Linking families and facilities for care at birth: What works to avert intrapartum-related deaths?
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 6 October 2009
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics
- Vol. 107 (Supplement) , S65-S88
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijgo.2009.07.012
Abstract
Background Delays in receiving effective care during labor and at birth may be fatal for the mother and fetus, contributing to 2 million annual intrapartum stillbirths and intrapartum‐related neonatal deaths each year. Objective We present a systematic review of strategies to link families and facilities, including community mobilization, financial incentives, emergency referral and transport systems, prenatal risk screening, and maternity waiting homes. Results There is moderate quality evidence that community mobilization with high levels of community engagement can increase institutional births and significantly reduce perinatal and early neonatal mortality. Meta‐analysis showed a doubling of skilled birth attendance and a 36% reduction in early neonatal mortality. However, no data are available on intrapartum‐specific outcomes. Evidence is limited, but promising, that financial incentive schemes and community referral/transport systems may increase rates of skilled birth attendance and emergency obstetric care utilization; however, impact on mortality is unknown. Current evidence for maternity waiting homes and risk screening is low quality. Conclusions Empowering communities is an important strategy to reduce the large burden of intrapartum complications. Innovations are needed to bring the poor closer to obstetric care, such as financial incentives and cell phone technology. New questions need to be asked of “old” strategies such as risk screening and maternity waiting homes. The effect of all of these strategies on maternal and perinatal mortality, particularly intrapartum‐related outcomes, requires further evaluation.Keywords
This publication has 101 references indexed in Scilit:
- Obstetric care in low-resource settings: What, who, and how to overcome challenges to scale up?International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics, 2009
- Two million intrapartum-related stillbirths and neonatal deaths: Where, why, and what can be done?International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics, 2009
- 60 million non-facility births: Who can deliver in community settings to reduce intrapartum-related deaths?International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics, 2009
- How did formative research inform the development of a women's group intervention in rural Nepal?Journal of Perinatology, 2008
- Effect of community-based behaviour change management on neonatal mortality in Shivgarh, Uttar Pradesh, India: a cluster-randomised controlled trialThe Lancet, 2008
- Interventions to address maternal, newborn, and child survival: what difference can integrated primary health care strategies make?The Lancet, 2008
- Community-based health insurance and access to maternal health services: Evidence from three West African countriesSocial Science & Medicine, 2008
- Effect of community-based newborn-care intervention package implemented through two service-delivery strategies in Sylhet district, Bangladesh: a cluster-randomised controlled trialThe Lancet, 2008
- Conditional Cash Transfers for Improving Uptake of Health Interventions in Low- and Middle-Income CountriesJAMA, 2007
- Too far to walk: Maternal mortality in contextPublished by Elsevier ,2002