乌干达一个繁忙的城市国家转诊医院产妇死亡监测和应对的障碍和促进因素。

Imelda Namagembe, Jolly Beyeza-Kashesya, Joseph Rujumba, Dan K Kaye, Moses Mukuru, Noah Kiwanuka, Ashley Moffett, Annettee Nakimuli, Josaphat Byamugisha
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:可预防的孕产妇和新生儿死亡仍然是一个全球关注的问题,特别是在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)。及时进行孕产妇死亡监测和应对(MDSR)是一项建议战略,通过确定导致死亡的背景因素来解释此类死亡,并为实施建议提供信息,以减少未来的死亡。由于支持MDSR的技能和领导不足等障碍,MDSR的实施仍然不够理想。在世卫组织和人口基金的领导下,有了推出千年发展战略的势头,然而,实施的障碍和推动因素受到的关注有限。这些都对成功实施有影响。本研究的目的是:评估卫生工作者、管理人员和生殖健康领域的其他合作伙伴在繁忙的城市国家转诊医院实施MDSR的障碍和促进因素。方法:定性研究采用深度访谈(24),与卫生工作者进行4次焦点小组讨论,与卫生部门管理人员和生殖健康实施伙伴进行15次关键信息提供者访谈。我们利用计划行为理论(TPB)进行专题分析。结果:实施MDSR的主要障碍是:知识和技能不足;害怕指责/诉讼;不执行建议;由于工作量和领导不足而筋疲力尽-以支持卫生工作者。主要的促进因素是让所有卫生工作者参与MDSR进程,消除指责,加强领导,实施MDSR的建议,并使低级卫生设施(特别是卫生中心- iv)发挥作用。结论:MDSR的障碍包括知识和技能差距,对指责和诉讼的恐惧,以及其他卫生系统因素,如应急供应不稳定,以及领导/治理挑战。建议:加强千年发展战略影响的努力应采用卫生系统响应方法来解决已确定的障碍,卫生工作者建设性参与以利用促进者并解决所需的法律框架。
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Barriers and facilitators to maternal death surveillance and response at a busy urban National Referral Hospital in Uganda.

Background: Preventable maternal and newborn deaths remain a global concern, particularly in low- and- middle-income countries (LMICs) Timely maternal death surveillance and response (MDSR) is a recommended strategy to account for such deaths through identifying contextual factors that contributed to the deaths to inform recommendations to implement in order to reduce future deaths. Implementation of MDSR is still suboptimal due to barriers such as inadequate skills and leadership to support MDSR. With the leadership of WHO and UNFPA, there is momentum to roll out MDSR, however, the barriers and enablers for implementation have received limited attention. These have  implications for successful implementation. The aim of this study was: To assess barriers and facilitators to implementation of MDSR at a busy urban National Referral Hospital as perceived by health workers, administrators, and other partners in Reproductive Health. Methods: Qualitative study using in-depth interviews (24), 4 focus-group discussions with health workers, 15 key-informant interviews with health sector managers and implementing partners in Reproductive-Health. We conducted thematic analysis drawing on the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB).   Results: The major barriers to implementation of MDSR were: inadequate knowledge and skills; fear of blame / litigation; failure to implement recommendations; burn out because of workload   and inadequate leadership- to support health workers. Major facilitators were involving all health workers in the MDSR process, eliminate blame, strengthen leadership, implement recommendations from MDSR and functionalize lower health facilities (especially Health Centre -IVs). Conclusions: The barriers of MDSR include knowledge and skills gaps, fear of blame and litigation, and other health system factors such as erratic emergency supplies, and leadership/governance challenges. Recommendation: Efforts to strengthen MDSR for impact should use health system responsiveness approach to address the barriers identified, constructive participation of health workers to harness the facilitators and addressing the required legal framework.

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