Abstract

Each year, more than half a million women die worldwide from causes related to pregnancy and childbirth, and nearly 4 million newborns die within 28 days of birth. In Uganda, 15 women die every single day from pregnancy and childbirth-related causes, 94 babies are stillborn, and 81 newborn babies die. Cost-effective solutions for the continuum of care can be achieved through Village Health Teams to improve home care practices and health care-seeking behavior. This study aims at examining the implementation of the timed and targeted counseling (ttC) model, as well as improving maternal and newborn health care practices. We conducted a quantitative longitudinal study on pregnant mothers who were recruited on suspicion of the pregnancy and followed-up until six weeks post-delivery. The household register was the primary data source, which was collected through a secondary review of the ttC registers. All outcome and process variables were analyzed using descriptive statistics. The study enrolled 616 households from 64 villages across seven sub-counties in Hoima district with a 98.5% successful follow-up rate. Over the course of the implementation period of ttC, there was an increase of 29.6% in timely 1st antenatal care, 28.7% in essential newborn care, 25.5% in exclusive breastfeeding, and 17.5% in quality of antenatal care. All these improvements were statistically significant. The findings from this study show that the application of the ttC model through Village Health Teams has great potential to improve the quality of antenatal and newborn care and the health-seeking practices of pregnant and breastfeeding mothers in rural communities.

Highlights

  • The study enrolled 616 households with pregnant women from villages, across seven sub-counties reached by Village Health Teams (VHTs)

  • Each VHT was responsible for the follow up of 10 pregnant women per village

  • As regards the women who dropped out, 0.8% lost the newborn, 0.3% had a miscarriage during the pregnancy period, 0.2% migrated to places outside of the project coverage, while another 0.2% were not followed up by the VHTs

Read more

Summary

Introduction

More than half a million women die worldwide from causes related to pregnancy and childbirth, and nearly 4 million newborns die within 28 days after birth [1]. In. Uganda, 15 women die every day from pregnancy and childbirth-related causes, 94 babies are stillborn, and 81 newborn babies die. 15 women die every day from pregnancy and childbirth-related causes, 94 babies are stillborn, and 81 newborn babies die This equates to 695,701 deaths each year due to complications during pregnancy, childbirth, and in the first month [2]. The link between a mother’s health and that of her newborn is crucial for addressing maternal and infant mortality and morbidity, since the majority of preventable maternal and infant deaths occur during pregnancy, childbirth, and the immediate postpartum period [3]

Objectives
Methods
Results
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