16 results on '"Moxon, Sarah G"'
Search Results
2. Assessment of the validity of the measurement of newborn and maternal health-care coverage in hospitals (EN-BIRTH): an observational study
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Serbanescu, Florina, Amouzou, Agbessi, Sæbø, Johan Ivar, Mathai, Matthews, Rawlins, Barbara, Azim, Tariq, Vaz, Lara, Monet, Jean-Pierre, Jackson, Debra, Requejo, Jennifer, Ram, Pavani K, Moran, Allisyn C, Kabuteni, Theopista John, Mazumder, Tapas, Rahman, Hafizur, Shaikh, Ziaul Haque, Talha, Taqbir Us Samad, Haider, Rajib, Siddika, Aysha, Sumi, Taslima Akter, Khan, Jasmin, Biswas, Bilkish, Mannan, M A, Hasanuzzaman, Abu, Ali, Ayub, Jahan, Rowshan Hosne, Hossain, Amir, Jahan, Ishrat, Gurung, Rejina, Sunny, Avinash K, Thakur, Nishant, Ghimire, Jagat Jeevan, Joshi, Elisha, Shrestha, Parashu Ram, Shrestha, Shree Krishna, Singh, Dela, Rana, Nisha, Mrisho, Mwifadhi, Manzi, Fatuma, Hanson, Claudia, Kija, Edward, Pembe, Andrea, Kisenge, Rodrick, Manji, Karim, Mkopi, Namala, Assenga, Evelyne, Blencowe, Hannah, Moxon, Sarah G, KC, Naresh P, Day, Louise Tina, Sadeq-ur Rahman, Qazi, Ehsanur Rahman, Ahmed, Salim, Nahya, KC, Ashish, Ruysen, Harriet, Tahsina, Tazeen, Masanja, Honorati, Basnet, Omkar, Gore-Langton, Georgia R, Zaman, Sojib Bin, Shabani, Josephine, Jha, Anjani Kumar, Gordeev, Vladimir Sergeevich, Ameen, Shafiqul, Shamba, Donat, Jha, Bijay, Boggs, Dorothy, Hossain, Tanvir, Shirima, Kizito, Bastola, Ram Chandra, Peven, Kimberly, Siddique, Abu Bakkar, Mbaruku, Godfrey, Paudel, Rajendra, Baschieri, Angela, Hossain, Aniqa Tasnim, Kong, Stefanie, Paudel, Asmita, Ahmed, Anisuddin, Cousens, Simon, El Arifeen, Shams, and Lawn, Joy E
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- 2021
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3. Risk of gentamicin toxicity in neonates treated for possible severe bacterial infection in low- and middle-income countries: Systematic Review
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Musiime, Grace M., Seale, Anna C., Moxon, Sarah G., and Lawn, Joy E.
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- 2015
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4. Kangaroo mother care: EN-BIRTH multi-country validation study.
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Salim, Nahya, Shabani, Josephine, Peven, Kimberly, Rahman, Qazi Sadeq-ur, KC, Ashish, Shamba, Donat, Ruysen, Harriet, Rahman, Ahmed Ehsanur, KC, Naresh, Mkopi, Namala, Zaman, Sojib Bin, Shirima, Kizito, Ameen, Shafiqul, Kong, Stefanie, Basnet, Omkar, Manji, Karim, Kabuteni, Theopista John, Brotherton, Helen, Moxon, Sarah G., and Amouzou, Agbessi
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NEONATAL death ,HOSPITAL records ,PREMATURE labor ,LABOR complications (Obstetrics) ,PREMATURE infants - Abstract
Background: Kangaroo mother care (KMC) reduces mortality among stable neonates ≤2000 g. Lack of data tracking coverage and quality of KMC in both surveys and routine information systems impedes scale-up. This paper evaluates KMC measurement as part of the Every Newborn Birth Indicators Research Tracking in Hospitals (EN-BIRTH) study.Methods: The EN-BIRTH observational mixed-methods study was conducted in five hospitals in Bangladesh, Nepal and Tanzania from 2017 to 2018. Clinical observers collected time-stamped data as gold standard for mother-baby pairs in KMC wards/corners. To assess accuracy, we compared routine register-recorded and women's exit survey-reported coverage to observed data, using different recommended denominator options (≤2000 g and ≤ 2499 g). We analysed gaps in quality of provision and experience of KMC. In the Tanzanian hospitals, we assessed daily skin-to-skin duration/dose and feeding frequency. Qualitative data were collected from health workers and data collectors regarding barriers and enablers to routine register design, filling and use.Results: Among 840 mother-baby pairs, compared to observed 100% coverage, both exit-survey reported (99.9%) and register-recorded coverage (92.9%) were highly valid measures with high sensitivity. KMC specific registers outperformed general registers. Enablers to register recording included perceptions of data usefulness, while barriers included duplication of data elements and overburdened health workers. Gaps in KMC quality were identified for position components including wearing a hat. In Temeke Tanzania, 10.6% of babies received daily KMC skin-to-skin duration/dose of ≥20 h and a further 75.3% received 12-19 h. Regular feeding ≥8 times/day was observed for 36.5% babies in Temeke Tanzania and 14.6% in Muhimbili Tanzania. Cup-feeding was the predominant assisted feeding method. Family support during admission was variable, grandmothers co-provided KMC more often in Bangladesh. No facility arrangements for other family members were reported by 45% of women at exit survey.Conclusions: Routine hospital KMC register data have potential to track coverage from hospital KMC wards/corners. Women accurately reported KMC at exit survey and evaluation for population-based surveys could be considered. Measurement of content, quality and experience of KMC need consensus on definitions. Prioritising further KMC measurement research is important so that high quality data can be used to accelerate scale-up of high impact care for the most vulnerable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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5. Categorising interventions to levels of inpatient care for small and sick newborns: Findings from a global survey.
