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Comprehensive approach to improving maternal health and achieving MDG 5: report from the mountains of Lesotho

Although it is now widely recognized that reductions in maternal mortality and improvements in women's health cannot be achieved through simple, vertical strategies, few programs have provided successful models for how to integrate services into a comprehensive program for maternal health. We r...

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Published in:PloS one 2012-08, Vol.7 (8), p.e42700-e42700
Main Authors: Satti, Hind, Motsamai, Sophie, Chetane, Palesa, Marumo, Leshoboro, Barry, Donna J, Riley, Jennifer, McLaughlin, Megan M, Seung, Kwonjune J, Mukherjee, Joia S
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container_title PloS one
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creator Satti, Hind
Motsamai, Sophie
Chetane, Palesa
Marumo, Leshoboro
Barry, Donna J
Riley, Jennifer
McLaughlin, Megan M
Seung, Kwonjune J
Mukherjee, Joia S
description Although it is now widely recognized that reductions in maternal mortality and improvements in women's health cannot be achieved through simple, vertical strategies, few programs have provided successful models for how to integrate services into a comprehensive program for maternal health. We report our experience in rural Lesotho, where Partners In Health (PIH) in partnership with the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare implemented a program that provides comprehensive care of pregnant women from the community to the clinic level. Between May and July 2009, PIH trained 100 women, many of whom were former traditional birth attendants, to serve as clinic-affiliated maternal health workers. They received performance-based incentives for accompanying pregnant women during antenatal care (ANC) visits and facility-based delivery. A nurse-midwife provided ANC and delivery care and supervised the maternal health workers. To overcome geographic barriers to delivering at the clinic, women who lived far from the clinic stayed at a maternal lying-in house prior to their expected delivery dates. We analyzed data routinely collected from delivery and ANC registers to compare service utilization before and after implementation of the program. After the establishment of the program, the average number first ANC visits increased from 20 to 31 per month. The clinic recorded 178 deliveries in the first year of the program and 216 in the second year, compared to 46 in the year preceding the program. During the first two years of the program, 49 women with complications were successfully transported to the district hospital, and no maternal deaths occurred among the women served by the program. Our results demonstrate that it is possible to achieve dramatic improvements in the utilization of maternal health services and facility-based delivery by strengthening human resource capacity, implementing active follow-up in the community, and de-incentivizing home births.
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subjects Communities
Community Health Services
Complications
Data processing
Delivery of Health Care
Delivery, Obstetric
Female
Health
Health services
HIV
Hospitals
Human immunodeficiency virus
Humans
Incentives
Lesotho
Maternal & child health
Maternal Health Services - organization & administration
Maternal Mortality
Maternal Welfare
Medical personnel
Medical tests
Medicine
Midwifery
Mountains
Nurse Midwives
Obstetrics - education
Obstetrics - methods
Physicians
Pilot projects
Population
Pregnancy
Pregnancy Outcome
Prenatal care
Prenatal Care - organization & administration
Program Development
Rural areas
Tuberculosis
Womens health
Workers
title Comprehensive approach to improving maternal health and achieving MDG 5: report from the mountains of Lesotho
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