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Where is the ‘C’ in antenatal care and postnatal care: A multi‐country survey of availability of antenatal and postnatal care in low‐ and middle‐income settings

Authors :
Madaj, Barbara
Gopalakrishnan, Somla
Quach, Alexandre
Filiaci, Simone
Traore, Adama
Bakusa, Dankom
Mdegela, Mselenge
Yousofzai, Abdul Wali
Rahmanzai, Ahmed Javed
Kodindo, Grace
Gami, Jean‐Pierre
Rostand, Njiki Dounou
Kessely, Hamit
Addo, Stephen Ayisi
Abbey, Mercy
Sapali, Mary
Omar, Ali
Ernest, Alex
Mtandu, Rugola
Agossou, Abram
Ketoh, Guillaume K.
Furtado, Nicholas
Mangiaterra, Viviana
van den Broek, Nynke
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

Objective: Antenatal (ANC) and postnatal care (PNC) are logical entry points for prevention and treatment of pregnancy‐related illness and to reduce perinatal mortality. We developed signal functions and assessed availability of the essential components of care. \ud \ud Design: Cross‐sectional survey. \ud Setting: Afghanistan, Chad, Ghana, Tanzania, Togo.\ud Sample: Three hundred and twenty‐one healthcare facilities.\ud Methods: Fifteen essential components or signal functions of ANC and PNC were identified. Healthcare facility assessment for availability of each component, human resources, equipment, drugs and consumables required to provide each component. \ud Main outcome measure: Availability of ANC PNC components.\ud Results: Across all countries, healthcare providers are available (median number per facility: 8; interquartile range [IQR] 3–17) with a ratio of 3:1 for secondary versus primary care. Significantly more women attend for ANC than PNC (1668 versus 300 per facility/year). None of the healthcare facilities was able to provide all 15 essential components of ANC and PNC. The majority (>75%) could provide five components: diagnosis and management of syphilis, vaccination to prevent tetanus, BMI assessment, gestational diabetes screening, monitoring newborn growth. In Sub‐Saharan countries, interventions for malaria and HIV (including prevention of mother to child transmission [PMTCT]) were available in 11.7–86.5% of facilities. Prevention and management of TB; assessment of pre‐ or post‐term birth, fetal wellbeing, detection of multiple pregnancy, abnormal lie and presentation; screening and support for mental health and domestic abuse were provided in

Subjects

Subjects :
wa_30
wq_500
wa_310
wq_175

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14700328
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....d3805abb532268bd4481fdb4865b23e7