Improving quality of care during childbirth in primary health centres: a stepped-wedge cluster-randomised trial in India
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Published:2018-10
Issue:5
Volume:3
Page:e000907
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ISSN:2059-7908
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Container-title:BMJ Global Health
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language:en
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Short-container-title:BMJ Glob Health
Author:
Agarwal Ramesh, Chawla DeepakORCID, Sharma Minakshi, Nagaranjan Shyama, Dalpath Suresh K, Gupta Rakesh, Kumar Saket, Chaudhuri Saumyadripta, Mohanty Premananda, Sankar Mari Jeeva, Agarwal Krishna, Rani Shikha, Thukral Anu, Jain Suksham, Yadav Chandra Prakash, Gathwala Geeta, Kumar Praveen, Sarin Jyoti, Sreenivas Vishnubhatla, Aggarwal Kailash C, Kumar Yogesh, Kharya PradipORCID, Bisht Surender Singh, Shridhar Gopal, Arora Raksha, Joshi Kapil, Bhalla Kapil, Soni Aarti, Singh Sube, Devakirubai Prischillal, Samuel Ritu, Yadav Reena, Bahl Rajiv, Kumar Vijay, Paul Vinod Kumar
Abstract
BackgroundLow/middle-income countries need a large-scale improvement in the quality of care (QoC) around the time of childbirth in order to reduce high maternal, fetal and neonatal mortality. However, there is a paucity of scalable models.MethodsWe conducted a stepped-wedge cluster-randomised trial in 15 primary health centres (PHC) of the state of Haryana in India to test the effectiveness of a multipronged quality management strategy comprising capacity building of providers, periodic assessments of the PHCs to identify quality gaps and undertaking improvement activities for closure of the gaps. The 21-month duration of the study was divided into seven periods (steps) of 3 months each. Starting from the second period, a set of randomly selected three PHCs (cluster) crossed over to the intervention arm for rest of the period of the study. The primary outcomes included the number of women approaching the PHCs for childbirth and 12 directly observed essential practices related to the childbirth. Outcomes were adjusted with random effect for cluster (PHC) and fixed effect for ‘months of intervention’.ResultsThe intervention strategy led to increase in the number of women approaching PHCs for childbirth (26 vs 21 women per PHC-month, adjusted incidence rate ratio: 1.22; 95% CI 1.17 to 1.28). Of the 12 practices, 6 improved modestly, 2 remained near universal during both intervention and control periods, 3 did not change and 1 worsened. There was no evidence of change in mortality with a majority of deaths occurring either during referral transport or at the referral facilities.ConclusionA multipronged quality management strategy enhanced utilisation of services and modestly improved key practices around the time of childbirth in PHCs in India.Trial registration numberCTRI/2016/05/006963.
Funder
World Health Organization
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy
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