A Woman s Pathway to and Experience of Life-saving PPH and PE/E Care: Unmet Needs

Similar documents
Improving PE/E and PPH care and using routine information sources to inform and track progress

Safer Cesarean Births Tanzania

Improving Maternal Health in Low-resource settings: Niger Case Study, Part 1

Danielle Charlet 1*, Allisyn C. Moran 2 and Supriya Madhavan 2

The HHS Afghan experience with EmONC implementation science. Wednesday, January 20, 2011 WHO- CARE Meeting Brian J.

WHO STANDARDS OF CARE TO IMPROVE MATERNAL AND NEWBORN QUALITY OF CARE IN FACILITIES

Pre-eclampsia and Eclampsia Prevention and Management: Quality of Care in Madagascar

Essential Documents of the National Association of Certified Professional Midwives

Research Team. Potential for uptake of diagnostic testing services along the continuum of care: Landscape assessment of community and providers

NATIONAL PROGRAMS TO PREVENT AND MANAGE PE/E 2012 STATUS REPORT

Pre-Eclampsia/Eclampsia: Prevention, Detection and Management

Amendments for Auxiliary Nurses and Midwives syllabus and regulation

Information for Midwives in relation to the Midwifery Scope of Practice Further interpretation, March 2005

The Birth Center Experience Kitty Ernst, FACNM, MPH, DSc (hon) and Kate Bauer, MBA

Essential Newborn Care Corps. Evaluation of program to rebrand traditional birth attendants as health promoters in Sierra Leone

Improving Quality in Healthcare

Improving health care Nigel Livesley MD, MPH

NIGERIA: BLOOD BANKS SAVE LIVES

Indian Council of Medical Research

Illness recognition and care-seeking for maternal and newborn complications in rural eastern Uganda

Pre-Eclampsia/ Eclampsia: Prevention, Detection and Management Toolkit

A UNIVERSAL PATHWAY. A WOMAN S RIGHT TO HEALTH

NATIONAL MIDWIFERY CREDENTIALS IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Respectful Care in Ethiopia The MCHIP Experience

3. Expand providers prescription capability to include alternatives such as cooking and physical activity classes.

Part I. New York State Laws and Regulations PRENATAL CARE ASSISTANCE PROGRAM (i.e., implementing regs on newborn testing program)

HOPE Final Report. 2. Program Outcomes: a. To establish an obstetric fistula team that will provide fistula repair surgeries on a yearround

Mama Rescue: An evoucher and Emergency Dispatch System for Ugandan Mothers

Standards for competence for registered midwives

10/3/2014. Problem Identification: Practice Gap. Increasing Satisfaction With the Birth Experience Through a Focused Postpartum Debriefing Session

Family-Centered Maternity Care

Improving Quality of Care during Childbirth: Learnings & Next Steps from the BetterBirth Trial

Job pack: Gynaecologist and Obstetrician

AVSC Working Paper INREACH: REACHING POTENTIAL FAMILY PLANNING CLIENTS WITHIN HEALTH INSTITUTIONS

LABOUR MANAGEMENT TOOL

THe liga InAn PRoJeCT TIMOR-LESTE

COLLEGE OF MIDWIVES OF BRITISH COLUMBIA

Integrating community data into the health information system in Rwanda

DRAFT OF RECOMMENDATION As of March 31, Evidence Summit on Reducing Maternal and Neonatal Mortality in Indonesia

Transcultural Experience to England

MEASURE DHS SERVICE PROVISION ASSESSMENT SURVEY HEALTH WORKER INTERVIEW

INFORMED DISCLOSURE AND CONSENT. Today s Date: Partner/Father of Baby s Name: Estimated Due Date:

Market Innovations to Improve Maternal Care

Nursing Act 8 of 2004 section 59

Purpose: To establish the Alliance guidelines for the scope of practice and supervision of Nurse Midwives.

