Abstract

Annually around 40 million mothers give birth at home without any trained health worker. Consequently, most of the maternal and neonatal mortalities occur at the community level due to lack of good quality care during labour and birth. Interventions delivered at the community level have not only been advocated to improve access and coverage of essential interventions but also to reduce the existing disparities and reaching the hard to reach. In this paper, we have reviewed the effectiveness of care delivered through community level inputs for improving maternal and newborn health outcomes. We considered all available systematic reviews published before May 2013 on the pre-defined community level interventions and report findings from 43 systematic reviews.Findings suggest that home visitation significantly improved antenatal care, tetanus immunization coverage, referral and early initiation of breast feeding with reductions in antenatal hospital admission, cesarean-section rates birth, maternal morbidity, neonatal mortality and perinatal mortality. Task shifting to midwives and community health workers has shown to significantly improve immunization uptake and breast feeding initiation with reductions in antenatal hospitalization, episiotomy, instrumental delivery and hospital stay. Training of traditional birth attendants as a part of community based intervention package has significant impact on referrals, early breast feeding, maternal morbidity, neonatal mortality, and perinatal mortality. Formation of community based support groups decreased maternal morbidity, neonatal mortality, perinatal mortality with improved referrals and early breast feeding rates. At community level, home visitation, community mobilization and training of community health workers and traditional birth attendants have the maximum potential to improve a range of maternal and newborn health outcomes. There is lack of data to establish effectiveness of outreach services, mass media campaigns and community education as standalone interventions. Future efforts should be concerted on increasing the availability and training of the community based skilled health workers especially in resource limited settings where the highest burden exists with limited resources to mobilize.

Highlights

  • Around 40 million mothers give birth at home without any trained health worker [1]

  • We have reviewed the effectiveness of care delivered through community level inputs for improving maternal newborn health (MNH) outcomes

  • For the pre-identified interventions, which did not report MNH outcomes, we have reported the impacts on other health outcomes reported by the review authors

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Around 40 million mothers give birth at home without any trained health worker [1]. Inputs at the community level involve programs based on training and consequent task shifting from healthcare personnel to mid-level health care personnel or lay individuals for local implementation at home, village or any defined community group They focus on resources such as local knowledge, volunteers’ time, community confidence and trust as channels for delivery. Community platforms can be used to deliver a full spectrum of promotive, preventive, and curative interventions including provision of basic antenatal (ANC), natal and postnatal care (PNC); preventive essential newborn care; breastfeeding counseling; management and referral of sick newborns; skills development in behavior change communication; and community mobilization strategies to promote birth and newborn care preparedness These programs do not substitute for a formal health system, but provide a channel to reach far flung areas with knowledge, commodities and skills, attempting to reduce existing inequities in healthcare access and utilization. We have broadly categorized these interventions into four categories: outreach services (including home visitation and referrals); task shifting; training; and formation of support groups for community mobilization

Objectives
Methods
Conclusion
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