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A study to better understand under-utilization of laboratory tests for antenatal care in Senegal

OBJECTIVE: To better understand factors contributing to underutilization of laboratory services for health care delivery in sub-Saharan Africa, we conducted a study in Senegalese Antenatal Care clinics (ANC) and laboratories to determine the extent of underutilization, contributing factors, and bott...

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Autores principales: van’t Hoog, Anna Helena, Sarr, Aicha, Koster, Winny, Delorme, Louis, Diallo, Souleymane, Sakande, Jean, Schultsz, Constance, Longuet, Christophe, Sow, Ahmad Iyane, Ondoa, Pascale
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6952088/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31917797
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225710
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author van’t Hoog, Anna Helena
Sarr, Aicha
Koster, Winny
Delorme, Louis
Diallo, Souleymane
Sakande, Jean
Schultsz, Constance
Longuet, Christophe
Sow, Ahmad Iyane
Ondoa, Pascale
author_facet van’t Hoog, Anna Helena
Sarr, Aicha
Koster, Winny
Delorme, Louis
Diallo, Souleymane
Sakande, Jean
Schultsz, Constance
Longuet, Christophe
Sow, Ahmad Iyane
Ondoa, Pascale
author_sort van’t Hoog, Anna Helena
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To better understand factors contributing to underutilization of laboratory services for health care delivery in sub-Saharan Africa, we conducted a study in Senegalese Antenatal Care clinics (ANC) and laboratories to determine the extent of underutilization, contributing factors, and bottlenecks in the cascade of care from first ANC visit, test uptake, to availability of test results and appropriate clinical management. METHODS: At 16 health facilities, pregnant women attending for their first ANC visit were consecutively recruited and information was prospectively collected on the request, execution, results and clinical management of seven nationally recommended laboratory screening tests for normal pregnancy: hemoglobin concentration (Hb), syphilis serology, HIV serology, determination of proteinuria (PU), determination of blood group and Rhesus factor, Emmel test to detect sickle cell disease, and glycaemia. Health facility staff were interviewed on human resource capacity, management of the ANC and the laboratory, and availability and use of guidelines. RESULTS: Of 1246 ANC attendants, 400 (32%) had complete results. Completeness varied between facilities from 0–99%. In multilevel logistic regression analysis of women nested in facilities, complete uptake was lower if women started ANC later in pregnancy; very low in rural ANC attendants who ever delivered compared to urban primigravidae (OR 0.064; 95%CI 0.00–0.52); and higher if the facility routinely recommended all seven tests. In the cascade from test request to clinical management, the most frequent bottleneck was non-execution of requested tests, while unavailability of results for executed test was uncommon (<2%). Overall, of 525 abnormal test results 97(18%) had a record of adequate clinical management. CONCLUSION: Our study illustrates challenges to test uptake even when laboratory testing capacity is in place, with large differences between facilities, and underscores the importance of management, policy, and the importance of considering local context in order to improve service delivery to expectant mothers.
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spelling pubmed-69520882020-01-17 A study to better understand under-utilization of laboratory tests for antenatal care in Senegal van’t Hoog, Anna Helena Sarr, Aicha Koster, Winny Delorme, Louis Diallo, Souleymane Sakande, Jean Schultsz, Constance Longuet, Christophe Sow, Ahmad Iyane Ondoa, Pascale PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE: To better understand factors contributing to underutilization of laboratory services for health care delivery in sub-Saharan Africa, we conducted a study in Senegalese Antenatal Care clinics (ANC) and laboratories to determine the extent of underutilization, contributing factors, and bottlenecks in the cascade of care from first ANC visit, test uptake, to availability of test results and appropriate clinical management. METHODS: At 16 health facilities, pregnant women attending for their first ANC visit were consecutively recruited and information was prospectively collected on the request, execution, results and clinical management of seven nationally recommended laboratory screening tests for normal pregnancy: hemoglobin concentration (Hb), syphilis serology, HIV serology, determination of proteinuria (PU), determination of blood group and Rhesus factor, Emmel test to detect sickle cell disease, and glycaemia. Health facility staff were interviewed on human resource capacity, management of the ANC and the laboratory, and availability and use of guidelines. RESULTS: Of 1246 ANC attendants, 400 (32%) had complete results. Completeness varied between facilities from 0–99%. In multilevel logistic regression analysis of women nested in facilities, complete uptake was lower if women started ANC later in pregnancy; very low in rural ANC attendants who ever delivered compared to urban primigravidae (OR 0.064; 95%CI 0.00–0.52); and higher if the facility routinely recommended all seven tests. In the cascade from test request to clinical management, the most frequent bottleneck was non-execution of requested tests, while unavailability of results for executed test was uncommon (<2%). Overall, of 525 abnormal test results 97(18%) had a record of adequate clinical management. CONCLUSION: Our study illustrates challenges to test uptake even when laboratory testing capacity is in place, with large differences between facilities, and underscores the importance of management, policy, and the importance of considering local context in order to improve service delivery to expectant mothers. Public Library of Science 2020-01-09 /pmc/articles/PMC6952088/ /pubmed/31917797 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225710 Text en © 2020 van’t Hoog 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 author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
van’t Hoog, Anna Helena
Sarr, Aicha
Koster, Winny
Delorme, Louis
Diallo, Souleymane
Sakande, Jean
Schultsz, Constance
Longuet, Christophe
Sow, Ahmad Iyane
Ondoa, Pascale
A study to better understand under-utilization of laboratory tests for antenatal care in Senegal
title A study to better understand under-utilization of laboratory tests for antenatal care in Senegal
title_full A study to better understand under-utilization of laboratory tests for antenatal care in Senegal
title_fullStr A study to better understand under-utilization of laboratory tests for antenatal care in Senegal
title_full_unstemmed A study to better understand under-utilization of laboratory tests for antenatal care in Senegal
title_short A study to better understand under-utilization of laboratory tests for antenatal care in Senegal
title_sort study to better understand under-utilization of laboratory tests for antenatal care in senegal
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6952088/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31917797
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225710
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