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Moxon, Sarah G., Blencowe, Hannah, Bailey, Patricia, Bradley, John, Day, Louise Tina, Ram, Pavani K., Monet, Jean-Pierre, Moran, Allisyn C., Zeck, Willibald, and Lawn, Joy E.
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INPATIENT care , *MIDDLE-income countries - Abstract
Background: In 2017, 2.5 million newborns died, mainly from prematurity, infections, and intrapartum events. Preventing these deaths requires health systems to provide routine and emergency care at birth, and quality inpatient care for small and sick newborns. Defined levels of emergency obstetric care (EmOC) and standardised measurement of “signal functions” has improved tracking of maternal care in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Levels of newborn care, particularly for small and sick newborns, and associated signal functions are still not consistently defined or tracked. Methods: Between November 2016-November 2017, we conducted an online survey of professionals working in maternal and newborn health. We asked respondents to categorise 18 clinical care interventions that could act as potential signal functions for small and sick newborns to 3 levels of care they thought were appropriate for health systems in LMICs to provide: “routine care at birth”, “special care” and “intensive care”. We calculated the percentage of respondents that classified each intervention at each level of care and stratified responses to look at variation by respondent characteristics. Results: Six interventions were classified to specific levels by more than 50% of respondents as “routine care at birth,” three interventions as “special care” and one as “intensive care”. Eight interventions were borderline between these care levels. Responses were more consistent for interventions with relevant WHO clinical care guidelines while more variation in respondents’ classification was observed in complex interventions that lack standards or guidelines. Respondents with experience in lower-income settings were more likely to assign a higher level of care for more complex interventions. Conclusions: Results were consistent with known challenges of scaling up inpatient care in lower-income settings and underline the importance of comprehensive guidelines and standards for inpatient care. Further work is needed to develop a shortlist of newborn signal functions aligned with emergency obstetric care levels to track universal health coverage for mothers and their newborns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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6. "Every Newborn-BIRTH" protocol: observational study validating indicators for coverage and quality of maternal and newborn health care in Bangladesh, Nepal and Tanzania.
