After neonatal care, what next? A qualitative study of mothers' post-discharge experiences after premature birth in Kenya.

IF 4.5 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Justinah Maluni, Dorothy Oluoch, Sassy Molyneux, Mwanamvua Boga, Caroline Jones, Florence Murila, Mike English, Sue Ziebland, Lisa Hinton
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Approximately 15 million babies are born prematurely every year worldwide. Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) and Asia account for more than half of the global preterm deliveries. Prominent healthcare structural and socio-economic factors in SSA, for example poverty and weak health systems, amplify vulnerabilities for mothers and premature babies; often leading to poor outcomes. Post-discharge mortality rates are high, and readmission is common. For mothers of premature babies, the transition home from hospital is marked by challenges and uncertainties. This study explored the post-discharge experiences of mothers of premature babies with the aim of identifying their needs and suggests strategies to strengthen and support their discharge preparation to care for their premature baby at home, and to and reduce mortality and readmission rates.

Methods: Narrative interviews were conducted face-to-face in English or Swahili with 34 mothers of premature babies recruited from two public hospitals and a social support group in Nairobi, Kenya between August-November 2021. Interviews were audio and video-recorded and transcribed for analysis. After transcription, the interviews were translated, where applicable, and thematic analysis was undertaken.

Results: For mothers of premature babies, discharge from neonatal care and the transition home is a complex process marked with mixed emotions; many reported feeling unprepared and facing stigma while in hospital and in their communities. Mothers described the emotional challenges of discharge from the neonatal unit and their information and support needs. Minimal involvement in their baby's care while in the neonatal unit appeared to contribute to the mothers' lack of confidence in caring for their babies independently post-discharge when they no longer had the support of the clinical and nursing staff. Insufficient information provided on discharge hindered a smooth transition to home, highlighting the need for information to support mothers' confidence after discharge. Stigma relating to beliefs around preterm births was experienced by some of the mothers in the community and within some health clinics.

Conclusions: To support transitions home, strengthening the timing and adequacy of information provided to mothers at discharge from the neonatal unit in low-income settings in SSA and Asia - such as Kenya-is essential. Introducing strategies to build and assess mothers' competencies with skills such as breastfeeding and identifying signs of deterioration before discharge could support their smooth transition home. Targeted engagement interventions at the community level could demystify and address stigma and knowledge gaps about premature deliveries at the community and social levels more broadly and within the health system.

在新生儿护理之后,下一步是什么?肯尼亚早产儿母亲出院后经历的定性研究。
背景:全世界每年约有1500万婴儿早产。撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)和亚洲占全球早产的一半以上。SSA突出的医疗结构和社会经济因素,例如贫困和薄弱的卫生系统,加剧了母亲和早产儿的脆弱性;通常会导致糟糕的结果。出院后死亡率很高,再入院很常见。对于早产婴儿的母亲来说,从医院回家的过渡充满了挑战和不确定性。本研究探讨了早产儿母亲出院后的经历,旨在确定她们的需求,并提出策略,以加强和支持她们在家照顾早产儿的出院准备,并降低死亡率和再入院率。方法:在2021年8月至11月期间,用英语或斯瓦希里语对来自肯尼亚内罗毕两家公立医院和一个社会支持团体的34名早产儿母亲进行面对面的叙述性访谈。采访录音和录像,并记录下来供分析。抄录后,在适当情况下对采访进行翻译,并进行专题分析。结果:对于早产儿母亲来说,从新生儿护理中心出院并过渡到家中是一个复杂的过程,其特征是复杂的情绪;许多人报告说,在医院和社区中感到措手不及,并面临耻辱。母亲们描述了从新生儿病房出院时的情感挑战以及她们的信息和支持需求。在新生儿病房时,很少参与婴儿的护理似乎会导致母亲在出院后不再得到临床和护理人员的支持时,对独立照顾婴儿缺乏信心。关于出院的信息不足阻碍了顺利过渡到家庭,突出表明需要信息来支持母亲出院后的信心。在社区和一些保健诊所,一些母亲经历了与早产有关的偏见。结论:为了支持家庭过渡,在SSA和亚洲(如肯尼亚)的低收入环境中,加强向母亲从新生儿病房出院时提供信息的时机和充分性至关重要。引入战略,建立和评估母亲的技能能力,如母乳喂养,并在出院前识别病情恶化的迹象,可以帮助她们顺利过渡到家庭。社区一级有针对性的参与干预措施可以在更广泛的社区和社会层面以及卫生系统内消除和解决有关早产的污名和知识差距。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
4.20%
发文量
162
审稿时长
28 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal for Equity in Health is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, online journal presenting evidence relevant to the search for, and attainment of, equity in health across and within countries. International Journal for Equity in Health aims to improve the understanding of issues that influence the health of populations. This includes the discussion of political, policy-related, economic, social and health services-related influences, particularly with regard to systematic differences in distributions of one or more aspects of health in population groups defined demographically, geographically, or socially.
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