24 results on '"Requejo, Jennifer"'
Search Results
2. Global core indicators for measuring WHO’s paediatric quality-of-care standards in health facilities: development and expert consensus
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Muzigaba, Moise, Chitashvili, Tamar, Choudhury, Allysha, Were, Wilson M., Diaz, Theresa, Strong, Kathleen L., Jackson, Debra, Requejo, Jennifer, Detjen, Anne, and Sacks, Emma
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- 2022
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3. Improving analysis and use of routine reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health facility data in low-and middle-income countries: a universal priority
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Diaz, Theresa and Requejo, Jennifer
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- 2021
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4. Count every newborn: EN-BIRTH study improving facility-based coverage and quality measurement in routine information systems
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Moran, Allisyn C. and Requejo, Jennifer
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- 2021
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5. Reducing unnecessary caesarean sections: scoping review of financial and regulatory interventions
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Opiyo, Newton, Young, Claire, Requejo, Jennifer Harris, Erdman, Joanna, Bales, Sarah, and Betrán, Ana Pilar
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- 2020
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6. Does women’s age matter in the SDGs era: coverage of demand for family planning satisfied with modern methods and institutional delivery in 91 low- and middle-income countries
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da Silva, Inacio Crochemore M., Everling, Fernanda, Hellwig, Franciele, Ronsmans, Carine, Benova, Lenka, Requejo, Jennifer, Raj, Anita, Barros, Aluisio J. D., and Victora, Cesar G.
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- 2020
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7. Ending preventable maternal mortality: phase II of a multi-step process to develop a monitoring framework, 2016–2030
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Jolivet, R. Rima, Moran, Allisyn C., O’Connor, Meaghan, Chou, Doris, Bhardwaj, Neelam, Newby, Holly, Requejo, Jennifer, Schaaf, Marta, Say, Lale, and Langer, Ana
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- 2018
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8. Odon device for instrumental vaginal deliveries: results of a medical device pilot clinical study
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Schvartzman, Javier A., Krupitzki, Hugo, Merialdi, Mario, Betrán, Ana Pilar, Requejo, Jennifer, Nguyen, My Huong, Vayena, Effy, Fiorillo, Angel E., Gadow, Enrique C., Vizcaino, Francisco M., von Petery, Felicitas, Marroquin, Victoria, Cafferata, María Luisa, Mazzoni, Agustina, Vannevel, Valerie, Pattinson, Robert C., Gülmezoglu, A Metin, Althabe, Fernando, Bonet, Mercedes, and for the World Health Organization Odon Device Research Group
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- 2018
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9. Survey of women's report for 33 maternal and newborn indicators: EN-BIRTH multi-country validation study.
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Ameen, Shafiqul, Siddique, Abu Bakkar, Peven, Kimberly, Rahman, Qazi Sadeq-ur, Day, Louise T., Shabani, Josephine, KC, Ashish, Boggs, Dorothy, Shamba, Donat, Tahsina, Tazeen, Rahman, Ahmed Ehsanur, Zaman, Sojib Bin, Hossain, Aniqa Tasnim, Ahmed, Anisuddin, Basnet, Omkar, Malla, Honey, Ruysen, Harriet, Blencowe, Hannah, Arnold, Fred, and Requejo, Jennifer
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NEWBORN infant care ,MATERNAL health services ,POSTNATAL care ,INTRAPARTUM care ,OBSTETRICS - Abstract
Background: Population-based household surveys, notably the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) and Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS), remain the main source of maternal and newborn health data for many low- and middle-income countries. As part of the Every Newborn Birth Indicators Research Tracking in Hospitals (EN-BIRTH) study, this paper focuses on testing validity of measurement of maternal and newborn indicators around the time of birth (intrapartum and postnatal) in survey-report.Methods: EN-BIRTH was an observational study testing the validity of measurement for selected maternal and newborn indicators in five secondary/tertiary hospitals in Bangladesh, Nepal and Tanzania, conducted from July 2017 to July 2018. We compared women's report at exit survey with the gold standard of direct observation or verification from clinical records for women with vaginal births. Population-level validity was assessed by validity ratios (survey-reported coverage: observer-assessed coverage). Individual-level accuracy was assessed by sensitivity, specificity and percent agreement. We tested indicators already in DHS/MICS as well as indicators