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Day, Louise T., Ruysen, Harriet, Gordeev, Vladimir S., Gore-Langton, Georgia R., Boggs, Dorothy, Cousens, Simon, Moxon, Sarah G., Blencowe, Hannah, Baschieri, Angela, Rahman, Ahmed Ehsanur, Tahsina, Tazeen, Zaman, Sojib Bin, Hossain, Tanvir, Rahman, Qazi Sadeq-ur, Ameen, Shafiqul, Arifeen, Shams El, Ashish, K. C., Shrestha, Shree Krishna, Naresh, P. K. C., and Singh, Dela
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MATERNAL health services - Abstract
Background To achieve Sustainable Development Goals and Universal Health Coverage, programmatic data are essential. The Every Newborn Action Plan, agreed by all United Nations member states and >80 development partners, includes an ambitious Measurement Improvement Roadmap. Quality of care at birth is prioritised by both Every Newborn and Ending Preventable Maternal Mortality strategies, hence metrics need to advance from health service contact alone, to content of care. As facility births increase, monitoring using routine facility data in DHIS2 has potential, yet validation research has mainly focussed on maternal recall surveys. The Every Newborn - Birth Indicators Research Tracking in Hospitals (EN-BIRTH) study aims to validate selected newborn and maternal indicators for routine tracking of coverage and quality of facility-based care for use at district, national and global levels. Methods EN-BIRTH is an observational study including >20 000 facility births in three countries (Tanzania, Bangladesh and Nepal) to validate selected indicators. Direct clinical observation will be compared with facility register data and a pre-discharge maternal recall survey for indicators including: uterotonic administration, immediate newborn care, neonatal resuscitation and Kangaroo mother care. Indicators including neonatal infection management and antenatal corticosteroid administration, which cannot be easily observed, will be validated using inpatient records. Trained clinical observers in Labour/Delivery ward, Operation theatre, and Kangaroo mother care ward/areas will collect data using a tablet-based customised data capturing application. Sensitivity will be calculated for numerators of all indicators and specificity for those numerators with adequate information. Other objectives include comparison of denominator options (ie, true target population or surrogates) and quality of care analyses, especially regarding intervention timing. Barriers and enablers to routine recording and data usage will be assessed by data flow assessments, quantitative and qualitative analyses. Conclusions To our knowledge, this is the first large, multi-country study validating facility-based routine data compared to direct observation for maternal and newborn care, designed to provide evidence to inform selection of a core list of indicators recommended for inclusion in national DHIS2. Availability and use of such data are fundamental to drive progress towards ending the annual 5.5 million preventable stillbirths, maternal and newborn deaths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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7. Service readiness for inpatient care of small and sick newborns: what do we need and what can we measure now?
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Moxon, Sarah G., Guenther, Tanya, Gabrysch, Sabine, Enweronu-Laryea, Christabel, Ram, Pavani K., Niermeyer, Susan, Kerber, Kate, Tann, Cally J., Russell, Neal, Kak, Lily, Bailey, Patricia, Wilson, Sasha, Wang, Wenjuan, Winter, Rebecca, Carvajal-Aguirre, Liliana, Blencowe, Hannah, Campbell, Oona, and Lawn, Joy
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LOW birth weight ,HOSPITAL care ,NEONATAL diseases ,INFANT care ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,NEEDS assessment - Abstract
Background: Each year an estimated 2.6 million newborns die, mainly from complications of prematurity, neonatal infections, and intrapartum events. Reducing these deaths requires high coverage of good quality care at birth, and inpatient care for small and sick newborns. In low- and middle-income countries, standardised measurement of the readiness of facilities to provide emergency obstetric care has improved tracking of readiness to provide care at birth in recent years. However, the focus has been mainly on obstetric care; service readiness for providing inpatient care of small and sick newborns is still not consistently measured or tracked.Methods: We reviewed existing international guidelines and resources to create a matrix of the structural characteristics (infrastructure, equipment, drugs, providers and guidelines) for service readiness to deliver a package of inpatient care interventions for small and sick newborns. To identify gaps in existing measurement systems, we reviewed three multi-country health facility survey tools (the Service Availability and Readiness Assessment, the Service Provision Assessment and the Emergency Obstetric and Newborn Care Assessment) against our service readiness matrix.Findings: For service readiness to provide inpatient care for small and sick newborns, our matrix detailed over 600 structural characteristics. Our review of the SPA, the SARA and the EmONC assessment tools identified several measurement omissions to capture information on key intervention areas, such as thermoregulation, feeding and respiratory support, treatment of specific complications (seizures, jaundice), and screening and follow up services, as well as specialised staff and service infrastructure.Conclusions: Our review delineates the required inputs to ensure readiness to provide inpatient care for small and sick newborns. Based on these findings, we detail where questions need to be added to existing tools and describe how measurement systems can be adapted to reflect small and sick newborns interventions. Such work can inform investments in health systems to end preventable newborn death and disability as part of the Every Newborn Action Plan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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8. Implementation of the Every Newborn Action Plan: Progress and lessons learned.
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Kinney, Mary V., Cocoman, Olive, Dickson, Kim E., Daelmans, Bernadette, Zaka, Nabila, Rhoda, Natasha R., Moxon, Sarah G., Kak, Lily, Lawn, Joy E., Khadka, Neena, and Darmstadt, Gary L.
