| Literature DB >> 29747604 |
Eniya Lufumpa1, Lucy Doos2, Antje Lindenmeyer3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Obstetric fistula is a debilitating childbearing injury that results from poorly managed obstructed labour, leading to the development of holes between the vagina and bladder and/or rectum. Effects of this injury are long-lasting, as women become incontinent and are often marginalised from their communities. Despite continuous occurrence of this injury in lower-income countries, it is preventable, as evidenced in high-income countries. This systematic review aims to identify and understand barriers and facilitators to interventions aimed at the prevention of obstetric fistulas in sub-Saharan African women.Entities:
Keywords: Barriers; Basic and comprehensive emergency obstetric care; Facilitators; Obstetric fistula; Preventive interventions
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29747604 PMCID: PMC5946543 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-018-1787-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of study inclusion process
Characteristics of included studies reporting on implemented fistula prevention interventions
| Author(s) | Year | Country/ region of study | Preventive intervention implemented | Phase applicable to intervention |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bacon | 2003 | sub-Saharan Africa | Improving access to adequate medical care; Health education programs | All three phases |
| Banke-Thomas et al. | 2014 | sub-Saharan Africa | Community and Facility based interventions | All three phases |
| Fistula carea | 2010 | Guinea (Kissidougou) | Village safe motherhood committees; Financial partnerships; Maternal waiting homes; and Market Towns and Local Resource Mobilisation project | All three phases |
| Fistula care (a)a | 2011 | Sierra Leone | Aberdeen’s Women’s Centre: counselling, family planning, and a maternity care unit for pregnancy care, labour and delivery, and postpartum recovery (services to prevent fistulas) | All three phases |
| Fistula care (b)a | 2011 | sub-Saharan Africa | Partograph | Phase 3: Receiving adequate care |
| Fistula carea | 2013 | Uganda | Partograph | Phase 3: Receiving adequate care |
| Gerten et al. | 2009 | Nigeria | Patient educational brochure at a vesicovaginal hospital | Phase 1: Decision to seek care |
| Levin and Kabagema | 2011 | sub-Saharan Africa | Partograph | Phase 3: Receiving adequate care |
| Markos and Bogale | 2015 | Ethiopia (Bale zone) | Partograph | Phase 3: Receiving adequate care |
| Miller et al. | 2005 | sub-Saharan Africa | Fistula prevention centres; Community-based preventions; Maternal waiting homes; and Training course about screening for risk of fistula | All three phases |
| Nathan et al. | 2009 | West Africa | Femme pour Femme, community healthcare insurance plan | All three phases |
| Ngoma | 2011 | Zambia | EmOC and Safe Motherhood Actions Groups (SMAGs); and Income generating activities (IGA) | All three phases |
| Ojanuga | 1991 | Nigeria | Community health education programs; organizing transport for pregnant women in need; and training traditional birth attendants | All three phases |
| Ojanuga | 1992 | Nigeria | Health education programs | Phase 1: Decision to seek care |
| Seim et al. | 2014 | Niger | Community-mobilization program that arrange transport for women who experience complicated labours | All three phases |
| Tahzib | 1989 | Nigeria | Safe motherhood initiatives not specified but aimed at encouraging hospital deliveries, and the improvement of the perception of facilities by women seeking help | All three phases |
| Turan et al. | 2007 | Eritrea | Transport of women to healthcare facilities | Phase 2: Accessibility of care |
| UNFPA | 2013 | sub-Saharan Africa | Global midwifery program; All-terrain motorbikes (Women and Health Alliance International) | Phase 2: Accessibility of care; |
aA six-year fistula repair and prevention program managed and implemented by Engender Health from 2007 to 2013
Barriers to interventions aimed at the prevention of obstetric fistulas categorised by the three phases of delay
| Phase one: | Phase two: | Phase three: |
|---|---|---|
| • Lack of awareness about health and preventive interventions | • Preventive strategies regarding birth plans are lagging | • Perception, healthcare practitioners view women with fistulas as a ‘nuisance’ and ‘embarrassment’ |
Facilitators to interventions aimed at the prevention of obstetric fistulas, categorised by the three phases of delay
| Phase one: | Phase two: | Phase three: |
|---|---|---|
| • Women with successful treatments acting as ambassadors and advocates for healthcare facilities | • Financial support | • Mobilisation of recognised experts |