| Literature DB >> 28580354 |
Sasha Hernandez1, Jessica Bastos Oliveira1, Taraneh Shirazian1.
Abstract
In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), where the rates of maternal mortality continue to be inappropriately high, there has been recognition of the importance of training traditional birth attendants (TBAs) to help improve outcomes during pregnancy and childbirth. In Guatemala, there is no national comprehensive training program in place despite the fact that the majority of women rely on TBAs during pregnancy and childbirth. This community case study presents a unique education program led by TBAs for TBAs in rural Guatemala. Discussion of this training program focuses on programming implementation, curriculum development, sustainable methodology, and how an educational partnership with the current national health-care system can increase access to health care for women in LMICs. Recent modifications to this training model are also discussed including how a change in the clinical curriculum is further integrating TBAs into the national health infrastructure. The training program has demonstrated that Guatemalan TBAs are able to improve their basic obstetrical knowledge, are capable of identifying and referring early complications of pregnancy and labor, and can deliver basic prenatal care that would otherwise not be provided. This training model is helping transform the role of the TBA from a sole cultural practitioner to a validated health-care provider within the health-care infrastructure of Guatemala and has the potential to do the same in other LMICs.Entities:
Keywords: Guatemala; Indigenous health; low resource settings; low- and middle-income countries; maternal mortality; rural HEALTH; traditional birth attendant; training model
Year: 2017 PMID: 28580354 PMCID: PMC5437202 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2017.00111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
The School of POWHER curriculum overview.
| Topic | |
|---|---|
| Day 1 | An Overview of Maternal-Infant Care |
| Day 2 | The Role of the Birth Attendant, Health Care Resources, and the Emergency Plan |
| Day 3 | Sexual Organs, Sexual Desire, and Menstruation, Ovulation, and Fertilization |
| Day 4 | The Natural Development of Pregnancy |
| Day 5 | The Choice of Motherhood, The Importance of Prenatal Care—Part 1 |
| Day 6 | The Importance of Prenatal Care—Part 2 |
| Day 7 | Pregnancy Complications, Part 1 |
| Day 8 | Pregnancy Complications, Part 2 |
| Day 9 | Signs and Symptoms of Danger during Pregnancy |
| Day 10 | Case Studies on Prenatal Care, Exam 1 |
| Day 11 | Review Exam 1 |
| Day 12 | Tetanus Vaccine, Introduction to Stages of Labor |
| Day 13 | Uncomplicated Labor: Stage One and Two |
| Day 14 | Uncomplicated Labor: Stage Two and Three |
| Day 15 | Review of Stages of Labor, Basic Care of the Newborn |
| Day 16 | Complications during Labor and Delivery |
| Day 17 | When to Refer during Labor |
| Day 18 | Neonatal Resuscitation, Immediate Post-Partum Care, Maternal Lactation |
| Day 19 | Maternal Lactation Review, Post-Partum Care: Day 1 & 4 |
| Day 20 | Review of Normal and Complicated Labor, Exam 2 |
| Day 21 | Medicinal Plants, Sharing of Experiences during Labor |
| Day 22 | Infection Prevention and Management, Sterilization of Birth Tools |
| Day 23 | Family Planning Methods |
| Day 24 | Case Studies: Family Planning, Self Breast Exam |
| Day 25 | Vaginal Infections and STIs |
| Day 26 | Nutrition and Malnutrition |
| Day 27 | Complicated Labor |
| Day 28 | Cumulative Review, Final Exam |
Figure 1Clinical assessment tool.
Mean test scores for School of POWHER class of 2014 students.
| Topic | Pre-test (%) | Post-test (%) | 1-year test (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anatomy/physiology | 53 | 70 | 64 |
| Pregnancy diagnosis | 35 | 83 | 70 |
| Prenatal care | 35 | 70 | 91 |
| Emergencies | 66 | 86 | 94 |
| Labor and delivery | 68 | 88 | 78 |
| Postpartum care | 52 | 81 | 55 |
| Newborn care | 74 | 79 | 86 |
| Sterile techniques | 62 | 86 | 70 |
| Infection prevention | 62 | 86 | 70 |
| Baby care | 90 | 100 | 100 |
| Prevention | 62 | 76 | 91 |
| Total knowledge score | 59 | 82 | 79 |
Type of counseling discussed during prenatal home visit in skills pilot study.
| Type of counseling | # of visits counseling occurred/total visits | # of visits counseling did not occur/total visits |
|---|---|---|
| Discussion of fever | 40/84 | 44/84 |
| Discussion of severe headache | 56/84 | 28/84 |
| Discussion of epigastric pain | 56/84 | 28/84 |
| Discussion of hemorrhage | 53/84 | 53/84 |
| Discussion of important of Td vaccine | 64/84 | 20/84 |
| Discussion of importance of prenatal vitamins | 60/84 | 25/84 |