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Scaling up quality care for mothers and newborns around the time of birth: an overview of methods and analyses of intervention-specific bottlenecks and solutions

Authors :
Nabila Zaka
Sarah G Moxon
Christabel Nyange
Joanne Ashton
Bernadette Daelmans
Matthews Mathai
Aline Simen-Kapeu
Joy E Lawn
Kim E Dickson
Gaurav Sharma
Ahmet Metin Gülmezoglu
Mary V Kinney
Martina Lukong Baye
Kate Kerber
Source :
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
Publisher :
Springer Nature

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The Every Newborn Action Plan (ENAP) and Ending Preventable Maternal Mortality targets cannot be achieved without high quality, equitable coverage of interventions at and around the time of birth. This paper provides an overview of the methodology and findings of a nine paper series of in-depth analyses which focus on the specific challenges to scaling up high-impact interventions and improving quality of care for mothers and newborns around the time of birth, including babies born small and sick. METHODS: The bottleneck analysis tool was applied in 12 countries in Africa and Asia as part of the ENAP process. Country workshops engaged technical experts to complete a tool designed to synthesise "bottlenecks" hindering the scale up of maternal-newborn intervention packages across seven health system building blocks. We used quantitative and qualitative methods and literature review to analyse the data and present priority actions relevant to different health system building blocks for skilled birth attendance, emergency obstetric care, antenatal corticosteroids (ACS), basic newborn care, kangaroo mother care (KMC), treatment of neonatal infections and inpatient care of small and sick newborns. RESULTS: The 12 countries included in our analysis account for the majority of global maternal (48%) and newborn (58%) deaths and stillbirths (57%). Our findings confirm previously published results that the interventions with the most perceived bottlenecks are facility-based where rapid emergency care is needed, notably inpatient care of small and sick newborns, ACS, treatment of neonatal infections and KMC. Health systems building blocks with the highest rated bottlenecks varied for different interventions. Attention needs to be paid to the context specific bottlenecks for each intervention to scale up quality care. Crosscutting findings on health information gaps inform two final papers on a roadmap for improvement of coverage data for newborns and indicate the need for leadership for effective audit systems. CONCLUSIONS: Achieving the Sustainable Development Goal targets for ending preventable mortality and provision of universal health coverage will require large-scale approaches to improving quality of care. These analyses inform the development of systematic, targeted approaches to strengthening of health systems, with a focus on overcoming specific bottlenecks for the highest impact interventions.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712393
Volume :
15
Issue :
S2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6248775b7181ffcdd942fe9b8429df42
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-15-s2-s1