with potential to be included in population-based surveys, notably the first validation for small and sick newborn care indicators.Results: 33 maternal and newborn indicators were evaluated. Amongst nine indicators already present in DHS/MICS, validity ratios for baby dried or wiped, birthweight measured, low birthweight, and sex of baby (female) were between 0.90-1.10. Instrumental birth, skin-to-skin contact, and early initiation of breastfeeding were highly overestimated by survey-report (2.04-4.83) while umbilical cord care indicators were massively underestimated (0.14-0.22). Amongst 24 indicators not currently in DHS/MICS, two newborn contact indicators (kangaroo mother care 1.00, admission to neonatal unit 1.01) had high survey-reported coverage amongst admitted newborns and high sensitivity. The remaining indicators did not perform well and some had very high "don't know" responses.Conclusions: Our study revealed low validity for collecting many maternal and newborn indicators through an exit survey instrument, even with short recall periods among women with vaginal births. Household surveys are already at risk of overload, and some specific clinical care indicators do not perform well and may be under-powered. Given that approximately 80% of births worldwide occur in facilities, routine registers should also be explored to track coverage of key maternal and newborn health interventions, particularly for clinical care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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10. Countdown to 2015 country case studies: systematic tools to address the 'black box' of health systems and policy assessment
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Singh, Neha S., Huicho, Luis, Afnan-Holmes, Hoviyeh, John, Theopista, Moran, Allisyn C., Colbourn, Tim, Grundy, Chris, Matthews, Zoe, Maliqi, Blerta, Mathai, Matthews, Daelmans, Bernadette, Requejo, Jennifer, and Lawn, Joy E.
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Child health ,purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#3.03.05 [https] ,Health Policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Infant, Newborn ,Maternal-Child Health Services/organization & administration ,Reproductive Health Services/organization & administration ,Tanzania/epidemiology ,Tanzania ,Health systems ,Policy analysis ,Peru ,Child Mortality ,Reproductive health ,Humans ,Infant Health ,Maternal health ,Newborn health ,Child ,Developing Countries ,Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Evaluating health systems and policy (HSP) change and implementation is critical in understanding reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health (RMNCH) progress within and across countries. Whilst data for health outcomes, coverage and equity have advanced in the last decade, comparable analyses of HSP changes are lacking. We present a set of novel tools developed by Countdown to 2015 (Countdown) to systematically analyse and describe HSP change for RMNCH indicators, enabling multi-country comparisons. METHODS: International experts worked with eight country teams to develop HSP tools via mixed methods. These tools assess RMNCH change over time (e.g. 1990-2015) and include: (i) Policy and Programme Timeline Tool (depicting change according to level of policy); (ii) Health Policy Tracer Indicators Dashboard (showing 11 selected RMNCH policies over time); (iii) Health Systems Tracer Indicators Dashboard (showing four selected systems indicators over time); and (iv) Programme implementation assessment. To illustrate these tools, we present results from Tanzania and Peru, two of eight Countdown case studies. RESULTS: The Policy and Programme Timeline tool shows that Tanzania's RMNCH environment is complex, with increased funding and programmes for child survival, particularly primary-care implementation. Maternal health was prioritised since mid-1990s, yet with variable programme implementation, mainly targeting facilities. Newborn health only received attention since 2005, yet is rapidly scaling-up interventions at facility- and community-levels. Reproductive health lost momentum, with re-investment since 2010. Contrastingly, Peru moved from standalone to integrated RMNCH programme implementation, combined with multi-sectoral, anti-poverty strategies. The HSP Tracer Indicators Dashboards show that Peru has adopted nine of 11 policy tracer indicators and Tanzania has adopted seven. Peru costed national RMNCH plans pre-2000, whereas Tanzania developed a national RMNCH plan in 2006 but only costed the reproductive health component. Both countries included all lifesaving RMNCH commodities on their essential medicines lists. Peru has twice the health worker density of Tanzania (15.4 vs. 7.1/10,000 population, respectively), although both are below the 22.8 WHO minimum threshold. CONCLUSIONS: These are the first HSP tools using mixed methods to systematically analyse and describe RMNCH changes within and across countries, important in informing accelerated progress for ending preventable maternal, newborn and child mortality in the post-2015 era.
