| Literature DB >> 23667335 |
Allisyn C Moran1, Kate Kerber, Deborah Sitrin, Tanya Guenther, Claudia S Morrissey, Holly Newby, Joy Fishel, P Stan Yoder, Zelee Hill, Joy E Lawn.
Abstract
Neonatal mortality accounts for 43% of under-five mortality. Consequently, improving newborn survival is a global priority. However, although there is increasing consensus on the packages and specific interventions that need to be scaled up to reduce neonatal mortality, there is a lack of clarity on the indicators needed to measure progress. In 2008, in an effort to improve newborn survival, the Newborn Indicators Technical Working Group (TWG) was convened by the Saving Newborn Lives program at Save the Children to provide a forum to develop the indicators and standard measurement tools that are needed to measure coverage of key newborn interventions. The TWG, which included evaluation and measurement experts, researchers, individuals from United Nations agencies and non-governmental organizations, and donors, prioritized improved consistency of measurement of postnatal care for women and newborns and of immediate care behaviors and practices for newborns. In addition, the TWG promoted increased data availability through inclusion of additional questions in nationally representative surveys, such as the United States Agency for International Development-supported Demographic and Health Surveys and the United Nations Children's Fund-supported Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys. Several studies have been undertaken that have informed revisions of indicators and survey tools, and global postnatal care coverage indicators have been finalized. Consensus has been achieved on three additional indicators for care of the newborn after birth (drying, delayed bathing, and cutting the cord with a clean instrument), and on testing two further indicators (immediate skin-to-skin care and applications to the umbilical cord). Finally, important measurement gaps have been identified regarding coverage data for evidence-based interventions, such as Kangaroo Mother Care and care seeking for newborn infection.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23667335 PMCID: PMC3646209 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001415
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Postnatal care indicator: measurement issues and advances.
| Topic | Issue(s) | What Has Been Accomplished | What Needs to Be Done |
| Recall and validity | • Uncertainty about mother's knowledge about what happened to baby after birth, especially for facility births• Lack of recall of past births up to five years prior to survey• Potential misunderstanding of survey questions on postnatal care | • Formative research indicates that women have a good idea what happens to their baby regardless of where they deliver• DHS and MICS questionnaires revised to include postnatal care for all newborns, regardless of place of birth• Formative research indicates that women have difficulty understanding the term “postnatal care"• DHS and MICS questionnaires revised to include an introductory statement for postnatal care questions• Standard tables in DHS and MICS updated to include postnatal care coverage for newborns | • Review data from new DHS and MICS questionnaires and revise tools as needed |
| Timing | • Lack of criteria to distinguish between intrapartum and postnatal care, e.g., should all contacts from birth count, or is postnatal care valid only if it takes place after the intrapartum period• Potential overestimation of true postnatal contacts | • Detailed postnatal care module developed and tested for MICS• Distinct measurement of the first pre-discharge and first post-discharge contact in MICS | • WHO recommendation to define postnatal contact (e.g., a cutoff of one hour after birth)• Formative research to differentiate intrapartum and postnatal care• Implementation research on facility pre-discharge checklist, etc. |
| Number of visits | • Only the first postnatal contact captured in DHS and MICS surveys, and may be an intrapartum contact but no further question asked• Lack of ability to capture pre-discharge postnatal care more accurately• Lack of data on home or clinic postnatal contacts after facility births | • Detailed postnatal care module developed and tested for MICS• Distinct measurement of the first pre-discharge and first post-discharge contact in MICS• No information captured on subsequent postnatal contacts | • Capture additional visits in optional module or specialized surveys |
| Content | • Data not currently collected in national surveys | • Formative research indicates women could recall specific actions for newborns during postnatal care (such as use of equipment, undressing baby, giving advice)• Consensus on five measureable signal functions for postnatal care for newborns | • Work with maternal health community on signal functions for postnatal care for women• WHO meeting to define postnatal care interventions for women and newborns• Test household survey module for content of postnatal care for newborns and women |
Global indicators for postnatal care coverage, 2010.
| Category | Indicator | Numerator | Denominator |
| Postnatal care for women | Percent of women who received postnatal care within two days after last delivery | Number of women who received postnatal care within two days after last delivery | Number of women with a live birth in the last two years |
| Postnatal care for newborns | Percent of newborns who received postnatal care within two days after delivery | Number of newborns who received postnatal care within two days after delivery | Number of women with a live birth in the last two years |
Figure 3Standard questionnaire for measuring coverage of immediate newborn care.
Figure 1Proportion of women who received postnatal care within two days of delivery by time of first visit, DHS survey data 2005–2011 [.
Figure 2Proportion of home births for which women and babies received postnatal care within two days of delivery, DHS survey data 2005–2011 [.
Recommended indicators for care behaviors and practices for newborns.
| Program Element | Indicator | Numerator | Denominator | Comments | Recommended Question(s) |
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| Thermal care: drying | Percent of newborns dried after birth | Number of newborns dried after birth | Number of live last births in the | All births; timing assessment optional | Was (NAME) dried (wiped) after delivery? |
| Thermal care: delayed bath | Percent of newborns with first bath delayed at least six hours after birth | Number of newborns with first bath delayed at least six hours after birth | Number of live last births in the | All births; different timing categories can be calculated | How long after delivery was (NAME) bathed for the first time? |
| Cord care: clean cord cutting | Percent of newborns with cord cut with clean instrument | Number of newborns with cord cut using new blade or boiled instrument | Number of live last births (at home) in the | Home births only; questions on use of clean delivery kits can be included | What was used to cut the cord? Was the instrument used to cut the cord boiled prior to use? |
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| Thermal care: skin-to-skin | Percent of newborns placed on the mother's bare chest after delivery | Number of newborns placed on the mother's bare chest after delivery | Number of live last births in the | All births; timing assessment optional | After the birth, was (NAME) put directly on the bare skin of your chest? (Show mother example of skin-to-skin position) |
| Cord care: applications to the umbilical cord | Percent of newborns with nothing (harmful) applied to cord | Number of newborns with nothing (harmful) applied to cord | Number of live last births in the | All births; “harmful" to be defined locally | Was anything applied to the cord after the cord was cut and tied, until the cord fell off? (If “yes") What was applied to the cord? |
Surveys will vary in period of recall. Typically, DHS surveys use a recall period of five years, while MICS surveys use a two-year period. Interviewer records all substances put on the cord from cutting until it falls off. Harmful substances are determined locally and split out during analysis.