| Literature DB >> 33256775 |
Sk Masum Billah1,2, Rashidul Haque3, Atique Iqbal Chowdhury4, Md Shahjahan Siraj4, Qazi Sadequr Rahman4, Tanvir Hossain4, Asraful Alam4, Masud Alam3, Chelsea Marie5, Beth McGrath5, Shams El Arifeen4, William A Petri5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Global Network for Women's and Children's Health Research (Global Network, GN) has established the Maternal Newborn Health Registry (MNHR) to assess MNH outcomes over time. Bangladesh is the newest country in the GN and has implemented a full electronic MNH registry system, from married women surveillance to pregnancy enrollment and subsequent follow ups.Entities:
Keywords: Bangladesh; Electronic data capture; Global network; Maternal and newborn health; Registry
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33256775 PMCID: PMC7708182 DOI: 10.1186/s12978-020-00993-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Health ISSN: 1742-4755 Impact factor: 3.223
Variables in MNHR in Bangladesh
| Level | Indicators | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Maternal mortality, neonatal mortality, stillbirth, miscarriage, medical termination of pregnancy, birth weight, cause of death, maternal and newborn complications, | |||
| Antenatal care from medically trained provider, Tetanus toxoid vaccination, iron, vitamin and calcium supplementation, HIV test, urine test for protein, ultrasound | Skilled attendance at delivery, place of delivery, mode of delivery, referral for hospitalization, newborn resuscitation, essential newborn care, | treatment received for maternal and newborn complications, hospitalization | |
| Household demographics, wealth, housing characteristics, water source, sanitation, fuel use, maternal education, height, hemoglobin, weight, parity, pervious pregnancy complications, gestational age | |||
Fig. 1Enrollment and follow up visit schedule and Information collected at different visits
Bangladesh MNHR data collection forms, data collection
| Data collection tools (forms) | Description | Responsible Person/Method | Potential Source(s) of Data |
|---|---|---|---|
| Married women surveillance form | List of all households, married women and their pregnancy status in the community. | Surveillance workers conduct census of all households in the registry clusters in two monthly rounds. | Household census |
| Pregnancy Registry Log (MN00): | Registry of all women who are pregnant in the community. | Surveillance workers report identified pregnant women to the Registry Administrator (RA) via electronic record sharing | Household surveillance of married women likely to become pregnant |
| Enrollment Form (MN01) | Demographics: basic demographic information of women | RAs collect data through interview of the pregnant women identified by surveillance workers | Interview with pregnant women |
| Perinatal Form (MN02) | Delivery outcome: outcome of all pregnant women on registry and coverage of interventions to be reported at delivery/discharge | RAs collect data through interview with participant, and/or family, reviewing health records at household and/or at health facility during 1st post partum visit | Interview with registry participants and review of health records (where available) |
| Follow-up (MN03) | Follow-up outcome: status of all mothers (to day 42) and neonates (to day 28) who are on the registry, post-partum complications | RAs collect data through interview with participant, and/or family, reviewing health records at household and/or health facility visits | Interview with mother/mother-in-law, birth attendant, and review of health records |
| Protocol Deviation (MN04) | Protocol Deviation: used to report all protocol deviations which occur during the registry | RA and the Senior Foreign Investigator (SFI) and/or Study Coordinator or their designee complete after reviewing the report | RA and Study Coordinator |
| Perinatal Cause of Death (COD) (MN05) | Perinatal COD: used to collect information of all fetal deaths > 20 weeks gestation and neonatal deaths (0 to day 28 days) which occur in the registry | Project Research Physicians collect data and the SFI and/or Study Coordinator or their designee reviews | Interview with mother/mother-in-law/family, birth attendant, and review of health records |
| Maternal COD (MN06) | Maternal COD: collect data on all maternal deaths for any reason during pregnancy or up to 42 days post-partum to determine a COD | Project Research Physicians collect data and the SFI and/or Study Coordinator or their designee reviews | Interview with family, birth attendant, and review of health records |
| Ultrasound dating worksheet (MN17) | Used to collect information on date of ultrasound and expected date of delivery | RAs collect the data at enrolment or perinatal (1st post partum) visit if women had received ultrasound any time during pregnancy | Ultrasound report and Interview with the participant |
| Socioeconomic status variable (MN18) | Used to collect information on household possession of assets, housing characteristics and water and sanitation access | RAs collect the information during enrollment visit at household | Interview with registry participants or other adult household member |
Fig. 212 clusters in unions (left) and two surveillance workers’ areas (right)
Fig. 3 Baris in surveillance blocks and surveillance workers’ area in a catchment
Eligibility criteria for enrollment of participants in MNH registry
| • Married pregnant women aged 15 to 49 years | |
| • Permanent residents of the study cluster including woman intending to transfer for care at delivery (natal move out) | |
| • Woman not a permanent resident of the study cluster but delivers in the study cluster (natal move in) | |
| • Women who do not provide consent or assent (for women aged < 18 years) |
Fig. 4Overall administrative structure of the MNHR in Bangladesh site
Fig. 5Data collection screen of surveillance application on android tablets
Fig. 6Data flow architecture of Bangladesh MNH registry site
Fig. 7Web monitoring data dashboard
Demography of Bangladesh MNH registry site clusters
| Cluster | Total Bari listed (#) | Total households listed (#) | Total population (#) | Currently Married Women in Reproductive Age (CMWRA) | Average Availability of CMWRA in HHs | Women less susceptible to become pregnant (#) | CMWRA reported currently pregnant (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1667 | 4854 | 19,308 | 4102 | 85% | 551 | 4% | |
| 967 | 4589 | 18,034 | 3917 | 85% | 620 | 5% | |
| 1390 | 4506 | 17,891 | 3774 | 84% | 659 | 5% | |
| 1049 | 4567 | 18,114 | 4001 | 88% | 604 | 5% | |
| 1908 | 4723 | 18,335 | 4265 | 90% | 297 | 5% | |
| 944 | 4431 | 17,937 | 4067 | 92% | 702 | 4% | |
| 1979 | 4973 | 19,330 | 4523 | 91% | 501 | 5% | |
| 1574 | 4690 | 17,936 | 4254 | 91% | 337 | 4% | |
| 1703 | 4558 | 18,538 | 3857 | 85% | 502 | 4% | |
| 1180 | 4858 | 18,445 | 4410 | 91% | 521 | 5% | |
| 1144 | 4591 | 18,508 | 4056 | 88% | 716 | 5% | |
| 1335 | 4724 | 19,086 | 4043 | 86% | 534 | 5% | |
| 16,840 | 56,064 | 221,462 | 49,269 | 88% | 6544 | 5% |
Fig. 8Prevalence of permanent sterilization, long-acting reversible contraceptives and injectable contraceptive by clusters