| Literature DB >> 23638148 |
Nitya Nand Deepak1, Ellie Mirzabagi, Alissa Koski, Vandana Tripathi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: India has the highest annual number of maternal deaths of any country. As obstetric hemorrhage is the leading cause of maternal death in India, numerous efforts are under way to promote access to skilled attendance at birth and emergency obstetric care. Current initiatives also seek to increase access to active management of the third stage of labor for postpartum hemorrhage prevention, particularly through administration of an uterotonic after delivery. However, prior research suggests widespread inappropriate use of uterotonics at facilities and in communities-for example, without adequate monitoring or referral support for complications. This qualitative study aimed to document health providers' and community members' current knowledge, attitudes, and practices regarding uterotonic use during labor and delivery in India's Karnataka state.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23638148 PMCID: PMC3639256 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0062801
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Bagalkot and Hassan District Profiles.
| Indicator | Bagalkot District | Hassan District |
| Population (in thousands) | 1,652 | 1,722 |
| Rural population (% of total) | 71% | 82.3% |
| Mothers who had ≥3 antenatal care visits during last pregnancy | 63% | 94% |
| Institutional births (% of total) | 46.6% | 80.3% |
| Delivery at home with a skilled provider (% of total) | 29% | 18.8% |
| Number of Community Health Centers | 25 | 30 |
| Number of Primary Health Centers | 10 | 15 |
| Number of Sub-Centers | 31 | 38 |
Source: International Institute for Population Sciences 2010 [30].
Interview Topics by Respondent Cadre.
| Respondent Type | Sample Interview Topics/Questions |
|
| |
| Physicians (n = 20) | Clinical experience and practice with uterotonics, frequency of use, attitude toward uterotonic use during labor and delivery, availability of uterotonics within the facility |
| Auxiliary nurse midwives/staff nurses/ladyhealth visitors (n = 20) | Clinical experience with uterotonics, perceived effect of uterotonic substances on labor/delivery processes, attitude toward uterotonic use during labor and delivery |
|
| |
| Mothers who gave birth within the past six months (n = 20) | Personal experience with use of uterotonics, attitude toward uterotonic use during labor and delivery (e.g., did they request uterotonics? If so, why?), cost associated with purchase/administration of uterotonics |
| Mothers-in-law with ≥ 1 grandchild (n = 20) | Role in delivery process, attitude toward uterotonic use during labor and delivery, cost associated with purchase and/or administration of uterotonics, personal recollection of uterotonic use practices (e.g., when did it become commonplace?) |
| Traditional birth attendants, also knownas | Perceived effect of uterotonic substances on labor/delivery processes, how effective they believe various substances to be, indications for use, uterotonic stock procurement |
| Unlicensed health workers, also knownas village doctors (n = 20) | Role in delivery processes at home and in facilities, clinical experience with uterotonics, perceived effect of uterotonic substances on labor/delivery processes, economics of uterotonic administration, stock procurement |
| Pharmacists, also known as chemists (n = 20) | Stock procurement, pricing, knowledge of prescription policy, selling practices (i.e., any advice, qualifying questions, contraindications) |