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Progress in reducing newborn mortality has lagged behind progress in reducing maternal and child deaths. The Every Newborn Action Plan (ENAP) was launched in 2014, with the aim of achieving equitable and high-quality coverage of care for all women and newborns through links with other global and national plans and measurement and accountability frameworks. This article aims to assess country progress and the mechanisms in place to support country implementation of the ENAP. A country tracking tool was developed and piloted in October–December 2014 to collect data on the ENAP-related national milestones and implementation barriers in 18 high-burden countries. Simultaneously, a mapping exercise involving 47 semi-structured interviews with partner organizations was carried out to frame the categories of technical support available in countries to support care at and around the time of birth by health system building blocks. Existing literature and reports were assessed to further supplement analysis of country progress. A total of 15 out of 18 high-burden countries have taken concrete actions to advance newborn health; four have developed specific action plans with an additional six in process and a further three strengthening newborn components within existing plans. Eight high-burden countries have a newborn mortality target, but only three have a stillbirth target. The ENAP implementation in countries is well-supported by UN agencies, particularly UNICEF and WHO, as well as multilateral and bilateral agencies, especially in health workforce training. New financial commitments from development partners and the private sector are substantial but tracking of national funding remains a challenge. For interventions with strong evidence, low levels of coverage persists and health information systems require investment and support to improve quality and quantity of data to guide and track progress. Some of the highest burden countries have established newborn health action plans and are scaling up evidence based interventions. Further progress will only be made with attention to context-specific implementation challenges, especially in areas that have been neglected to date such as quality improvement, sustained investment in training and monitoring health worker skills, support to budgeting and health financing, and strengthening of health information systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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9. " -BIRTH" protocol: observational study validating indicators for coverage and quality of maternal and newborn health care in Bangladesh, Nepal and Tanzania.
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Day, Louise T, Ruysen, Harriet, Gordeev, Vladimir S, Gore-Langton, Georgia R, Boggs, Dorothy, Cousens, Simon, Moxon, Sarah G, Blencowe, Hannah, Baschieri, Angela, Rahman, Ahmed Ehsanur, Tahsina, Tazeen, Zaman, Sojib Bin, Hossain, Tanvir, Rahman, Qazi Sadeq-Ur, Ameen, Shafiqul, El Arifeen, Shams, Kc, Ashish, Shrestha, Shree Krishna, Kc, Naresh P, and Singh, Dela
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Background: To achieve Sustainable Development Goals and Universal Health Coverage, programmatic data are essential. The Every Newborn Action Plan, agreed by all United Nations member states and >80 development partners, includes an ambitious Measurement Improvement Roadmap. Quality of care at birth is prioritised by both Every Newborn and Ending Preventable Maternal Mortality strategies, hence metrics need to advance from health service contact alone, to content of care. As facility births increase, monitoring using routine facility data in DHIS2 has potential, yet validation research has mainly focussed on maternal recall surveys. The Every Newborn - Birth Indicators Research Tracking in Hospitals (EN-BIRTH) study aims to validate selected newborn and maternal indicators for routine tracking of coverage and quality of facility-based care for use at district, national and global levels.Methods: EN-BIRTH is an observational study including >20 000 facility births in three countries (Tanzania, Bangladesh and Nepal) to validate selected indicators. Direct clinical observation will be compared with facility register data and a pre-discharge maternal recall survey for indicators including: uterotonic administration, immediate newborn care, neonatal resuscitation and Kangaroo mother care. Indicators including neonatal infection management and antenatal corticosteroid administration, which cannot be easily observed, will be validated using inpatient records. Trained clinical observers in Labour/Delivery ward, Operation theatre, and Kangaroo mother care ward/areas will collect data using a tablet-based customised data capturing application. Sensitivity will be calculated for numerators of all indicators and specificity for those numerators with adequate information. Other objectives include comparison of denominator options (ie, true target population or surrogates) and quality of care analyses, especially regarding intervention timing. Barriers and enablers to routine recording and data usage will be assessed by data flow assessments, quantitative and qualitative analyses.Conclusions: To our knowledge, this is the first large, multi-country study validating facility-based routine data compared to direct observation for maternal and newborn care, designed to provide evidence to inform selection of a core list of indicators recommended for inclusion in national DHIS2. Availability and use of such data are fundamental to drive progress towards ending the annual 5.5 million preventable stillbirths, maternal and newborn deaths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
