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Planning for Maternity Waiting Home Bed Capacity: Lessons from Rural Zambia

BACKGROUND: Maternity waiting homes (MWH) allow pregnant women to stay in a residential facility close to a health center while awaiting delivery. This approach can improve health outcomes for women and children. Health planners need to consider many factors in deciding the number of beds needed for...

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Autores principales: Vian, Taryn, Kaiser, Jeanette L., Ngoma, Thandiwe, Juntunen, Allison, Mataka, Kaluba K., Bwalya, Misheck, Sakanga, Viviane I. R., Rockers, Peter C., Hamer, Davidson H., Biemba, Godfrey, Scott, Nancy A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ubiquity Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9138814/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35651969
http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/aogh.3691
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author Vian, Taryn
Kaiser, Jeanette L.
Ngoma, Thandiwe
Juntunen, Allison
Mataka, Kaluba K.
Bwalya, Misheck
Sakanga, Viviane I. R.
Rockers, Peter C.
Hamer, Davidson H.
Biemba, Godfrey
Scott, Nancy A.
author_facet Vian, Taryn
Kaiser, Jeanette L.
Ngoma, Thandiwe
Juntunen, Allison
Mataka, Kaluba K.
Bwalya, Misheck
Sakanga, Viviane I. R.
Rockers, Peter C.
Hamer, Davidson H.
Biemba, Godfrey
Scott, Nancy A.
author_sort Vian, Taryn
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Maternity waiting homes (MWH) allow pregnant women to stay in a residential facility close to a health center while awaiting delivery. This approach can improve health outcomes for women and children. Health planners need to consider many factors in deciding the number of beds needed for an MWH. OBJECTIVE: The objective of the study is to review experience in Zambia in planning and implementing MWHs, and consider lessons learned in determining optimal capacity. METHODS: We conducted a study of 10 newly built MWH in Zambia over 12 months. For this case study analysis, data on beds, service volume, and catchment area population were examined, including women staying at the homes, bed occupancy, and average length of stay. We analyzed bed occupancy by location and health facility catchment area size, and categorized occupancy by month from very low to very high. FINDINGS: Most study sites were rural, with 3 of the 10 study sites rural-remote. Four sites served small catchment areas (<9 000), 3 had medium (9 000–11 000), and 3 had large (>11 000) size populations. Annual occupancy was variable among the sites, ranging from 13% (a medium rural site) to 151% (a large rural-remote site). Occupancy higher than 100% was accommodated by repurposing the MWH postnatal beds and using extra mattresses. Most sites had between 26–69% annual occupancy, but monthly occupancy was highly variable for reasons that seem unrelated to catchment area size, rural or rural-remote location. CONCLUSION: Planning for MWH capacity is difficult due to high variability. Our analysis suggests planners should try to gather actual recent monthly birth data and estimate capacity using the highest expected utilization months, anticipating that facility-based deliveries may increase with introduction of a MWH. Further research is needed to document and share data on MWH operations, including utilization statistics like number of beds, mattresses, occupancy rates and average length of stay.
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spelling pubmed-91388142022-05-31 Planning for Maternity Waiting Home Bed Capacity: Lessons from Rural Zambia Vian, Taryn Kaiser, Jeanette L. Ngoma, Thandiwe Juntunen, Allison Mataka, Kaluba K. Bwalya, Misheck Sakanga, Viviane I. R. Rockers, Peter C. Hamer, Davidson H. Biemba, Godfrey Scott, Nancy A. Ann Glob Health Original Research BACKGROUND: Maternity waiting homes (MWH) allow pregnant women to stay in a residential facility close to a health center while awaiting delivery. This approach can improve health outcomes for women and children. Health planners need to consider many factors in deciding the number of beds needed for an MWH. OBJECTIVE: The objective of the study is to review experience in Zambia in planning and implementing MWHs, and consider lessons learned in determining optimal capacity. METHODS: We conducted a study of 10 newly built MWH in Zambia over 12 months. For this case study analysis, data on beds, service volume, and catchment area population were examined, including women staying at the homes, bed occupancy, and average length of stay. We analyzed bed occupancy by location and health facility catchment area size, and categorized occupancy by month from very low to very high. FINDINGS: Most study sites were rural, with 3 of the 10 study sites rural-remote. Four sites served small catchment areas (<9 000), 3 had medium (9 000–11 000), and 3 had large (>11 000) size populations. Annual occupancy was variable among the sites, ranging from 13% (a medium rural site) to 151% (a large rural-remote site). Occupancy higher than 100% was accommodated by repurposing the MWH postnatal beds and using extra mattresses. Most sites had between 26–69% annual occupancy, but monthly occupancy was highly variable for reasons that seem unrelated to catchment area size, rural or rural-remote location. CONCLUSION: Planning for MWH capacity is difficult due to high variability. Our analysis suggests planners should try to gather actual recent monthly birth data and estimate capacity using the highest expected utilization months, anticipating that facility-based deliveries may increase with introduction of a MWH. Further research is needed to document and share data on MWH operations, including utilization statistics like number of beds, mattresses, occupancy rates and average length of stay. Ubiquity Press 2022-05-24 /pmc/articles/PMC9138814/ /pubmed/35651969 http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/aogh.3691 Text en Copyright: © 2022 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Original Research
Vian, Taryn
Kaiser, Jeanette L.
Ngoma, Thandiwe
Juntunen, Allison
Mataka, Kaluba K.
Bwalya, Misheck
Sakanga, Viviane I. R.
Rockers, Peter C.
Hamer, Davidson H.
Biemba, Godfrey
Scott, Nancy A.
Planning for Maternity Waiting Home Bed Capacity: Lessons from Rural Zambia
title Planning for Maternity Waiting Home Bed Capacity: Lessons from Rural Zambia
title_full Planning for Maternity Waiting Home Bed Capacity: Lessons from Rural Zambia
title_fullStr Planning for Maternity Waiting Home Bed Capacity: Lessons from Rural Zambia
title_full_unstemmed Planning for Maternity Waiting Home Bed Capacity: Lessons from Rural Zambia
title_short Planning for Maternity Waiting Home Bed Capacity: Lessons from Rural Zambia
title_sort planning for maternity waiting home bed capacity: lessons from rural zambia
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9138814/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35651969
http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/aogh.3691
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