| Literature DB >> 35329118 |
Grant Murewanhema1, Godfrey Musuka2, Chipo Gwanzura1, Richard Makurumidze3, Itai Chitungo4, Munashe Chimene5, Nigel Tungwarara6, Tafadzwa Dzinamarira2,7, Mugove Gerald Madziyire1.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic and resultant lockdowns have brought unprecedented challenges for Maternal, Sexual and Reproductive Health (MSRH) services. Components of MSRH services adversely affected include antenatal, postnatal, and newborn care; provision of family planning and post-abortion care services; sexual and gender-based violence care and prevention; and care and treatment for sexually transmitted infections including HIV. Resuscitating, remodeling or inventing interventions to restore or maintain these essential services at the community level, as a gateway to higher care, is critical to mitigating short and long-term effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on essential MSRH. We propose a possible framework for community involvement and propose integrating key information, education, and communication of MSRH messages within COVID-19 messages.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; antenatal care; family planning; pandemic; postnatal care; sexual and gender-based violence; sexually transmitted infections
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35329118 PMCID: PMC8953553 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19063431
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Maintaining essential family planning activities and managing abortions at the community level during the COVID-19 pandemic.
| Item and Objective | Action Points |
|---|---|
| Train village health workers: to ensure continuity of access to essential family planning services |
Village health workers can be trained to distribute oral contraceptives in the community, to reduce travel requirements and bring contraceptives closer to where the clients stay; Provide village health workers with tools for infection prevention and control to protect themselves and their community whilst they distribute contraceptives. |
| Community Kiosks: to ensure easy access of family planning methods at strategic points in communities |
Women can access contraceptive pills and condoms at community kiosks manned by village health workers or primary care nurses stationed in villages, to reduce the need to travel; Place IEC material at these community kiosks and aim to integrate family planning and other MSRH messages within key COVID-19 IEC messages, incorporating colourful displays. |
| Provide long-acting reversible contraception via mobile clinics: to reduce the need for repeated visits to health centres |
Long-acting reversible methods of contraception such as Jadelle, Implanon and Copper Intra-uterine contraceptive devices can be offered via mobile clinics observing minimum aseptic techniques; Village health workers, village heads and other community leaders can spread information regarding visit schedules. |
| Establish telemedicine services: to minimize person-to-person contact with healthcare providers in avoidable circumstances |
Provide communities with linkage to telemedicine services in case they encounter adverse effects to contraception. This enables triaging to determine who needs attention in a medical facility:
With government medical officers With gynaecologists |
| Managing abortion in the community: to reduce adverse outcomes associated with reduced access to post-abortion care |
Community nurses can work with community health workers for the administration of misoprostol to stable patients awaiting access to safe health facilities. Liaising with midwives and medical officers through teleconsultations will be critical; Community health workers must be empowered to identify and facilitate the urgent referral of all unstable patients to health facilities. |
Ensuring the continuity of essential antenatal and postnatal care services at the community level during the COVID-19 pandemic.
