A blended learning approach for capacity strengthening to improve the quality of integrated HIV, TB, and Malaria services during antenatal and postnatal care in LMICs: A feasibility study

Author:

Ladur Alice Norah1,Egere Uzochukwu1,Ravit Marion1,Mgawadere Florence2,Murray Christopher1,White Sarah Ann1,Mohammed Hauwa3,Mutai Rael1,Nyaga Lucy1,Shikuku Duncan1,Bashir Issak4,Ayinde Olubunmi Olufunmilola4,Bakar Rukia5,Katalambula Leonard6,Federici Carlo7,Torbica Alexsandra7,Furtado Nicholas8,Ameh Charles1

Affiliation:

1. Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

2. University of Liverpool

3. Zankli Medical Centre

4. Ministry of Health

5. The State University of Zanzibar

6. University of Dodoma

7. SDA Bocconi school of management

8. Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria

Abstract

Abstract Background The blended learning (BL) approach to training health care professionals is increasingly adopted in many countries because of high costs and disruption to service delivery in the light of severe human resource shortage in low resource settings. The Covid-19 pandemic increased the urgency to identify alternatives to traditional face-to-face (f2f) education approach. A four-day f2f antenatal care (ANC) and postnatal care (PNC) continuous professional development course (CPD) was repackaged into a 3-part BL course; 1) self-directed learning (16 hours) 2) facilitated virtual sessions (2.5 hours over 3 days) and 3) 2-day f2f sessions.Methods This study assessed the feasibility, change in healthcare providers' knowledge and costs of the BL package in Nigeria, Tanzania, and Kenya. A mixed methods design was used. A total of 89 healthcare professionals, were purposively selected. Quantitative data was collected through an online questionnaire and skills assessments, analyzed using STATA 12 software. Qualitative data was collected through key informant interviews and focus group discussions, analysed using thematic analysis.Results Majority of participants (86%) accessed the online sessions using a mobile phone from home and health facilities. The median (IQR) time of completing the self-directed component was 16 hours, IQR (8, 30). A multi-disciplinary team comprising of 42% nurse-midwives, 28% doctors, 20% clinical officers and 10% other healthcare professionals completed the BL course. Participants liked the BL approach due to its flexibility in learning, highly educative/relevant content, mixing of health worker cadres and CPD points. Aspects that were noted as challenging were related to personal log-in details and network connectivity issues during the self-directed learning and facilitated virtual sessions respectively.Conclusion The blended learning approach to ANC-PNC in-service training was found to be feasible, cost saving compared to the face-to-face approach and acceptable to health care professionals in LMICs.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference23 articles.

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2. United Nations. Sustainable Development Goals. New York: United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs; 2016 23rd Nov 2019]. Available from: https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/sdg3#targets.

3. United Nations. World Health Organization and United Nations Children’s Fund. WHO/UNICEF joint database on SDG 3.1.2 Skilled Attendance at Birth 2021. Available from: https://unstats.un.org/sdgs/indicators/database/.

4. Global causes of maternal death: a WHO systematic analysis;Say L;Lancet global health,2014

5. MOH (Kenya). Saving Mothers Lives 2017, First Confidential Report into Maternal Deaths in Kenya. 2017. Available from: https://cmnh.lstmed.ac.uk/sites/default/files/content/centre-news-articles/attachments/CEMD%20Main%20Report%20Sept%203%20FINAL-%20Full%20Report.pdf.

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