Abstract
BackgroundMany maternal and perinatal deaths in low-resource settings are preventable. Inadequate access to timely, quality care in maternity facilities drives poor outcomes, especially where women deliver at home with traditional birth attendants (TBA). Yet few solutions exist to support TBA-initiated referrals or address reasons patients frequently refuse facility care, such as disrespectful and abusive treatment. We hypothesised that deploying accompaniers—obstetric care navigators (OCN)—trained to provide integrated patient support would facilitate referrals from TBAs to public hospitals.MethodsThis project built on an existing collaboration with 41 TBAs who serve indigenous Maya villages in Guatemala’s Western Highlands, which provided baseline data for comparison. When TBAs detected pregnancy complications, families were offered OCN referral support. Implementation was guided by bimonthly meetings of the interdisciplinary quality improvement team where the OCN role was iteratively tailored. The primary process outcomes were referral volume, proportion of births receiving facility referral, and referral success rate, which were analysed using statistical process control methods.ResultsOver the 12-month pilot, TBAs attended 847 births. The median referral volume rose from 14 to 27.5, meeting criteria for special cause variation, without a decline in success rate. The proportion of births receiving facility-level care increased from 24±6% to 62±20% after OCN implementation. Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy and prolonged labour were the most common referral indications. The OCN role evolved to include a number of tasks, such as expediting emergency transportation and providing doula-like labour support.ConclusionsOCN accompaniment increased the proportion of births under TBA care that received facility-level obstetric care. Results from this of obstetric care navigation suggest it is a feasible, patient-centred intervention to improve maternity care.
Reference36 articles.
1. Using human rights to improve maternal and neonatal health: history, connections and a proposed practical approach;Gruskin;Bull World Health Organ,2008
2. World Health Organization (WHO), UNICEF, UNFPA . Trends in maternal mortality: 1990 to 2015 - Estimates by WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA, World Bank Group and the United Nations Population Division 2015.
3. World Health Organization (WHO) . Maternal mortality Fact sheet #348, 2015. Available: http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs348/en/ [Accessed 12 Aug 2018].
4. Hug L , Sharrow D , Zhong K , et al . Levels & Trends in Child Mortality. United Nations Child Fund 2018.
5. Relationship between body image disturbance and incidence of depression: the SUN prospective cohort