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- 2016
11. Countries' progress for women's and children's health in the Millennium Development Goal era: the Countdown to 2015 experience.
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Berman, Peter, Requejo, Jennifer, Bhutta, Zulfiqar A., Singh, Neha S., Owen, Helen, and Lawn, Joy E.
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WOMEN'S health , *MATERNAL health services , *ADOLESCENCE - Published
- 2016
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12. Countdown to 2015 country case studies: what have we learned about processes and progress towards MDGs 4 and 5?
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Moucheraud, Corrina, Owen, Helen, Singh, Neha S., Ng, Courtney Kuonin, Requejo, Jennifer, Lawn, Joy E., Berman, Peter, and Countdown Case Study Collaboration Group
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CONSORTIA ,CHILDREN'S health ,REPRODUCTIVE health ,WOMEN'S health ,CHILD mortality ,IMMUNIZATION ,INFANT mortality ,MORTALITY ,MATERNAL mortality - Abstract
Background: Countdown to 2015 was a multi-institution consortium tracking progress towards Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) 4 and 5. Case studies to explore factors contributing to progress (or lack of progress) in reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health (RMNCH) were undertaken in: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, China, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Niger, Pakistan, Peru, and Tanzania. This paper aims to identify cross-cutting themes on how and why these countries achieved or did not achieve MDG progress.Methods: Applying a standard evaluation framework, analyses of impact, coverage and equity were undertaken, including a mixed methods analysis of how these were influenced by national context and coverage determinants (including health systems, policies and financing).Results: The majority (7/10) of case study countries met MDG-4 with over two-thirds reduction in child mortality, but none met MDG-5a for 75 % reduction in maternal mortality, although six countries achieved >75 % of this target. None achieved MDG-5b regarding reproductive health. Rates of reduction in neonatal mortality were half or less that for post-neonatal child mortality. Coverage increased most for interventions administered at lower levels of the health system (e.g., immunisation, insecticide treated nets), and these experienced substantial political and financial support. These interventions were associated with ~30-40 % of child lives saved in 2012 compared to 2000, in Ethiopia, Malawi, Peru and Tanzania. Intrapartum care for mothers and newborns -- which require higher-level health workers, more infrastructure, and increased community engagement -- showed variable increases in coverage, and persistent equity gaps. Countries have explored different approaches to address these problems, including shifting interventions to the community setting and tasks to lower-level health workers.Conclusions: These Countdown case studies underline the importance of consistent national investment and global attention for achieving improvements in RMNCH. Interventions with major global investments achieved higher levels of coverage, reduced equity gaps and improvements in associated health outcomes. Given many competing priorities for the Sustainable Development Goals era, it is essential to maintain attention to the unfinished RMNCH agenda, particularly health systems improvements for maternal and neonatal outcomes where progress has been slower, and to invest in data collection for monitoring progress and for rigorous analyses of how progress is achieved in different contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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13. Born Too Soon: Care during pregnancy and childbirth to reduce preterm deliveries and improve health outcomes of the preterm baby.
