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Scaling Up Safer Birth Bundle Through Quality Improvement in Nepal (SUSTAIN) - a stepped wedge cluster randomized controlled trial in public hospitals

Authors :
Gurung, Rejina
Jha, Anjani Kumar
Pyakurel, Susheel
Gurung, Abhishek
Litorp, Helena
Wrammert, Johan
Jha, Bijay Kumar
Paudel, Prajwal
Rahman, Syed Moshfiqur
Malla, Honey
Sharma, Srijana
Gautam, Manish
Linde, Jorgen Erland
Moinuddin, Md
Ewald, Uwe
Målqvist, Mats
Axelin, Anna
KC, Ashish
Gurung, Rejina
Jha, Anjani Kumar
Pyakurel, Susheel
Gurung, Abhishek
Litorp, Helena
Wrammert, Johan
Jha, Bijay Kumar
Paudel, Prajwal
Rahman, Syed Moshfiqur
Malla, Honey
Sharma, Srijana
Gautam, Manish
Linde, Jorgen Erland
Moinuddin, Md
Ewald, Uwe
Målqvist, Mats
Axelin, Anna
KC, Ashish
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background: Each year, 2.2 million intrapartum-related deaths (intrapartum stillbirths and first day neonatal deaths) occur worldwide with 99% of them taking place in low- and middle-income countries. Despite the accelerated increase in the proportion of deliveries taking place in health facilities in these settings, the stillborn and neonatal mortality rates have not reduced proportionately. Poor quality of care in health facilities is attributed to two-thirds of these deaths. Improving quality of care during the intrapartum period needs investments in evidence-based interventions. We aim to evaluate the quality improvement packageScaling Up Safer Bundle Through Quality Improvement in Nepal (SUSTAIN)on intrapartum care and intrapartum-related mortality in public hospitals of Nepal. Methods: We will conduct a stepped wedge cluster randomized controlled trial in eight public hospitals with each having least 3000 deliveries a year. Each hospital will represent a cluster with an intervention transition period of 2months in each. With a level of significance of 95%, the statistical power of 90% and an intra-cluster correlation of 0.00015, a study period of 19months should detect at least a 15% change in intrapartum-related mortality. Quality improvement training, mentoring, systematic feedback, and a continuous improvement cycle will be instituted based on bottleneck analyses in each hospital. All concerned health workers will be trained on standard basic neonatal resuscitation and essential newborn care. Portable fetal heart monitors (Moyo (R)) and neonatal heart rate monitors (Neobeat (R)) will be introduced in the hospitals to identify fetal distress during labor and to improve neonatal resuscitation. Independent research teams will collect data in each hospital on intervention inputs, processes, and outcomes by reviewing records and carrying out observations and interviews. The dose-response effect will be evaluated through process evaluations. Discussion: With the

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1235306437
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186.s13012-019-0917-z