| Literature DB >> 28591145 |
Hege L Ersdal1, Nalini Singhal2, Georgina Msemo3, Ashish Kc4,5, Santorino Data6, Nester T Moyo7, Cherrie L Evans8, Jeffrey Smith8, Jeffrey M Perlman9, Susan Niermeyer10.
Abstract
Globally, the burden of deaths and illness is still unacceptably high at the day of birth. Annually, approximately 300.000 women die related to childbirth, 2.7 million babies die within their first month of life, and 2.6 million babies are stillborn. Many of these fatalities could be avoided by basic, but prompt care, if birth attendants around the world had the necessary skills and competencies to manage life-threatening complications around the time of birth. Thus, the innovative Helping Babies Survive (HBS) and Helping Mothers Survive (HMS) programs emerged to meet the need for more practical, low-cost, and low-tech simulation-based training. This paper provides users of HBS and HMS programs a 10-point list of key implementation steps to create sustained impact, leading to increased survival of mothers and babies. The list evolved through an Utstein consensus process, involving a broad spectrum of international experts within the field, and can be used as a means to guide processes in low-resourced countries. Successful implementation of HBS and HMS training programs require country-led commitment, readiness, and follow-up to create local accountability and ownership. Each country has to identify its own gaps and define realistic service delivery standards and patient outcome goals depending on available financial resources for dissemination and sustainment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28591145 PMCID: PMC5462342 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0178073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1The “Utstein Formula for Survival” with different implementation scenarios (adapted from Søreide et al [26] with permission).
A priori and emergent codes based on the pre-meeting inputs.
| Work with stakeholders who are ready for implementation–nationally, in-facility | |
| Include all stakeholders–professional associations, UN health agencies, maternal/neonatal, public/private | |
| Make a national plan including the Ministry of Health–accommodating new inputs/unforeseen changes, realistic and phased | |
| Designate leadership for carrying out the national plan | |
| Define the role of stakeholders clearly–site x time, small-scale partnerships, collaboration to avoid compartmentalization | |
| Have a system for accountability that is transparent to all parties–nationally, in-facility | |
| Establish a system for training–train-the-trainer-and-provider cascade, fidelity, coverage, adaptation of materials, integration of maternal/neonatal content, video | |
| Conduct training in-facility–local ownership, prioritized content, high staff coverage | |
| Conduct low-dose, high-frequency practice–tailored to needs, incentivized, self-evaluation checklists, video | |
| Identify a local champion in-facility | |
| Introduce programs (or content) into pre-service curricula | |
| Support a facility-based improvement process using HBS/HMS outcome/process measures–flexible leadership, various sources of materials, content based on needs | |
| Build a reliable supply chain/procurement/maintenance/reprocessing system | |
| Encourage community participation/mobilization–awareness/advocacy, family training for out-of-facility births and essential newborn care | |
| Collect data on core set of outcomes | |
| Align national health registry data and facility-based data collection | |
| Utilize data for guiding improvement and budgeting | |
| Enact policies/regulations supporting high-quality care–training, commodities, facilities, personnel | |
| Budget at all levels to support high-quality care | |
| Integration | |
| a-between Ministry of Health, educational bodies, professional associations and hands-on workforce | |
| b-between maternal and neonatal domains at all process steps from readiness to funding to planning/stakeholder roles, training, practice (integrated scenarios), data | |
| c-health facilities and community–prenatal care, in-facility care, community follow-up | |
| d-regionalized care–how to get advanced help, time to advanced care, public and private facilities | |
| Empowerment of provider, pregnant woman, family | |
Fig 2Illustration of the 4-stage implementation model and categories for discussion during the 1st and 2nd Utstein-rotation related to the “Utstein Formula for Survival” (adapted from Søreide et al [26] with permission).
Fig 3Nepal: Formation and function of the quality improvement team.
Fig 4Tanzania: Champions of LDHF in-situ training (adapted from Perlman et al [29] with permission).
Fig 5Uganda: Implementing a broader program after scanning and planning.
Essential action points for national HBS/HMS implementation.
| 1. At the country level, establish a maternal/newborn/child health alliance with public, private, and non-governmental partners |
| 2. Form a functional working group for advocacy, planning, training, and monitoring at the country level. Through the working group, identify gaps in the current system, establish performance standards, set specific goals, and develop a financial plan to implement and sustain the program(s) |
| 3. Develop a plan for national-to-facility levels training, which achieves high-quality coverage of providers in both public and private facilities |
| 4. Provide appropriately adapted learning materials, equipment and supplies simultaneously with training |
| 5. Identify and support local leaders and champions |
| 6. Set up local systems for frequent, brief refresher training, debriefing, and audits |
| 7. Support the function of facility-level perinatal quality improvement teams |
| 8. Collect and report local data on a standardized set of indicators of basic processes of care and patient outcomes |
| 9. Develop a system for looped reporting and feedback to/from all levels of the health system and the working group |
| 10. Engage and empower health care providers, families, and the broader community in the initiative |