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Requejo, Jennifer, Merialdi, Mario, Althabe, Fernando, Keller, Matthais, Katz, Joanne, and Menon, Ramkumar
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Pregnancy and childbirth represent a critical time period when a woman can be reached through a variety of mechanisms with interventions aimed at reducing her risk of a preterm birth and improving her health and the health of her unborn baby. These mechanisms include the range of services delivered during antenatal care for all pregnant women and women at high risk of preterm birth, services provided to manage preterm labour, and workplace, professional and other supportive policies that promote safe motherhood and universal access to care before, during and after pregnancy. The aim of this paper is to present the latest information about available interventions that can be delivered during pregnancy to reduce preterm birth rates and improve the health outcomes of the premature baby, and to identify data gaps. The paper also focuses on promising avenues of research on the pregnancy period that will contribute to a better understanding of the causes of preterm birth and ability to design interventions at the policy, health care system and community levels. At minimum, countries need to ensure equitable access to comprehensive antenatal care, quality childbirth services and emergency obstetric care. Antenatal care services should include screening for and management of women at high risk of preterm birth, screening for and treatment of infections, and nutritional support and counselling. Health workers need to be trained and equipped to provide effective and timely clinical management of women in preterm labour to improve the survival chances of the preterm baby. Implementation strategies must be developed to increase the uptake by providers of proven interventions such as antenatal corticosteroids and to reduce harmful practices such as non-medically indicated inductions of labour and caesarean births before 39 weeks of gestation. Behavioural and community-based interventions that can lead to reductions in smoking and violence against women need to be implemented in conjunction with antenatal care models that promote women’s empowerment as a strategy for reducing preterm delivery. The global community needs to support more discovery research on normal and abnormal pregnancies to facilitate the development of preventive interventions for universal application. As new evidence is generated, resources need to be allocated to its translation into new and better screening and diagnostic tools, and other interventions aimed at saving maternal and newborn lives that can be brought to scale in all countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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14. A common evaluation framework for the African Health Initiative.
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Bryce, Jennifer, Requejo, Jennifer Harris, Moulton, Lawrence H., Ram, Malathi, and Black, Robert E.
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MEDICAL care , *PUBLIC health , *MEDICAL quality control , *HEALTH education , *DATA quality - Abstract
Background: The African Health Initiative includes highly diverse partnerships in five countries (Ghana, Mozambique, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Zambia), each of which is working to improve population health by strengthening health systems and to evaluate the results. One aim of the Initiative is to generate cross-site learning that can inform implementation in the five partnerships during the project period and identify lessons that may be generalizable to other countries in the region. Collaborators in the Initiative developed a common evaluation framework as a basis for this cross-site learning. Methods: This paper describes the components of the framework; this includes the conceptual model, core metrics to be measured in all sites, and standard guidelines for reporting on the implementation of partnership activities and contextual factors that may affect implementation, or the results it produces. We also describe the systems that have been put in place for data management, data quality assessments, and cross-site analysis of results. Results and conclusions: The conceptual model for the Initiative highlights points in the causal chain between health system strengthening activities and health impact where evidence produced by the partnerships can contribute to learning. This model represents an important advance over its predecessors by including contextual factors and implementation strength as potential determinants, and explicitly including equity as a component of both outcomes and impact. Specific measurement challenges include the prospective documentation of program implementation and contextual factors. Methodological issues addressed in the development of the framework include the aggregation of data collected using different methods and the challenge of evaluating a complex set of interventions being improved over time based on continuous monitoring and intermediate results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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15. Feasibility and safety study of a new device (Odón device) for assisted vaginal deliveries: study protocol.
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Schvartzman, Javier A., Krupitzki, Hugo, Betrán, Ana Pilar, Requejo, Jennifer, Bergel, Eduardo, Fiorillo, Ãngel E., Gadow, Enrique C,, VizcaÃno, Francisco M., von Petery, Felicitas, Althabe, Fernando, Belizán, José, Borruto, Franco, Boulvain, Michel, Di Renzo, Gian Carlo, Gülmezoglu, Metin, Hofmeyr, Justus, Judge, Kevin, Tak Yeung Leung, My Huong Nguyen, and Saugstad, Ola Didrik
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- 2013
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16. High ANC coverage and low skilled attendance in a rural Tanzanian district: a case for implementing a birth plan intervention.