10. Treatment of neonatal infections: a multi-country analysis of health system bottlenecks and potential solutions.
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Simen-Kapeu, Aline, Seale, Anna C, Wall, Steve, Nyange, Christabel, Qazi, Shamim A, Moxon, Sarah G, Young, Mark, Liu, Grace, Darmstadt, Gary L, Dickson, Kim E, and Lawn, Joy E
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Background: Around one-third of the world's 2.8 million neonatal deaths are caused by infections. Most of these deaths are preventable, but occur due to delays in care-seeking, and access to effective antibiotic treatment with supportive care. Understanding variation in health system bottlenecks to scale-up of case management of neonatal infections and identifying solutions is essential to reduce mortality, and also morbidity.Methods: A standardised bottleneck analysis tool was applied in 12 countries in Africa and Asia as part of the development of the Every Newborn Action Plan. Country workshops involved technical experts to complete a survey tool, to grade health system "bottlenecks" hindering scale up of maternal-newborn intervention packages. Quantitative and qualitative methods were used to analyse the data, combined with literature review, to present priority bottlenecks and synthesise actions to improve case management of newborn infections.Results: For neonatal infections, the health system building blocks most frequently graded as major or significant bottlenecks, irrespective of mortality context and geographical region, were health workforce (11 out of 12 countries), and community ownership and partnership (11 out of 12 countries). Lack of data to inform decision making, and limited funding to increase access to quality neonatal care were also major challenges.Conclusions: Rapid recognition of possible serious bacterial infection and access to care is essential. Inpatient hospital care remains the first line of treatment for neonatal infections. In situations where referral is not possible, the use of simplified antibiotic regimens for outpatient management for non-critically ill young infants has recently been reported in large clinical trials; WHO is developing a guideline to treat this group of young infants. Improving quality of care through more investment in the health workforce at all levels of care is critical, in addition to ensuring development and dissemination of national guidelines. Improved information systems are needed to track coverage and adequately manage drug supply logistics for improved health outcomes. It is important to increase community ownership and partnership, for example through involvement of community groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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11. Kangaroo mother care: a multi-country analysis of health system bottlenecks and potential solutions.
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Vesel, Linda, Bergh, Anne-Marie, Kerber, Kate J, Valsangkar, Bina, Mazia, Goldy, Moxon, Sarah G, Blencowe, Hannah, Darmstadt, Gary L, de Graft Johnson, Joseph, Dickson, Kim E, Ruiz Peláez, Juan, von Xylander, Severin, Lawn, Joy E, and KMC Research Acceleration Group
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Background: Preterm birth is now the leading cause of under-five child deaths worldwide with one million direct deaths plus approximately another million where preterm is a risk factor for neonatal deaths due to other causes. There is strong evidence that kangaroo mother care (KMC) reduces mortality among babies with birth weight <2000 g (mostly preterm). KMC involves continuous skin-to-skin contact, breastfeeding support, and promotion of early hospital discharge with follow-up. The World Health Organization has endorsed KMC for stabilised newborns in health facilities in both high-income and low-resource settings. The objectives of this paper are to: (1) use a 12-country analysis to explore health system bottlenecks affecting the scale-up of KMC; (2) propose solutions to the most significant bottlenecks; and (3) outline priority actions for scale-up.Methods: The bottleneck analysis tool was applied in 12 countries in Africa and Asia as part of the Every Newborn Action Plan process. Country workshops involved technical experts to complete the survey tool, which is designed to synthesise and grade health system "bottlenecks", factors that hinder the scale-up, of maternal-newborn intervention packages. We used quantitative and qualitative methods to analyse the bottleneck data, combined with literature review, to present priority bottlenecks and actions relevant to different health system building blocks for KMC.Results: Marked differences were found in the perceived severity of health system bottlenecks between Asian and African countries, with the former reporting more significant or very major bottlenecks for KMC with respect to all the health system building blocks. Community ownership and health financing bottlenecks were significant or very major bottlenecks for KMC in both low and high mortality contexts, particularly in South Asia. Significant bottlenecks were also reported for leadership and governance and health workforce building blocks.Conclusions: There are at least a dozen countries worldwide with national KMC programmes, and we identify three pathways to scale: (1) champion-led; (2) project-initiated; and (3) health systems designed. The combination of all three pathways may lead to more rapid scale-up. KMC has the potential to save lives, and change the face of facility-based newborn care, whilst empowering women to care for their preterm newborns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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12. Basic newborn care and neonatal resuscitation: a multi-country analysis of health system bottlenecks and potential solutions.
