| Literature DB >> 28713802 |
Abstract
Skills strengthening and capacity building for maternal and newborn health (MNH) providers are essential to ensure quality care for mothers and newborns. There is, however, limited research regarding what constitutes an effective model in low-income countries. The Lao People's Democratic Republic (Laos) has some of the region's worst outcomes for neonatal and maternal mortality. Moreover, with a 23-year hiatus in midwifery training, which ended approximately 7 years ago, there is a cadre of new and inexperienced midwives in practice without support systems, skills, or continuing professional development opportunities. Traditional didactic teaching methodologies prevail in Laos, but with little evidence of efficacy. As an alternative model, Save the Children International has been implementing a mentorship approach for MNH providers in two provinces in northern Laos since January 2016, with technical guidance and funding from the United States Agency for International Development-supported global Maternal Child Survival Program. This community case study will describe and reflect on the approach by highlighting the need and rationale for mentorship, followed by a description of the program's core components and the results observed so far. Lessons learned and the application of the approach to different contexts and health-care professionals, considering both constraints and opportunities, will be discussed.Entities:
Keywords: capacity building; coaching; maternal and newborn health providers; mentorship; supportive supervision
Year: 2017 PMID: 28713802 PMCID: PMC5491883 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2017.00145
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Nine key standards of the integrated in-service guideline for normal delivery when the baby is not breathing.
| 1. | Monitor woman in labor using the partograph |
| 2. | Preparation just before birth |
| 3. | Assisting birth |
| 4. | Immediate essential newborn care |
| 5. | Newborn resuscitation—Airway and stimulation |
| 6. | Newborn resuscitation—Bag and mask ventilation |
| 7. | Active management of third stage of labor |
| 8. | Post-delivery tasks |
| 9 | Infection control and routine procedure after birth |
Figure 1Distribution of the professional roles of the first- and second-generation mentors.
Seven building blocks and standards of mentoring.
| Coaching | Demonstrating | Feedback and assessment |
| Action planning | Reflect on own progress as a mentor | Safety of mother and newborn |
Key program elements of mentorship.
| Essential components | Laos mentorship examples |
|---|---|
| Pedagogical style | Participatory learning in practice |
| Method of implementation | During real delivery or simulation using anatomical model (Mamanatalie/Neonatalie) |
| Location | In the delivery room |
| Frequency | Low-dose high-frequency (Specific skills practised frequently) |
| Development and retention of skills | Skills drills for rare events, e.g., newborn resuscitation and continuous mentoring skills development with buddy support |
| Institutionalized and sustainable | District level mentors in the facility ensuring mentorship are part of everyday practice |
| Laos trainer mentors equipped to train new mentors | |
| Support | Buddy system of trainer mentor supporting district mentor. District mentor supporting facility staff (mentees). Model of supportive supervision |
| Integrated | Maternal and newborn together |
| Comprehensive | Includes respectful maternal care, labor monitoring using partograph, active management of the third stage of labor, skin to skin, early breast feeding and infection control, and disposal of waste |
| Reflective, adaptive, and reproducible | Process documentation, regular mentor feedback, and review meetings to share lessons learned, inform continuous revisions of the approach, develop concise model adapted to context for reproducibility/scalability |
Figure 2Diagram of the Mentor program showing mentor capacity in the facilities and tools for implementation.