| Literature DB >> 20718979 |
Ramou Cole-Ceesay1, Meena Cherian, Alieu Sonko, Nestor Shivute, Mamady Cham, Michael Davis, Famara Fatty, Susan Wieteska, Momodou Baro, Diane Watson, Barbara Phillips, Rhona Macdonald, Brigid Hayden, David Southall.
Abstract
A system to improve the management of emergencies during pregnancy, childbirth, infancy and childhood in a region of The Gambia (Brikama) with a population of approximately 250,000 has been developed.This was accomplished through formal partnership between the Gambian Ministry of Health, the World Health Organisation, Maternal Childhealth Advocacy International and the Advanced Life Support Group.Since October 2006, the hospital in Brikama has been renovated and equipped and more efficiently provided with emergency medicines. An emergency ambulance service now links the community with the hospital through a mobile telephone system. Health professionals from community to hospital have been trained in obstetric, neonatal and paediatric emergency management using skills' based education. The programme was evaluated in log books detailing individual resuscitations and by external assessment.The hospital now has constant water and electricity, a functioning operating theatre and emergency room; the maternity unit and children's wards have better emergency equipment and there is a more reliable supply of oxygen and emergency drugs, including misoprostol (for treating post partum haemorrhage) and magnesium sulphate (for severe pre-eclampsia). There is also a blood transfusion service.Countrywide, 217 doctors, nurses, and midwives have undergone accredited training in the provision of emergency maternal, newborn and child care, including for major trauma. 33 have received additional education through Generic Instructor Courses and 15 have reached full instructor status. 83 Traditional Birth Attendants and 48 Village Health Workers have been trained in the recognition and initial management of emergencies, including resuscitation of the newborn. Eleven and ten nurses underwent training in peri-operative nursing and anaesthetics respectively, to address the acute shortage required for emergency Caesarean section.Between May 2007 and March 2010, 109 patients, mostly pregnant mothers, were stabilised and transported to hospital by the new emergency ambulance service.293 resuscitation attempts were documented in personal logbooks.A sustainable system for better managing emergencies has been established and is helping to negate the main obstacle impeding progress: the country's lack of available trained medical and nursing staff. However, insufficient attention was paid to improving staff morale and accommodation representing significant failings of the programme.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20718979 PMCID: PMC2931483 DOI: 10.1186/1742-4755-7-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Health ISSN: 1742-4755 Impact factor: 3.223
Emergency ambulance data for Brikama region from 14/5/07 until 20/2/10
| Patient numbers | Total | Emergency | Resuscitation given | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1,52,63 | 3 | Obstructed Labour | IV glucose x3, oxygen x1, normal saline bolus x2, CS x3 | 3 mothers alive, 1 infant death |
| 8,12,13,18,19,22,25,29,30,31,32,34,37,41,46,56,57,68,99,103, | 20 | Ante-partum Haemorrhage or miscarriage | CS × 6, IV glucose × 2, IV Normal saline × 19, lateral tilt × 1, oxygen × 2, leg elevation × 2, blood transfusion × 1, IV antibiotics x1 | All mothers alive, 7 infant deaths |
| 3,40,43,45,85,91,94,101 | 8 | Eclampsia and 2 cases of severe pre-eclampsia | IM/IV hydralazine × 4, IV magnesium sulphate x6, CS x2, Diazepam × 1, oxygen x1, airway opening x2, oropharyngeal airway, suction x2 | 7 mothers and infants alive, 1outcome unrecorded |
