Abstract

Introductionbirth attendants' retention of knowledge and skills of neonatal resuscitation post-training can prevent birth asphyxia by repeatedly applying neonatal resuscitation guidelines. This study assessed primary healthcare workers' retention of knowledge and skills of basic neonatal resuscitation.Methodsin 28 primary health centres, 106 birth attendants had their knowledge and skills assessed following a one-day neonatal resuscitation training. The evaluation was before, immediately after training, at three months (a subset of participants) and six months. Paired t-tests were used to compare mean scores at two different evaluation times.Resultsthe mean baseline knowledge and skills scores were 35.22% ± 12.90% and 21.40% ± 16.91% respectively. Immediately after training, it increased to 81.48% ± 7.05% and 87.40% ± 13.97% respectively (p=0.0001). At three months, it decreased to 55.37% ± 20.50% and 59.11% ± 25.55% respectively (p=0.0001), at six months it was 55.77% ± 14.28% and 60.38% ± 19.79% respectively (p=0.0001). Following immediate post-training at 6 months, knowledge and skills scores increased to 94.91 ± 7.28% and 96.02 ± 4.50% respectively (p=0.0001). No participant had adequate knowledge and one had adequate skills at baseline. The proportion of those with adequate knowledge and skills markedly increased immediate post-training but decreased remarkably at three-month and at six-month evaluations respectively. 99.1% had adequate knowledge and all had adequate skills immediate post-training at 6 months.Conclusionneonatal resuscitation training led to an improvement in knowledge and skills with suboptimal retention at three to six months post-training. Re-training improved knowledge and skills. We recommend that the retention of knowledge and skills could improve by retraining and mentoring at least 3-6 monthly.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call