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Enweronu-Laryea, Christabel, Dickson, Kim E, Moxon, Sarah G, Simen-Kapeu, Aline, Nyange, Christabel, Niermeyer, Susan, Bégin, France, Sobel, Howard L, Lee, Anne C C, von Xylander, Severin, and Lawn, Joy E
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Background: An estimated two-thirds of the world's 2.7 million newborn deaths could be prevented with quality care at birth and during the postnatal period. Basic Newborn Care (BNC) is part of the solution and includes hygienic birth and newborn care practices including cord care, thermal care, and early and exclusive breastfeeding. Timely provision of resuscitation if needed is also critical to newborn survival. This paper describes health system barriers to BNC and neonatal resuscitation and proposes solutions to scale up evidence-based strategies.Methods: The maternal and newborn bottleneck analysis tool was applied by 12 countries in Africa and Asia as part of the Every Newborn Action Plan process. Country workshops engaged technical experts to complete the survey tool, which is designed to synthesise and grade health system "bottlenecks" that hinder the scale up of maternal-newborn intervention packages. We used quantitative and qualitative methods to analyse the bottleneck data, combined with literature review, to present priority bottlenecks and actions relevant to different health system building blocks for BNC and neonatal resuscitation.Results: Eleven of the 12 countries provided grading data. Overall, bottlenecks were graded more severely for resuscitation. The most severely graded bottlenecks for BNC were health workforce (8 of 11 countries), health financing (9 out of 11) and service delivery (7 out of 9); and for neonatal resuscitation, workforce (9 out of 10), essential commodities (9 out of 10) and service delivery (8 out of 10). Country teams from Africa graded bottlenecks overall more severely. Improving workforce performance, availability of essential commodities, and well-integrated health service delivery were the key solutions proposed.Conclusions: BNC was perceived to have the least health system challenges among the seven maternal and newborn intervention packages assessed. Although neonatal resuscitation bottlenecks were graded more severe than for BNC, similarities particularly in the workforce and service delivery building blocks highlight the inextricable link between the two interventions and the need to equip birth attendants with requisite skills and commodities to assess and care for every newborn. Solutions highlighted by country teams include ensuring more investment to improve workforce performance and distribution, especially numbers of skilled birth attendants, incentives for placement in challenging settings, and skills-based training particularly for neonatal resuscitation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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13. Antenatal corticosteroids for management of preterm birth: a multi-country analysis of health system bottlenecks and potential solutions.
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Liu, Grace, Segrè, Joel, Gülmezoglu, A, Mathai, Matthews, Smith, Jeffrey M, Hermida, Jorge, Simen-Kapeu, Aline, Barker, Pierre, Jere, Mercy, Moses, Edward, Moxon, Sarah G, Dickson, Kim E, Lawn, Joy E, Althabe, Fernando, and Working Group for UN Commission of Life Saving Commodities Antenatal Corticosteroids
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Background: Preterm birth complications are the leading cause of deaths for children under five years. Antenatal corticosteroids (ACS) are effective at reducing mortality and serious morbidity amongst infants born at <34 weeks gestation. WHO guidelines strongly recommend use of ACS for women at risk of imminent preterm birth where gestational age, imminent preterm birth, and risk of maternal infection can be assessed, and appropriate maternal/newborn care provided. However, coverage remains low in high-burden countries for reasons not previously systematically investigated.Methods: The bottleneck analysis tool was applied in 12 countries in Africa and Asia as part of the Every Newborn Action Plan process. Country workshops involved technical experts to complete the survey tool, which is designed to synthesise and grade health system "bottlenecks", factors that hinder the scale up, of maternal-newborn intervention packages. We used quantitative and qualitative methods to analyse the bottleneck data, combined with literature review, to present priority bottlenecks and actions relevant to different health system building blocks for ACS.Results: Eleven out of twelve countries provided data in response to the ACS questionnaire. Health system building blocks most frequently reported as having significant or very major bottlenecks were health information systems (11 countries), essential medical products and technologies (9 out of 11 countries) and health service delivery (9 out of 11 countries). Bottlenecks included absence of coverage data, poor gestational age metrics, lack of national essential medicines listing, discrepancies between prescribing authority and provider cadres managing care, delays due to referral, and lack of supervision, mentoring and quality improvement systems.Conclusions: Analysis centred on health system building blocks in which 9 or more countries (>75%) reported very major or significant bottlenecks. Health information systems should include improved gestational age assessment and track ACS coverage, use and outcomes. Better health service delivery requires clarified policy assigning roles by level of care and cadre of provider, dependent on capability to assess gestational age and risk of preterm birth, and the implementation of guidelines with adequate supervision, mentoring and quality improvement systems, including audit and feedback. National essential medicines lists should include dexamethasone for antenatal use, and dexamethasone should be integrated into supply logistics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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14. Scaling up quality care for mothers and newborns around the time of birth: an overview of methods and analyses of intervention-specific bottlenecks and solutions.
