Karin Cadwell, Anna Blair, Kajsa Brimdyr, Kristin Svensson, Melissa Reyes, Mike Kagawa, Louise Racine Bastarache, Scovia Nalugo Mbambla
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Timely and prolonged skin-to-skin contact (SSC) immediately after birth is recommended in the Ugandan Clinical Guideline, the 2023 International Research and Practice Guideline on SSC and by the WHO/UNICEF Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative. Skin-to-skin contact is safe, low-resource, evidence-based and contributes to short- and long-term health outcomes. However, practice is inconsistent. A rapid-change intervention, PRECESS (Practice, Reflection, Education and training, Combined with Ethnography for Sustainable Success), encouraged adaptation of the SSC Guideline protocol in a regional referral hospital in Uganda. Fifteen key informants, including leadership and staff members, were interviewed before and after the practice change about perceived barriers and solutions for implementing SSC. The semi-structured pre- and post-intervention interviews were recorded, transcribed and analyzed for meaningful units and themes. Three themes emerged: (1) Commitment to consistent, evidence-based care within constraints; (2) Addressing knowledge and skill regarding the optimal practice of SSC; and (3) Willingness to "take-up" the practice change for the benefit of mothers and babies. Our findings support the experiential method of practice change PRECESS to implement immediate, continuous, uninterrupted SSC for at least the first hour after birth. Despite the challenges and barriers identified in key informant interviews, significant progress was made in increasing the duration of SSC for both vaginal and cesarean births. The identified themes provide insight for future implementation of skin-to-skin contact.
期刊介绍:
Maternal & Child Nutrition addresses fundamental aspects of nutrition and its outcomes in women and their children, both in early and later life, and keeps its audience fully informed about new initiatives, the latest research findings and innovative ways of responding to changes in public attitudes and policy. Drawing from global sources, the Journal provides an invaluable source of up to date information for health professionals, academics and service users with interests in maternal and child nutrition. Its scope includes pre-conception, antenatal and postnatal maternal nutrition, women''s nutrition throughout their reproductive years, and fetal, neonatal, infant, child and adolescent nutrition and their effects throughout life.