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Magoma, Moke, Requejo, Jennifer, Campbell, Oona M. R., Cousens, Simon, and Filippi, Veronique
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PREGNANT women , *PRENATAL diagnosis , *BIRTH plans , *HIV - Abstract
Background: In Tanzania, more than 90% of all pregnant women attend antenatal care at least once and approximately 62% four times or more, yet less than five in ten receive skilled delivery care at available health units. We conducted a qualitative study in Ngorongoro district, Northern Tanzania, in order to gain an understanding of the health systems and socio-cultural factors underlying this divergent pattern of high use of antenatal services and low use of skilled delivery care. Specifically, the study examined beliefs and behaviors related to antenatal, labor, delivery and postnatal care among the Maasai and Watemi ethnic groups. The perspectives of health care providers and traditional birth attendants on childbirth and the factors determining where women deliver were also investigated. Methods: Twelve key informant interviews and fifteen focus group discussions were held with Maasai and Watemi women, traditional birth attendants, health care providers, and community members. Principles of the grounded theory approach were used to elicit and assess the various perspectives of each group of participants interviewed. Results: The Maasai and Watemi women's preferences for a home birth and lack of planning for delivery are reinforced by the failure of health care providers to consistently communicate the importance of skilled delivery and immediate post-partum care for all women during routine antenatal visits. Husbands typically serve as gatekeepers of women's reproductive health in the two groups - including decisions about where they will deliveryet they are rarely encouraged to attend antenatal sessions. While husbands are encouraged to participate in programs to prevent maternal-to-child transmission of HIV, messages about the importance of skilled delivery care for all women are not given emphasis. Conclusions: Increasing coverage of skilled delivery care and achieving the full implementation of Tanzania's Focused Antenatal Care Package in Ngorongoro depends upon improved training and monitoring of health care providers, and greater family participation in antenatal care visits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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17. Implementation research to catalyze advances in health systems strengthening in sub-Saharan Africa: the African Health Initiative.
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Sherr, Kenneth, Requejo, Jennifer Harris, and Basinga, Paulin
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MEDICAL care , *HEALTH care industry - Abstract
A preface to the 2013 issue of the journal "BMC Health Services Research" is presented.
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- 2013
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18. How to assure access of essential RMNCH medicines by looking at policy and systems factors: an analysis of countdown to 2015 countries.
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Briggs, Jane, Embrey, Martha, Maliqi, Blerta, Hedman, Lisa, and Requejo, Jennifer
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Background: In 2000, the Millennium Development Goals set targets for social achievements by 2015 including goals related to maternal and child health, with mixed success. Several initiatives supported these goals including assuring availability of appropriate medicines and commodities to meet health service targets. To reach the new Sustainable Development Goals by 2030, information is needed to address policy and systems factors to improve access to lifesaving commodities.Methods: We compiled indicator data on 15 commodities related to reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health (RMNCH) and analyzed them across 75 Countdown to 2015 countries from eight regions to identify problems with specific commodities and determinants of access. The determinants related to policy, regulatory environment, financing, pharmaceutical procurement and supply chain, and information systems. We mapped commodity information from four datasets from the World Health Organization and the United Nation's Commission on Life Saving Commodities creating a stoplight dashboard to illustrate countries' environment to assure access. We also developed a dashboard for policy and systems indicators for select countries.Results: The commodities we identified as having the fewest barriers to access had been in use longer, including oral rehydration solution and oxytocin injection. Looking across the different systems and policy determinants of access, only Zimbabwe had all 15 commodities on both its essential medicines list and in its standard treatment guidelines, and only Cameroon and Zambia had at least one product registered for each commodity. Senegal alone procured all tracer commodities centrally in the previous year, and 70% of responding countries had costed plans for maternal, newborn, and child health. No country reported recent stock-outs of all the 15 commodities at the central level-countries always had some of the 15 commodities available; however, products with frequent stock-outs included misoprostol, calcium gluconate, penicillin injections, ceftriaxone, and amoxicillin dispersible tablets.Conclusions: This analysis highlights country deficiencies in policies and systems, such as incoherent policy guidelines, problems in product registration, lack of logistics data, and central-level stock-outs that may affect access to essential RMNCH commodities. To tackle these deficiencies, countries need to integrate commodity-related indicators into other health monitoring activities to improve service quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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19. Odon device: a promising tool to facilitate vaginal delivery and increase access to emergency care.
