| Literature DB >> 29977530 |
Robert McPherson1, Stephen Hodgins2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Newborn mortality remains unacceptably high in many countries. Postnatal home visits (PNHVs) have been endorsed as a strategy for delivery of postnatal care (PNC) to reduce newborn mortality as well as to improve maternal outcomes. This paper reports on a review of coverage-related performance of such programs implemented at scale through government health services in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Malawi, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Rwanda, Sri Lanka and Uganda.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29977530 PMCID: PMC6005634 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.08.010422
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Figure 1Process for selecting and screening countries during phases I and II. Note: Bangladesh was included in the review in order to better understand how it has proceeded in development of postnatal care (PNC) programming over the past decade.
National, population-representative data relevant to PNHV coverage (past 2 years, unless otherwise specified)
| Country (institutional delivery rate: past 5 y) | PNC coverage within 2 d of birth | For home births, timing of any PNC | PNC coverage within 2 d of birth | For home births, timing of any PNC | Source | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 48% | 1% | <4 h 0.5%, 4-48 h 0.5% | – | – | – | 2014 Mini DHS [ | |
| physician/ midwife 0.6%, health extension worker 0.3% | |||||||
| 93% | 45% | <4 h 31%, 4-48 h 14% | 25% | 16% | <4 h 6.5%, 4-48 h 10% | 2014 DHS [ | |
| TBA 32%, nurse-midwife 7.2%, physician 1.6%, community health officer/ nurse 1.2%, other 3.5% | TBA 8.6%, physician 4.8%, nurse-midwife 2.0%, community health officer/ nurse 0.2%, other 0.8% | ||||||
| 46% | 13% | – | 39% (within 24 h of discharge) | 13% (within 24 h of birth) | – | 2014 RSOC survey [ | |
| 89% | 60% | <4 h 36%, 4-48 h 24% | 53% | 36% | <4 h 21%, 4-48 h 15% | 2012 DHS [ | |
| Nurse/midwife or village midwife 53%, TBA 6.5%, physician 0.4%, obstetrician 0.2% | Nurse/ midwife or village midwife 29%, TBA 6%, physician 0.2%, pediatrician 0.1% | ||||||
| 82% | 25% | PNC “visits” (not including care at birth): day 0: 5%, day 1: 2%, day 2: 2%, days 3-6: 2%. | 88% | 28% | PNC “visits” (not including care at birth): day 0: 8%, day 1: 3%, day 2: 3%, days 3-6: 2%. | 2014 MICS [ | |
| Location of 1st PNC visit within 1 week (among those born at home who received PNC) 82% at health facility. | Location of 1st PNC visit within 1 week (among those born at home who received PNC) 72% at health facility. | ||||||
| Physician 75%, TBA 15%, CHW 4%, community midwives 6% | Physician 66%, TBA 21%, CHW 9%, community midwives 4% | ||||||
| 89% | 56% | <4 h 30%, 4-48 h 26% | 38% | 36% | <4 h 19%, 4-48 h 17% | 2016 DHS [ | |
| Physician/ nurse/ midwife/LHV 33%, TBA 18%, auxiliary midwife 5%, CHW 0.2% | Physician/ nurse/ midwife/ LHV-20%, TBA 12%, auxiliary midwife 3.3%, CHW 0.2% | ||||||
| 91% | 18% | PNC “visits” (not including care at birth): day 0: 1.4%, day 1%-1%, day 2 - 0.2%, days 3-6 -0.1%. | 91% | 17% | PNC “visits” (not including care at birth): day 0 - 2.3%, day 1 - 0.8%, day 2 - 0.6%, days 3-6 -1%. | 2014 MICS [ | |
| Location of 1st PNC visit within 1 week (among those born at any site who received PNC): 78% at health facility. | Location of 1st PNC visit within 1 week (among those born at any site who received PNC): 70% at health facility. | ||||||
| Physician/ nurse/ midwife 72%, auxiliary nurse-midwife 10%, health assistant/ auxiliary health worker 17%, maternal child health worker/ village health worker 2% | Physician/ nurse/ midwife 63%, auxiliary nurse-midwife 10%, health assistant/ auxiliary health worker 24%, maternal child health worker/ village health worker 3% | ||||||
| 85% | 32% | <4 h 30%, 4-48 h 2% | 58% | 25% | <4 h 22%, 4-48 h 3% | 2013 DHS [ | |
| TBA 26%, physician /nurse/ midwife 5%, other 0.2% | Auxiliary nurse-midwife 18%, physician/ nurse/ midwife 7%, other 0.3% | ||||||
| 44% | 31% | <4 h 24%, 4-48 h 7% | 19% | 19% | <4 h 13%, 4-48 h 6% | 2015 DHS [ | |
| Physician/ nurse/ medical assistant 27%, midwife 0.8%, CHW 2.6% | Physician/ nurse/ medical assistant 16.8%, CHW 2.2% | ||||||
| 49% | 10% | <4 h 5.5%, 4-48 h 4.5% | 15% | 5% | <4 h 1%, 4-48 h 4% | 2011 DHS[ | |
| TBA 6%, physician/nurse/midwife 4%, nurse’s aide/village health team member 0.5%, medical assistant-0.2% | TBA 1%, physician/nurse/midwife 4%, nurse’s aide/village health team member 0.1%, medical assistant-0.3% | ||||||
TBA – traditional birth attendant, CHW – community health worker, PNC – post-natal care, MICS – Multi-Indicator Cluster Surveys, d – days, h – hours
Factors that influence performance of postnatal home visits (from key informant interviews)
| Factors relating to the general health system | Factors specific to PNHVs |
|---|---|
| • Government ownership and financing • Pilot-testing the model under realistic program conditions, revising the model based on evaluation findings, and only proceeding to phased scale-up if the model achieves acceptable results and demonstrates feasibility. • Adequacy of training, supervision, information collection for monitoring and evaluation, equipment and supplies, and availability of suitable referral sites for mothers and newborns with health problems. • Provisions for holding the cadre performing PNHVs accountable for services it provides. | • Adherence to a standard that mothers and newborns stay in facilities for 24 h post-delivery and be provided with high-quality PNC prior to discharge. • Schedule of PNHVs that is feasible and that may be complemented by facility-based PNC. • Positioning PNHVs as part of a life-course continuum of care rather than as a stand-alone service. • Cultivation of demand for home-based postnatal services, by clients who view the cadre providing them as competent and trustworthy, who are receptive to using government health services (including facility-based services), and who will allow health workers into their homes during the postnatal period. • Functional system for birth notification to the cadre performing PNHVs. • Availability of a cadre (to conduct PNHVs) that is qualified, motivated, has time to perform home visitation, and can access clients’ homes without undue burden. • Health worker access to transport to visit clients’ homes. |
PNHV – postnatal home visits, PNC – postnatal care