| 1,2,10, 14,36,45,54,93,100,101,104, | 11 | Pregnancy Induced Hypertension without severe pre-eclampsia or eclampsia | IV hydralazine × 6, IM hydralazine × 2, CS × 3, | 11 mothers and 11 infants alive |
| 4,10,15,16,44,53,59,72,76,77,84,89, | 12 | Twins × 4, breech × 6, or compound presentation × 2 | IV glucose × 5, CS x4, vaginal breech x4, IV normal saline × 5, blood transfusion × 1 | 11 mothers alive, 1 breech fractured femur, 4 fresh stillbirths (one breech head could not be delivered) |
| 7,10,16,17,20,26, 27, 28,33,50,66,69,82,86,87,88,90,101,102 | 19 | Prolonged labour | IV glucose × 16, IV antibiotics x1, IV normal saline × 3, ventouse at home × 2, urinary catheter × 1, CS × 9, | 19 mothers alive |
| 65,81,83,92,96,97,100,106 | 8 | Postpartum haemorrhage | IV normal saline x5, misoprostol x2, ergometrine × 4, oxytocin IV × 1, blood transfusion × 5, IV antibiotics × 2, repair tear × 1 | 7 mothers alive |
| 39, 53,58, 83,97, | 5 | Severe anaemia | Oxygen × 1, blood transfusion × 5, IV normal saline × 3, IV antibiotics × 1 | 5 mothers alive |
| 20,21,36,51,55,62,70,71,73,74,75,87,93,102,107 | 15 | Primagravida | IV 50% glucose × 7, IV normal saline × 4, CS × 4, ventouse × 1 | 15 mothers alive |
| 38,42,47,49,53,66,67,78,79,80,88,90,106,109 | 14 | 4 or more previous births | IV normal saline × 4, IV glucose × 3, blood transfusion × 1 | 13 mothers alive |
| 26,75,95 | 3 | Infection in pregnancy | IV 50% glucose x1, IV antibiotics × 3, CS x1 | 3 mothers alive |
| 5,29,45,64,84 | 5 | Preterm labour | 5 mothers alive | |
| 9(3 patients),11(2 patients),108 | 6 | Road accident | Airway opening x3, compression for bleeding x1, IV normal saline x2, Pain control, | 4 survived and 2 died |
| 6(3 years),24(3 weeks),35(8 days), 61(2 years) | 4 | Paediatric emergency | Airway opening × 2, oropharyngeal airway × 1, IV Normal saline x2 IV glucose followed by infusion × 1, IV antibiotics × 1, Assisted ventilation with bag-valve-mask and oxygen x1, compression to stop bleeding × 1, blood transfusion x1 | 4 survived |
| 23,39,48,60,64,98,105 | 7 | Miscellaneous (asthma, loss of consciousness, severe vomiting, retained placenta, dehydration and shock, staff member in labour) | Anti-asthma treatment x2(salbutamol, hydrocortisone, aminophylline), oxygen x1, IV normal saline x2, IV glucose x3, retained placenta removed after urinary catheter x1, IV antibiotics × 1 | 6 pregnant mothers and their infants survived. |
Abbreviations: IM = intramuscular injection, IV = intravenous, CS = Caesarean section
Figure 1Training of a Traditional Birth Attendant in bag-valve-mask ventilation of the newborn. A Gambian instructor is helping a Traditional Birth Attendant (TBA) to undertake bag-valve-mask ventilation on an infant manikin. The TBA will need to breathe for a newborn infant requiring resuscitation after first drying the baby and opening his/her airway.
Details of resuscitations documented in logbooks by providers of emergency care
| CONDITIONS RESUSCITATED | TOTAL | DEATHS |
|---|---|---|
| Ante partum haemorrhage | 17 | |
| Postpartum haemorrhage | ||
| Massive haemorrhage | ||
| Eclampsia | ||
| Severe anaemia | ||
| Shock | ||
| Severe sepsis including malaria | ||
| Road accident | ||
| Severe pneumonia | ||
| Birth asphyxia | ||
| Burns | ||
| Complications of labour/delivery | ||
| Major medical problems (epilepsy, diabetes, airway obstruction, severe dehydration, severe anaemia, malnutrition, apnoea, hypoglycaemia, heart failure, hypertension, liver disease, gas poisoning) | ||
| Major trauma (gunshot, stabbing, fracture, head injury) | ||
| Severe asthma | ||
| Unknown | ||