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Harris Requejo, Jennifer and Belizán, José M.
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DELIVERY (Obstetrics) , *COMMERCIAL product evaluation , *DIFFUSION of innovations , *EMERGENCY medical services , *MEDICAL protocols , *OBSTETRICS apparatus & instruments , *VAGINA , *WORLD health , *EQUIPMENT & supplies - Abstract
The last innovation in operative vaginal delivery happened centuries ago with the invention of the forceps and the vacuum extractor. The World Health Organization Odon Device Research Group recently published a protocol for a feasibility and safety study for a new device (Odon device) which aims to revolutionize assisted vaginal delivery. This editorial discusses the device and its pathway to global use. Although preliminary results look promising, the rigorous three-phased WHO protocol needs completion before the device can be determined, based on the evidence, to be safe and effective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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20. National health policy-makers' views on the clarity and utility of Countdown to 2015 country profiles and reports: findings from two exploratory qualitative studies.
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Hunter, Benjamin M, Requejo, Jennifer H, Pope, Ian, Daelmans, Bernadette, and Murray, Susan F
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Background: The use of sets of indicators to assess progress has become commonplace in the global health arena. Exploratory research has suggested that indicators used for global monitoring purposes can play a role in national policy-making, however, the mechanisms through which this occurs are poorly understood. This article reports findings from two qualitative studies that aimed to explore national policy-makers' interpretation and use of indicators from country profiles and reports developed by Countdown to 2015.Methods: An initial study aimed at exploring comprehension of Countdown data was conducted at the 2010 joint Women Deliver/Countdown conference. A second study was conducted at the 64th World Health Assembly in 2011, specifically targeting national policy-makers. Semi-structured interviews were carried out with 29 and 22 participants, respectively, at each event. Participants were asked about their understanding of specific graphs and indicators used or proposed for use in Countdown country profiles, and their perception of how such data can inform national policy-making. Responses were categorised using a framework analysis.Results: Respondents in both studies acknowledged the importance of the profiles for tracking progress on key health indicators in and across countries, noting that they could be used to highlight changes in coverage, possible directions for future policy, for lobbying finance ministers to increase resources for health, and to stimulate competition between neighbouring or socioeconomically similar countries. However, some respondents raised questions about discrepancies between global estimates and data produced by national governments, and some struggled to understand the profile graphs shown in the absence of explanatory text. Some respondents reported that use of Countdown data in national policy-making was constrained by limited awareness of the initiative, insufficient detail in the country profiles to inform policy, and the absence of indicators felt to be more appropriate to their own country contexts.Conclusions: The two studies emphasise the need for country consultations to ensure that national policy-makers understand how to interpret and use tools like the Countdown profile for planning purposes. They make clear the value of qualitative research for refining tools used to promote accountability, and the need for country level Countdown-like processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
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21. How much time is available for antenatal care consultations? Assessment of the quality of care in rural Tanzania.