A UNIVERSAL PATHWAY. A WOMAN S RIGHT TO HEALTH

Individual In-Depth Interview Guide: SKILLED ATTENDANT

FACULTY OF HEALTH SCHOOL OF NURSING AND MIDWIFERY

HELPING MOTHERS SURVIVE IN MALAWI

Job pack: Gynaecologist and Obstetrician

8 November, RMNCAH Country Case-Studies: Summary of Findings from Six Countries

Health Management Information Systems (HMIS) Review

Cochrane Review of Alternative versus Conventional Institutional Settings for Birth. E Hodnett, S Downe, D Walsh, 2012

SCOPE OF PRACTICE. for Midwives in Australia

Juba Teaching Hospital, South Sudan Health Systems Strengthening Project

LIFE AFTER EBOLA: MOTHERS RETURN TO HEALTH FACILITIES IN SIERRA LEONE ADVANCING PARTNERS & COMMUNITIES, SIERRA LEONE PHOTO JOURNAL

FINAL REPORT FOR DINING FOR WOMEN

Overview of good practices on safe delivery

Private Midwives Serve the Hard-to-Reach: A Promising Practice Model

Improving Community Knowledge of Prevention & Treatment of Fistula

Identify methods to create, implement, and evaluate a nurse driven, evidence-based project to improve postpartum hemorrhage outcomes

PLANNED OUT-OF-HOSPITAL BIRTH TRANSPORT GUIDELINE

Identification of the newborn guideline (GL859)

Safe Motherhood Promotion Project (SMPP) QUARTERLY PROGRESS REPORT

Improving Health Care

Mali Country Report FY16

Informed Disclosure & Consent for Care/Homebirth River & Mountain Midwives PLLC Susan Rannestad & Susanrachel Condon

Trust Guideline for the Management of Postnatal Care: Planning, Information and Discharge Guideline

(Modern Application Trends In Hospital Management) (Third Arabian Conference 5-7 December 2004)

Janani Suraksha Yojana (JSY) State Institute of Health & Family Welfare, Jaipur

Parental Views on Maternity Services

MEETING THE NEONATAL CHALLENGE. Dr.B.Kishore Assistant Commissioner (CH), GoI New Delhi November 14, 2009

Location, Location, Location! Labor and Delivery

The Bihar, India Experience

Two midwives will attend your birth. In certain circumstances, a senior midwifery student may attend your birth as the 2 nd midwife.

Optima Health Provider Manual

The Midwife-Mother Relationship. The less we do, the more we give

I m afraid, actually!

Informal Meeting on provision of home-based care to mother and child in the first week after birth

Capsular Training on Skilled Birth Attendance: Lessons from an Operations Research Study in Bahraich District, Uttar Pradesh

The Pull and Push Factors Influencing Choice of Place and Delivery Attendant in the Urban Slums of Nyalenda, Kisumu East District, Kenya

Improved Maternal, Newborn and Women s Health through Increased Access to Evidence-based Interventions. Source:DHS 2003

Development of guideline based quality indicators for post partum hemorrhage to improve quality of care

Postpartum Nurse Report Sheet

Traditional Birth Attendant Education in Fondwa, Haiti Program and Evaluation Plan By Katherine Wiegert

Saving Mothers, Giving Life. Emergency Obstetric and Newborn Care Access and Availability. Phase 1 Monitoring and Evaluation Report

Population Council, Bangladesh INTRODUCTION

Assessment of Midwives Knowledge Regarding Childbirth Classes in Baghdad City

Family Birthplace. Childbirth. Education. Franciscan Healthcare

Understanding OB Adverse Event Measures

Guideline for the Management of Malpresentation in Labour, HSE Home Birth Service

Maternal and neonatal health skills of nurses working in primary health care centre of Eastern Nepal

Media Kit. August 2016

WAHANA VISI INDONESIA

INTRODUCTION. KEY ACHIEVEMENTS Malaria

Midwife / Physician Agreement

Wednesday, May 20, :00 p.m. Eastern

CONTINUITY OF MIDWIFERY CARE PROGRAM

U.S. Funding for International Maternal & Child Health

Section IX Special Needs & Case Management

Transcription:

A Woman s Pathway to and Experience of Life-saving PPH and PE/E Care: Unmet Needs An Unfinished Agenda in Maternal Health: Meeting the Needs of Women with Preeclampsia/Eclampsia and Postpartum Hemorrhage Washington, DC June 13, 2017

