Gaps and opportunities for the integrated delivery of mother-child care, postpartum family planning and nutrition services in Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire and Niger

Halima Tougri, M. Yameogo, R. Compaoré, D. Dahourou, D. Belemsaga, Bertrand Meda, D. Kpebo, M. Ndour, S. Kouanda
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Abstract

Maternal and infant deaths can be prevented through integrated service delivery during pregnancy, postpartum, and early childhood. Our study analyses the gaps and opportunities associated with integrating maternal, newborn, and child health (MNCH) services with postpartum family planning (PPFP) and nutrition services at different points of contact in health facilities in a preintervention context in west Africa. We conducted a qualitative study from June to July 2018 in Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire and Niger. The points of contact studied at the health facility level were the prenatal care, postpartum care and immunisation/growth monitoring services. Individual in-depth interviews were used to collect data from key informants (providers, community health workers and mother-child health programme managers). To measure the degree of service integration, we used the dimensions and indicators included in the Integra Initiative framework concerning four aspects of integration: physical (the availability of multiple services in the health facility), temporal (the availability of care more than one day per week), provider level, and functional (the receipt of integrated services by the client). The findings of this study show that the integrated delivery of MNCH, PPFP, and nutrition services is configured in similar ways in Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire and Niger and is insufficient at all points of contact. Physical integration is high. However, the study found important gaps in temporal, functional and provider-level integration. The main barriers to integrated service delivery are the shortage of providers, the lack of training in integrated service delivery, and insufficient service organisation. However, the availability of multiple services throughout the week, the multiple points of contact between the mother-child pair and the health system, and the multiple skills of providers represent opportunities for functional integration through the establishment of a formal referral system between the different care units with follow-up and feedback among service providers. The provision of training and the development of a well-organised referral system in different health facilities, taking into account the specific characteristics of each health facility (urban/rural, primary health facility/district hospital), can improve the delivery of integrated MNCH, PPFP, and nutrition care to the mother-child pair.
布基纳法索、科特迪瓦和尼日尔在综合提供母婴保健、产后计划生育和营养服务方面的差距和机会
可以通过在怀孕、产后和儿童早期提供综合服务来预防母婴死亡。我们的研究分析了在西非干预前的背景下,在卫生机构的不同接触点,将孕产妇、新生儿和儿童健康(MNCH)服务与产后计划生育(PPFP)和营养服务相结合的差距和机会。我们于2018年6月至7月在布基纳法索、科特迪瓦和尼日尔进行了一项定性研究。在卫生机构一级研究的接触点是产前护理、产后护理和免疫/生长监测服务。个人深入访谈用于收集关键信息提供者(提供者、社区卫生工作者和母婴健康方案管理人员)的数据。为了衡量服务整合的程度,我们使用了Integra倡议框架中包含的四个方面的维度和指标:物理(卫生机构中多种服务的可用性)、时间(每周一天以上的护理可用性),提供者级别和功能(客户接受综合服务)。这项研究的结果表明,布基纳法索、科特迪瓦和尼日尔以类似的方式综合提供MNCH、PPFP和营养服务,在所有接触点都不够。物理集成度很高。然而,该研究发现,在时间、功能和提供者层面的整合方面存在重要差距。综合服务提供的主要障碍是提供者短缺、缺乏综合服务提供方面的培训以及服务组织不足。然而,通过在不同的护理单位之间建立正式的转诊系统,并在服务提供者之间进行跟进和反馈,一周内提供多种服务,母子二人与卫生系统之间的多个接触点,以及提供者的多种技能,代表了功能整合的机会。考虑到每个卫生机构(城市/农村、初级卫生机构/地区医院)的具体特点,在不同的卫生机构中提供培训和发展组织良好的转诊系统,可以改善向母婴对提供综合MNCH、PPFP和营养护理。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
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0.00%
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审稿时长
16 weeks
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