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Magoma, Moke, Requejo, Jennifer, Merialdi, Mario, Campbell, Oona Mr, Cousens, Simon, Filippi, Veronique, and Campbell, Oona M R
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Background: Many women in Sub-Saharan African countries do not receive key recommended interventions during routine antenatal care (ANC) including information on pregnancy, related complications, and importance of skilled delivery attendance. We undertook a process evaluation of a successful cluster randomized trial testing the effectiveness of birth plans in increasing utilization of skilled delivery and postnatal care in Ngorongoro district, rural Tanzania, to document the time spent by health care providers on providing the recommended components of ANC.Methods: The study was conducted in 16 health units (eight units in each arm of the trial). We observed, timed, and audio-recorded ANC consultations to assess the total time providers spent with each woman and the time spent for the delivery of each component of care. T-test statistics were used to compare the total time and time spent for the various components of ANC in the two arms of the trial. We also identified the topics discussed during the counselling and health education sessions, and examined the quality of the provider-woman interaction.Results: The mean total duration for initial ANC consultations was 40.1 minutes (range 33-47) in the intervention arm versus 19.9 (range 12-32) in the control arm p < 0.0001. Except for drug administration, which was the same in both arms of the trial, the time spent on each component of care was also greater in the intervention health units. Similar trends were observed for subsequent ANC consultations. Birth plans were always discussed in the intervention health units. Counselling on HIV/AIDS was also prioritized, especially in the control health units. Most other recommended topics (e.g. danger signs during pregnancy) were rarely discussed.Conclusion: Although the implementation of birth plans in the intervention health units improved provider-women dialogue on skilled delivery attendance, most recommended topics critical to improving maternal and newborn survival were rarely covered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
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22. Barriers and enablers to routine register data collection for newborns and mothers: EN-BIRTH multi-country validation study.
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Shamba D, Day LT, Zaman SB, Sunny AK, Tarimo MN, Peven K, Khan J, Thakur N, Talha MTUS, K C A, Haider R, Ruysen H, Mazumder T, Rahman MH, Shaikh MZH, Sæbø JI, Hanson C, Singh NS, Schellenberg J, Vaz LME, Requejo J, and Lawn JE
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- Bangladesh epidemiology, Data Accuracy, Female, Health Personnel organization & administration, Health Personnel statistics & numerical data, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Maternal Death prevention & control, Nepal epidemiology, Perinatal Care statistics & numerical data, Perinatal Death prevention & control, Pregnancy, Stillbirth, Tanzania epidemiology, Data Collection statistics & numerical data, Documentation statistics & numerical data, Hospitals statistics & numerical data, Perinatal Care organization & administration, Registries statistics & numerical data
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Background: Policymakers need regular high-quality coverage data on care around the time of birth to accelerate progress for ending preventable maternal and newborn deaths and stillbirths. With increasing facility births, routine Health Management Information System (HMIS) data have potential to track coverage. Identifying barriers and enablers faced by frontline health workers recording HMIS source data in registers is important to improve data for use., Methods: The EN-BIRTH study was a mixed-methods observational study in five hospitals in Bangladesh, Nepal and Tanzania to assess measurement validity for selected Every Newborn coverage indicators. We described data elements required in labour ward registers to track these indicators. To evaluate barriers and enablers for correct recording of data in registers, we designed three interview tools: a) semi-structured in-depth interview (IDI) guide b) semi-structured focus group discussion (FGD) guide, and c) checklist assessing care-to-documentation. We interviewed two groups of respondents (January 2018-March 2019): hospital nurse-midwives and doctors who fill ward registers after birth (n = 40 IDI and n = 5 FGD); and data collectors (n = 65). Qualitative data were analysed thematically by categorising pre-identified codes. Common emerging themes of barriers or enablers across all five hospitals were identified relating to three conceptual framework categories., Results: Similar themes emerged as both barriers and enablers. First, register design was recognised as crucial, yet perceived as complex, and not always standardised for necessary data elements. Second, register filling was performed by over-stretched nurse-midwives with variable training, limited supervision, and availability of logistical resources. Documentation complexity across parallel documents was time-consuming and delayed because of low staff numbers. Complete data were valued more than correct data. Third, use of register data included clinical handover and monthly reporting, but little feedback was given from data users., Conclusion: Health workers invest major time recording register data for maternal and newborn core health indicators. Improving data quality requires standardised register designs streamlined to capture only necessary data elements. Consistent implementation processes are also needed. Two-way feedback between HMIS levels is critical to improve performance and accurately track progress towards agreed health goals.