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Dickson, Kim E, Kinney, Mary V, Moxon, Sarah G, Ashton, Joanne, Zaka, Nabila, Simen-Kapeu, Aline, Sharma, Gaurav, Kerber, Kate J, Daelmans, Bernadette, Gülmezoglu, A, Mathai, Matthews, Nyange, Christabel, Baye, Martina, and Lawn, Joy E
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MEDICAL economics ,ADRENOCORTICAL hormones ,DELIVERY (Obstetrics) ,INFANT care ,INFECTION ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,LEADERSHIP ,MATERNAL health services ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL emergencies ,MEDICAL personnel ,POSTNATAL care ,QUALITY assurance ,RESEARCH funding ,PATIENT participation ,EQUIPMENT & supplies ,HUMAN services programs ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: The Every Newborn Action Plan (ENAP) and Ending Preventable Maternal Mortality targets cannot be achieved without high quality, equitable coverage of interventions at and around the time of birth. This paper provides an overview of the methodology and findings of a nine paper series of in-depth analyses which focus on the specific challenges to scaling up high-impact interventions and improving quality of care for mothers and newborns around the time of birth, including babies born small and sick.Methods: The bottleneck analysis tool was applied in 12 countries in Africa and Asia as part of the ENAP process. Country workshops engaged technical experts to complete a tool designed to synthesise "bottlenecks" hindering the scale up of maternal-newborn intervention packages across seven health system building blocks. We used quantitative and qualitative methods and literature review to analyse the data and present priority actions relevant to different health system building blocks for skilled birth attendance, emergency obstetric care, antenatal corticosteroids (ACS), basic newborn care, kangaroo mother care (KMC), treatment of neonatal infections and inpatient care of small and sick newborns.Results: The 12 countries included in our analysis account for the majority of global maternal (48%) and newborn (58%) deaths and stillbirths (57%). Our findings confirm previously published results that the interventions with the most perceived bottlenecks are facility-based where rapid emergency care is needed, notably inpatient care of small and sick newborns, ACS, treatment of neonatal infections and KMC. Health systems building blocks with the highest rated bottlenecks varied for different interventions. Attention needs to be paid to the context specific bottlenecks for each intervention to scale up quality care. Crosscutting findings on health information gaps inform two final papers on a roadmap for improvement of coverage data for newborns and indicate the need for leadership for effective audit systems.Conclusions: Achieving the Sustainable Development Goal targets for ending preventable mortality and provision of universal health coverage will require large-scale approaches to improving quality of care. These analyses inform the development of systematic, targeted approaches to strengthening of health systems, with a focus on overcoming specific bottlenecks for the highest impact interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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15. Inpatient care of small and sick newborns: a multi-country analysis of health system bottlenecks and potential solutions.
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Moxon SG, Lawn JE, Dickson KE, Simen-Kapeu A, Gupta G, Deorari A, Singhal N, New K, Kenner C, Bhutani V, Kumar R, Molyneux E, and Blencowe H
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- Africa, Anti-Bacterial Agents supply & distribution, Asia, Asphyxia Neonatorum therapy, Community Participation, Equipment and Supplies supply & distribution, Female, Health Information Systems, Healthcare Financing, Humans, Infant, Infant Care standards, Infant Mortality, Infant, Newborn, Infections therapy, Leadership, Male, Oxygen supply & distribution, Quality Improvement, Workforce, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Hospitalization, Infant Care economics, Premature Birth therapy
- Abstract
Background: Preterm birth is the leading cause of child death worldwide. Small and sick newborns require timely, high-quality inpatient care to survive. This includes provision of warmth, feeding support, safe oxygen therapy and effective phototherapy with prevention and treatment of infections. Inpatient care for newborns requires dedicated ward space, staffed by health workers with specialist training and skills. Many of the estimated 2.8 million newborns that die every year do not have access to such specialised care., Methods: The bottleneck analysis tool was applied in 12 countries in Africa and Asia as part of the Every Newborn Action Plan process. Country workshops involved technical experts to complete the survey tool, which is designed to synthesise and grade health system "bottlenecks" (or factors that hinder the scale up) of maternal-newborn intervention packages. For this paper, we used quantitative and qualitative methods to analyse the bottleneck data, and combined these with literature review, to present priority bottlenecks and actions relevant to different health system building blocks for inpatient care of small and sick newborns., Results: Inpatient care of small and sick newborns is an intervention package highlighted by all country workshop participants as having critical health system challenges. Health system building blocks with the highest graded (significant or major) bottlenecks were health workforce (10 out of 12 countries) and health financing (10 out of 12 countries), followed by community ownership and partnership (9 out of 12 countries). Priority actions based on solution themes for these bottlenecks are discussed., Conclusions: Whilst major bottlenecks to the scale-up of quality inpatient newborn care are present, effective solutions exist. For all countries included, there is a critical need for a neonatal nursing cadre. Small and sick newborns require increased, sustained funding with specific insurance schemes to cover inpatient care and avoid catastrophic out-of-pocket payments. Core competencies, by level of care, should be defined for monitoring of newborn inpatient care, as with emergency obstetric care. Rather than fatalism that small and sick newborns will die, community interventions need to create demand for accessible, high-quality, family-centred inpatient care, including kangaroo mother care, so that every newborn can survive and thrive.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Count every newborn; a measurement improvement roadmap for coverage data.
