"Attitude is the fifth delay": perspectives of obstetric near-miss survivors and health care professionals on continuity and coordination of maternal care.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES BMC Health Services Research Pub Date : 2025-02-19 DOI:10.1186/s12913-025-12341-4
Samuel M Mulongo, Doreen Kaura, Bob Mash
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Abstract

Background: Fragmentation in maternal healthcare contributes to preventable maternal deaths. Improving continuity and coordination can mitigate this issue by influencing interactions among providers, interdisciplinary teams, and patient-provider relationships. The obstetric near-miss approach has the potential to offer insights into continuity and coordination in maternal health. The aim of this study was to explore the perspectives of near-miss survivors and health care professionals on continuity and coordination of care in a primary health care system in Uasin Ngishu region, Kenya.

Methods: This was a descriptive qualitative single case study. Data was collected through individual interviews, focus group discussions, and observation.

Results: Four deductively identified themes emerged: sequential coordination, continuity, parallel coordination, and access. Sequential coordination was influenced by antagonistic relationships between healthcare providers in primary care facilities and the main referral hospital. Longitudinal and interpersonal continuity were driven by positive interactions between women and healthcare providers, characterized by availability, willingness to listen, and addressing personal issues. Parallel coordination was affected by heavy workloads and ineffective task shifting within primary care facilities. Finally, access-related issues included accommodation strategies such as telephone hotlines for pregnant women, out-of-pocket payments for specialist consultation, and alternative referral pathways different from the formal pathways in the health system.

Conclusion: To promote continuity and coordination in primary health care for pregnant women, there is a need to focus on social competencies and skills among health care professionals providing obstetric care, encourage accommodation strategies in facilities, reduce or eliminate out-of-pocket payments for referred women, address attitude and professional conflicts among midwives at different levels in the referral pathway and address workloads and task shifting in primary care facilities.

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“态度是第五次延误”:产科未遂事故幸存者和保健专业人员对产妇护理连续性和协调的看法。
背景:产妇保健的碎片化造成了可预防的产妇死亡。改善连续性和协调可以通过影响提供者、跨学科团队和患者-提供者关系之间的互动来缓解这一问题。产科未遂方法有可能对产妇保健的连续性和协调性提供见解。本研究的目的是探讨肯尼亚瓦辛·恩吉舒地区初级卫生保健系统中濒死幸存者和卫生保健专业人员对护理的连续性和协调的看法。方法:采用描述性定性单例研究。通过个人访谈、焦点小组讨论和观察收集数据。结果:出现了四个演绎确定的主题:顺序协调、连续性、平行协调和获取。顺序协调受到初级保健设施和主要转诊医院的卫生保健提供者之间的对抗关系的影响。纵向和人际连续性是由妇女和医疗保健提供者之间的积极互动驱动的,其特点是可用性、倾听意愿和解决个人问题。初级保健设施内繁重的工作量和无效的任务转移影响了并行协调。最后,与获取相关的问题包括住宿策略,如孕妇电话热线、专家咨询的自付费用以及不同于卫生系统正式途径的替代转诊途径。结论:为了促进孕妇初级卫生保健的连续性和协调性,需要重点关注提供产科护理的卫生保健专业人员的社会能力和技能,鼓励设施中的住宿策略,减少或取消转诊妇女的自付费用,解决转诊途径中不同级别助产士之间的态度和专业冲突,并解决初级卫生保健设施中的工作量和任务转移问题。
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来源期刊
BMC Health Services Research
BMC Health Services Research 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
7.10%
发文量
1372
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: BMC Health Services Research is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of health services research, including delivery of care, management of health services, assessment of healthcare needs, measurement of outcomes, allocation of healthcare resources, evaluation of different health markets and health services organizations, international comparative analysis of health systems, health economics and the impact of health policies and regulations.
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