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- 2021
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23. Countdown to 2015 country case studies: systematic tools to address the "black box" of health systems and policy assessment.
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Singh NS, Huicho L, Afnan-Holmes H, John T, Moran AC, Colbourn T, Grundy C, Matthews Z, Maliqi B, Mathai M, Daelmans B, Requejo J, and Lawn JE
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- Child, Child Mortality, Humans, Infant Health, Infant, Newborn, Peru, Tanzania epidemiology, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Developing Countries, Health Policy, Maternal-Child Health Services organization & administration, Reproductive Health Services organization & administration
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Background: Evaluating health systems and policy (HSP) change and implementation is critical in understanding reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health (RMNCH) progress within and across countries. Whilst data for health outcomes, coverage and equity have advanced in the last decade, comparable analyses of HSP changes are lacking. We present a set of novel tools developed by Countdown to 2015 (Countdown) to systematically analyse and describe HSP change for RMNCH indicators, enabling multi-country comparisons., Methods: International experts worked with eight country teams to develop HSP tools via mixed methods. These tools assess RMNCH change over time (e.g. 1990-2015) and include: (i) Policy and Programme Timeline Tool (depicting change according to level of policy); (ii) Health Policy Tracer Indicators Dashboard (showing 11 selected RMNCH policies over time); (iii) Health Systems Tracer Indicators Dashboard (showing four selected systems indicators over time); and (iv) Programme implementation assessment. To illustrate these tools, we present results from Tanzania and Peru, two of eight Countdown case studies., Results: The Policy and Programme Timeline tool shows that Tanzania's RMNCH environment is complex, with increased funding and programmes for child survival, particularly primary-care implementation. Maternal health was prioritised since mid-1990s, yet with variable programme implementation, mainly targeting facilities. Newborn health only received attention since 2005, yet is rapidly scaling-up interventions at facility- and community-levels. Reproductive health lost momentum, with re-investment since 2010. Contrastingly, Peru moved from standalone to integrated RMNCH programme implementation, combined with multi-sectoral, anti-poverty strategies. The HSP Tracer Indicators Dashboards show that Peru has adopted nine of 11 policy tracer indicators and Tanzania has adopted seven. Peru costed national RMNCH plans pre-2000, whereas Tanzania developed a national RMNCH plan in 2006 but only costed the reproductive health component. Both countries included all lifesaving RMNCH commodities on their essential medicines lists. Peru has twice the health worker density of Tanzania (15.4 vs. 7.1/10,000 population, respectively), although both are below the 22.8 WHO minimum threshold., Conclusions: These are the first HSP tools using mixed methods to systematically analyse and describe RMNCH changes within and across countries, important in informing accelerated progress for ending preventable maternal, newborn and child mortality in the post-2015 era.
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- 2016
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24. Odon device: a promising tool to facilitate vaginal delivery and increase access to emergency care.
- Author
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Requejo JH and Belizán JM
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Equipment Safety, Extraction, Obstetrical instrumentation
- Abstract
The last innovation in operative vaginal delivery happened centuries ago with the invention of the forceps and the vacuum extractor. The World Health Organization Odon Device Research Group recently published a protocol for a feasibility and safety study for a new device (Odon device) which aims to revolutionize assisted vaginal delivery. This editorial discusses the device and its pathway to global use. Although preliminary results look promising, the rigorous three-phased WHO protocol needs completion before the device can be determined, based on the evidence, to be safe and effective.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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