care and establishing public private partnerships. CONCLUSIONS: Progress towards the 2030 targets for ending preventable maternal and newborn deaths is dependent on improving quality of care during birth and the immediate postnatal period. Strengthening national health systems to improve maternal and newborn health, as a cornerstone of universal health coverage, will only be possible by addressing specific health system bottlenecks during labour and birth, including those within health workforce, health financing and health service delivery.
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spelling pubmed-45778672015-09-23 Quality care during labour and birth: a multi-country analysis of health system bottlenecks and potential solutions Sharma, Gaurav Mathai, Matthews Dickson, Kim E Weeks, Andrew Hofmeyr, G Justus Lavender, Tina Day, Louise Tina Mathews, Jiji Elizabeth Fawcus, Sue Simen-Kapeu, Aline de Bernis, Luc BMC Pregnancy Childbirth Research BACKGROUND: Good outcomes during pregnancy and childbirth are related to availability, utilisation and effective implementation of essential interventions for labour and childbirth. The majority of the estimated 289,000 maternal deaths, 2.8 million neonatal deaths and 2.6 million stillbirths every year could be prevented by improving access to and scaling up quality care during labour and birth. METHODS: The bottleneck analysis tool was applied in 12 countries in Africa and Asia as part of the Every Newborn Action Plan process. Country workshops engaged technical experts to complete the survey tool, which is designed to synthesise and grade health system "bottlenecks", factors that hinder the scale up, of maternal-newborn intervention packages. We used quantitative and qualitative methods to analyse the bottleneck data, combined with literature review, to present priority bottlenecks and actions relevant to different health system building blocks for skilled birth attendance and basic and comprehensive emergency obstetric care. RESULTS: Across 12 countries the most critical bottlenecks identified by workshop participants for skilled birth attendance were health financing (10 out of 12 countries) and health workforce (9 out of 12 countries). Health service delivery bottlenecks were found to be the most critical for both basic and comprehensive emergency obstetric care (9 out of 12 countries); health financing was identified as having critical bottlenecks for comprehensive emergency obstetric care (9 out of 12 countries). Solutions to address health financing bottlenecks included strengthening national financing mechanisms and removing financial barriers to care seeking. For addressing health workforce bottlenecks, improved human resource planning is needed, including task shifting and improving training quality. For health service delivery, proposed solutions included improving quality of care and establishing public private partnerships. CONCLUSIONS: Progress towards the 2030 targets for ending preventable maternal and newborn deaths is dependent on improving quality of care during birth and the immediate postnatal period. Strengthening national health systems to improve maternal and newborn health, as a cornerstone of universal health coverage, will only be possible by addressing specific health system bottlenecks during labour and birth, including those within health workforce, health financing and health service delivery. BioMed Central 2015-09-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4577867/ /pubmed/26390886 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-15-S2-S2 Text en Copyright © 2015 Sharma et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Sharma, Gaurav
Mathai, Matthews
Dickson, Kim E
Weeks, Andrew
Hofmeyr, G Justus
Lavender, Tina
Day, Louise Tina
Mathews, Jiji Elizabeth
Fawcus, Sue
Simen-Kapeu, Aline
de Bernis, Luc
Quality care during labour and birth: a multi-country analysis of health system bottlenecks and potential solutions
title Quality care during labour and birth: a multi-country analysis of health system bottlenecks and potential solutions
title_full Quality care during labour and birth: a multi-country analysis of health system bottlenecks and potential solutions
title_fullStr Quality care during labour and birth: a multi-country analysis of health system bottlenecks and potential solutions
title_full_unstemmed Quality care during labour and birth: a multi-country analysis of health system bottlenecks and potential solutions
title_short Quality care during labour and birth: a multi-country analysis of health system bottlenecks and potential solutions
title_sort quality care during labour and birth: a multi-country analysis of health system bottlenecks and potential solutions
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4577867/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26390886
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-15-S2-S2
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