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Evaluation of a multi-level intervention to improve postpartum intrauterine device services in Rwanda

Background. The copper intrauterine device is one of the most safe, effective, and cost-effective methods for preventing unintended pregnancy. It can be used postpartum irrespective of breastfeeding to improve birth spacing and reduce unintended pregnancy and maternal-child mortality. However, this...

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Autores principales: Ingabire, Rosine, Nyombayire, Julien, Hoagland, Alexandra, Da Costa, Vanessa, Mazzei, Amelia, Haddad, Lisa, Parker, Rachel, Sinabamenye, Robertine, Mukamuyango, Jeannine, Smith, Julie, Umutoni, Victoria, Mork, Ellen, Allen, Susan, Karita, Etienne, Wall, Kristin M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: F1000 Research Limited 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6266741/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30569036
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.12854.3
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author Ingabire, Rosine
Nyombayire, Julien
Hoagland, Alexandra
Da Costa, Vanessa
Mazzei, Amelia
Haddad, Lisa
Parker, Rachel
Sinabamenye, Robertine
Mukamuyango, Jeannine
Smith, Julie
Umutoni, Victoria
Mork, Ellen
Allen, Susan
Karita, Etienne
Wall, Kristin M.
author_facet Ingabire, Rosine
Nyombayire, Julien
Hoagland, Alexandra
Da Costa, Vanessa
Mazzei, Amelia
Haddad, Lisa
Parker, Rachel
Sinabamenye, Robertine
Mukamuyango, Jeannine
Smith, Julie
Umutoni, Victoria
Mork, Ellen
Allen, Susan
Karita, Etienne
Wall, Kristin M.
author_sort Ingabire, Rosine
collection PubMed
description Background. The copper intrauterine device is one of the most safe, effective, and cost-effective methods for preventing unintended pregnancy. It can be used postpartum irrespective of breastfeeding to improve birth spacing and reduce unintended pregnancy and maternal-child mortality. However, this method remains highly underutilized. Methods. We developed a multi-level intervention to increase uptake of the postpartum intrauterine device (PPIUD, defined as insertion up to six weeks post-delivery) in Kigali, Rwanda. High-volume hospitals and health centers were selected for implementation of PPIUD counseling and service delivery. Formative work informed development of a PPIUD counseling flipchart to be delivered during antenatal care, labor and delivery, infant vaccination visits, or in the community. Two-day didactic counseling, insertion/removal, and follow-up trainings were provided to labor and delivery and family planning nurses followed by a mentored practicum certification process. Counseling data were collected in government clinic logbooks. Insertions and follow-up data were collected in logbooks created for the implementation. Data were collected by trained government clinic staff and abstracted/managed by study staff. Stakeholders were involved from intervention development through dissemination of results. Results. Two hospitals (and their two associated health centers) and two additional health centers were selected. In 6-months prior to our intervention, 7.7 PPIUDs/month were inserted on average at the selected facilities. From August 2017-July 2018, we trained 83 counselors and 39 providers to provide PPIUD services. N=9,020 women received one-on-one PPIUD counseling after expressing interest in family planning who later delivered at a selected health facility. Of those, n=2,575 had PPIUDs inserted (average of 214.6 insertions/month), a 29% uptake. Most PPIUDs (62%) were inserted within 10 minutes of delivery of the placenta. Conclusions. This successful, comprehensive intervention has the potential to make a significant impact on PPIUD uptake in Rwanda. The intervention is scalable and adaptable to other sub-Saharan African countries.
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spelling pubmed-62667412018-12-17 Evaluation of a multi-level intervention to improve postpartum intrauterine device services in Rwanda Ingabire, Rosine Nyombayire, Julien Hoagland, Alexandra Da Costa, Vanessa Mazzei, Amelia Haddad, Lisa Parker, Rachel Sinabamenye, Robertine Mukamuyango, Jeannine Smith, Julie Umutoni, Victoria Mork, Ellen Allen, Susan Karita, Etienne Wall, Kristin M. Gates Open Res Research Article Background. The copper intrauterine device is one of the most safe, effective, and cost-effective methods for preventing unintended pregnancy. It can be used postpartum irrespective of breastfeeding to improve birth spacing and reduce unintended pregnancy and maternal-child mortality. However, this method remains highly underutilized. Methods. We developed a multi-level intervention to increase uptake of the postpartum intrauterine device (PPIUD, defined as insertion up to six weeks post-delivery) in Kigali, Rwanda. High-volume hospitals and health centers were selected for implementation of PPIUD counseling and service delivery. Formative work informed development of a PPIUD counseling flipchart to be delivered during antenatal care, labor and delivery, infant vaccination visits, or in the community. Two-day didactic counseling, insertion/removal, and follow-up trainings were provided to labor and delivery and family planning nurses followed by a mentored practicum certification process. Counseling data were collected in government clinic logbooks. Insertions and follow-up data were collected in logbooks created for the implementation. Data were collected by trained government clinic staff and abstracted/managed by study staff. Stakeholders were involved from intervention development through dissemination of results. Results. Two hospitals (and their two associated health centers) and two additional health centers were selected. In 6-months prior to our intervention, 7.7 PPIUDs/month were inserted on average at the selected facilities. From August 2017-July 2018, we trained 83 counselors and 39 providers to provide PPIUD services. N=9,020 women received one-on-one PPIUD counseling after expressing interest in family planning who later delivered at a selected health facility. Of those, n=2,575 had PPIUDs inserted (average of 214.6 insertions/month), a 29% uptake. Most PPIUDs (62%) were inserted within 10 minutes of delivery of the placenta. Conclusions. This successful, comprehensive intervention has the potential to make a significant impact on PPIUD uptake in Rwanda. The intervention is scalable and adaptable to other sub-Saharan African countries. F1000 Research Limited 2019-02-04 /pmc/articles/PMC6266741/ /pubmed/30569036 http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.12854.3 Text en Copyright: © 2019 Ingabire R et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ingabire, Rosine
Nyombayire, Julien
Hoagland, Alexandra
Da Costa, Vanessa
Mazzei, Amelia
Haddad, Lisa
Parker, Rachel
Sinabamenye, Robertine
Mukamuyango, Jeannine
Smith, Julie
Umutoni, Victoria
Mork, Ellen
Allen, Susan
Karita, Etienne
Wall, Kristin M.
Evaluation of a multi-level intervention to improve postpartum intrauterine device services in Rwanda
title Evaluation of a multi-level intervention to improve postpartum intrauterine device services in Rwanda
title_full Evaluation of a multi-level intervention to improve postpartum intrauterine device services in Rwanda
title_fullStr Evaluation of a multi-level intervention to improve postpartum intrauterine device services in Rwanda
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of a multi-level intervention to improve postpartum intrauterine device services in Rwanda
title_short Evaluation of a multi-level intervention to improve postpartum intrauterine device services in Rwanda
title_sort evaluation of a multi-level intervention to improve postpartum intrauterine device services in rwanda
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6266741/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30569036
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.12854.3
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