Outline Diverse pathways to PPH and PE/E Care (Lancet conceptual framework) Women s experience of PPH and PE/E care 2

Three Delays: timely PPH and PE/E Care PPH, PE/E recognition and decision to seek care (Delay 1) Two pathways to accessing PPH, PE/E care (Delay 2) Receiving timely, effective respectful care (Delay 3)

First delay? Trends in Facility Deliveries in Africa and Asia (2003-13) Montagu et al, HPP 2017

Diverse pathways to reach care (Lancet 2016 MH Series) Conceptual framework of pathways leading to adequate childbirth care options Source: Series Paper Maternal Health 3. Lancet 2016 5

First Delay: PPH/PEE recognition and decision to seek care Facility-based deliveries How do women/families decide whether to deliver in a facility, which facility and when to go? (ANC role?) What factors make women/families agree to referral? Do women/families know danger symptoms to look for once discharged from the health facility? Home deliveries experiencing a complication What do we know about family and providers capacity to identify PPH/PEE and to recognize symptom severity? Who and what factors influence decision to seek care (or follow through on referral) and process of accessing care? Is this any different for PPH/PEE than other complications?

Six-country study on PPH recognition and care-seeking (USAID Translating Research into Action) Examined PPH identification, severity recognition and care-seeking (also newborn illness) Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Nigeria, Tanzania, Uganda Early reflections (synthesis report pending): Husbands and elder females common decision makers (reinforced in literature) Common by-passing of primary facilities; bouncing between facilities (established in literature) Quality of care (clinical and experience of care) commonly cited as major factor in care-seeking process. Perceived complication cause may influence type of care sought (e.g. spiritual, formal/facility, traditional.) Post-partum confinement practices can deter care-seeking

Husbands take their pregnant wife to traditional healers 100% of the time. Only 25% take their wives to hospital for ANC, others visit traditional healers and chemists. Male, FGD Nigeria These are WOMEN S problems during pregnancy and after delivery...i don t want to interfere My mother and grandmother might be the right persons to decide. Male, FGD Bangladesh

Diverse pathways to reach care (Lancet 2016 MH Series) Conceptual framework of pathways leading to adequate childbirth care options Source: Series Paper Maternal Health 3. Lancet 2016 9

Second Delay: unmet needs, ensuring timely access to PE/E and PPH Care Emergency patient transport systems (24/7) Locally defined referral protocols Pre-referral and transport standards (e.g. IV access, accompanying skilled provider.) Innovations in service organization to expedite care access (e.g. alongside midwifery-led units next to hospitals, maternity homes.)

This was her 7th pregnancy at age forty. Her BP was high and she was having checkups from BHU and taking BP pills. Her labor pains started in 8th month and she was taken to BHU.BHU staff left her unattended; they took her to DHQ. At DHQ staff said there was no expert doctor and [told us to] go to X Medical Complex. Too much time was spent to reach X Medical Complex due to traffic. As soon as her checkup was started at the Medical Complex she passed away. Pakistan Verbal Autopsy

Advice and dischar ge Recove ry Treatme nt Stabilizati on Evaluati on Arrival Third Delay: a woman s care pathway once she reaches a CEmONC facility timing! 3 2 5 Operating theater Change & scrub room Post-op ward Hospital Gate Emergency evaluation area 7 6 Discharge Labor & delivery room 4 Maternity ward Caseload! + 1 Ancillary services: Pharmacy, laboratory, blood bank, maintenance 12

What do we know about women s experience of PPH and PE/E care and influencing factors? Limited published information in medical and public health literature What matters most to women and families? What factors influence women s experience of PPH/PEE care? Including pain? How does provider experience of giving care, including prior trauma related to near-misses/maternal deaths influence care? What about follow-up care? What other consequences? (economic, social, emotional)

By far the hardest thing for me to accept is [what happened] from Lauren s perspective.the amount of pain she must have experienced in that exact moment when she finally had this little girl [and knew she was dying].i can accept the amount of pain I have been dealt but [her pain] is the one thing I just can t accept. I can t understand, I can t fathom it. Widow of Lauren Bloomstein who died of undiagnosed PE/E in a U.S. hospital several hours after giving birth to a baby girl