| Item and Objective | Action |
|---|---|
| Provide micronutrient supplements and malaria prophylaxis tablets at the community level: to reduce risk of anaemia and malnutrition, and reduce adverse outcomes from malaria in pregnancy in endemic areas |
Village health workers, village heads and other community leaders can keep a diary of all pregnant women in their locality; Village health workers to provide all pregnant women in their communities with micronutrient supplements and provide them with three-month supplies of iron and folate; Village health workers can be educated on dosing schedules for intermittent presumptive therapy of malaria with sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine and provide correct doses to pregnant women in malaria-endemic areas. |
| Establish mobile antenatal care clinics and mobility for community nurses: to ensure continued access to essential antenatal care and surveillance in marginalized communities |
Mobile antenatal clinics. These can be integrated with mobile family planning and HIV care services, and the same basic precautionary infection prevention and control measures taken as above; Village heads, community leaders and village health workers can spread dates of scheduled visits into the community; Ministry of Health and Child Care and development partners to support the mobile clinics with basic personal protective equipment, sphygmomanometers, thermos-scanners and hand-held dopplers; Ministry of Health and Child Care and development partners can provide motorbikes for community nurses and community health workers, with thermoscanners and blood pressure machines, to monitor pregnant and postpartum patients; Advocate for observation of physical distancing and attending to limited numbers of clients during these visits. A strict booking register can be observed; Any clients with high-risk pregnancies should be referred to higher facilities. |
| Community distribution of misoprostol: to reduce adverse outcomes from postpartum haemorrhage for women who face challenges in accessing health centres in time |
Village health workers are provided with misoprostol to distribute to pregnant women near term in case they fail to access health facilities when they get into labour due to transport challenges. |
| Transport and logistics for labouring women: to reduce the logistical challenges in accessing transport and minimize delays in reaching health centres for labour and delivery |
Villages/Communities must ideally locate a resident with a reliable vehicle, and pool funds to ensure it is always fuelled; This individual(s) can assist with getting pregnant women to nearby health facilities when they get into labour, and they must be given exemption letters to allow them to travel freely; Sensitise local leaders (chiefs, headmen) on the importance of timely access to healthcare facilities for labouring women. Most chiefs are provided with government vehicles that can be used to assist pregnant women in marginalised areas. |
| Postnatal care: to ensure continued access to essential postnatal care services at the community level |
Village health workers and other community health workers can be sensitised to follow-up pregnant women who cannot access health facilities, to identify any dangerous symptoms and signs that need urgent intervention; Smooth communication between midwives, medical officers and local leadership can facilitate urgent referral of such women to higher facilities. |
Ensuring continued access to sexually transmitted infection prevention and HAART services at the community level during the COVID-19 pandemic.
| Item and Objective | Action |
|---|---|
| Community antiretroviral therapy delivery models for pregnant and breastfeeding women: to ensure continued access to antiretroviral therapy with no disruptions |
Development partners in conjunction with the Ministry of Health and Child Care to urgently design differentiated models of antiretroviral therapy delivery for pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers; All pregnant women must be granted exemption letters to enable them free movement between village and health facility levels. At the community level, village heads and chiefs can be granted this authority; Ensure maximumly permissible (3–6 months) supplies of HAART and Co-trimoxazole are given for each client; Groups can apply to partners for funding for transport allowances for the appointed members. |
| Mobile antiretroviral therapy clinics: to ensure continued access to HIV treatment in the communities, closer to where people stay |
Pregnant women must be given priority for testing; Ensure test and treat strategy is employed effectively for any pregnant mothers who test positive for HIV to minimise vertical transmission; Appropriate counselling services must be maintained for women to ensure adherence and compliance to medicines; Village health workers, community leaders and village heads can spread the news of scheduled dates. |
| Telemedicine: to minimize unnecessary face-to-face contacts between clients and service providers |
Establish links for telemedicine with medical officers and specialist doctors for side-effects and other problems; Communities to advocate for phones and subsidised calls to ensure availability of these services |
| Sexually transmitted infections prevention at the community level: to ensure continued access to these preventive services for those in need |
Condom distribution at community kiosks; Condom distribution through village health workers and other community health workers for free; Reinforce messages on the importance of safer sex and abstinence at key and strategic points in the community; Integrate COVID-19 prevention messages with messages on HIV and sexually transmitted infections prevention. |
Ensuring early care for sexual and gender-based violence and rape survivors at the community level.
| Item | Action |
|---|---|
| Disclosure of sexual and gender-based violence: to ensure timely access to care and treatment for victims |
Primary care counsellors and community health workers must be empowered to encourage early disclosure of sexual and gender-based violence by victims to promote early seeking of appropriate treatment and counselling services. |
| Emergency Contraception: to reduce the risks of unwanted pregnancies for rape survivors |
Village health workers and community health workers must be trained to provide emergency oral contraception to survivors at the community level within 12–72 h to prevent unintended pregnancies. |
| Post-Exposure Prophylaxis: to reduce the risk of incident HIV and sexually transmitted infections from rape incidents |
Provide post-exposure prophylaxis for HIV and sexually transmitted infections to reduce the incidence among sexual and gender-based violence and rape survivors. |