- Author
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Moxon SG, Ruysen H, Kerber KJ, Amouzou A, Fournier S, Grove J, Moran AC, Vaz LM, Blencowe H, Conroy N, Gülmezoglu A, Vogel JP, Rawlins B, Sayed R, Hill K, Vivio D, Qazi SA, Sitrin D, Seale AC, Wall S, Jacobs T, Ruiz Peláez J, Guenther T, Coffey PS, Dawson P, Marchant T, Waiswa P, Deorari A, Enweronu-Laryea C, Arifeen S, Lee AC, Mathai M, and Lawn JE
- Subjects
- Adrenal Cortex Hormones supply & distribution, Adrenal Cortex Hormones therapeutic use, Anti-Infective Agents, Local therapeutic use, Breast Feeding statistics & numerical data, Chlorhexidine therapeutic use, Delivery, Obstetric standards, Delivery, Obstetric statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Infant Care standards, Infant, Newborn, Infections therapy, Kangaroo-Mother Care Method standards, Kangaroo-Mother Care Method statistics & numerical data, Perinatal Death prevention & control, Postnatal Care standards, Pregnancy, Premature Birth therapy, Resuscitation standards, Resuscitation statistics & numerical data, Statistics as Topic, Stillbirth, Terminology as Topic, Umbilical Cord microbiology, Perinatal Mortality, Quality Improvement, Quality Indicators, Health Care statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: The Every Newborn Action Plan (ENAP), launched in 2014, aims to end preventable newborn deaths and stillbirths, with national targets of ≤12 neonatal deaths per 1000 live births and ≤12 stillbirths per 1000 total births by 2030. This requires ambitious improvement of the data on care at birth and of small and sick newborns, particularly to track coverage, quality and equity., Methods: In a multistage process, a matrix of 70 indicators were assessed by the Every Newborn steering group. Indicators were graded based on their availability and importance to ENAP, resulting in 10 core and 10 additional indicators. A consultation process was undertaken to assess the status of each ENAP core indicator definition, data availability and measurement feasibility. Coverage indicators for the specific ENAP treatment interventions were assigned task teams and given priority as they were identified as requiring the most technical work. Consultations were held throughout., Results: ENAP published 10 core indicators plus 10 additional indicators. Three core impact indicators (neonatal mortality rate, maternal mortality ratio, stillbirth rate) are well defined, with future efforts needed to focus on improving data quantity and quality. Three core indicators on coverage of care for all mothers and newborns (intrapartum/skilled birth attendance, early postnatal care, essential newborn care) have defined contact points, but gaps exist in measuring content and quality of the interventions. Four core (antenatal corticosteroids, neonatal resuscitation, treatment of serious neonatal infections, kangaroo mother care) and one additional coverage indicator for newborns at risk or with complications (chlorhexidine cord cleansing) lack indicator definitions or data, especially for denominators (population in need). To address these gaps, feasible coverage indicator definitions are presented for validity testing. Measurable process indicators to help monitor health service readiness are also presented. A major measurement gap exists to monitor care of small and sick babies, yet signal functions could be tracked similarly to emergency obstetric care., Conclusions: The ENAP Measurement Improvement Roadmap (2015-2020) outlines tools to be developed (e.g., improved birth and death registration, audit, and minimum perinatal dataset) and actions to test, validate and institutionalise proposed coverage indicators. The roadmap presents a unique opportunity to strengthen routine health information systems, crosslinking these data with civil registration and vital statistics and population-based surveys. Real measurement change requires intentional transfer of leadership to countries with the greatest disease burden and will be achieved by working with centres of excellence and existing networks.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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