Abstract

BackgroundKangaroo mother care (KMC) is a proven low-cost intervention to prevent neonatal mortality of pre-term and low birth weight babies and is very relevant to Bangladesh. KMC provides thermal regulation and thus directly avert neonatal mortality. KMC includes early, continuous, and prolonged skin-to-skin contact between an infant and caregiver, exclusive breastfeeding, early discharge from the hospital, and post-discharge follow-up. The purpose of this study was to investigate the fidelity of this intervention’s implementation according to national guidelines across all tiers of government (public) health facilities of Bangladesh.MethodsWe adopted a triangulation mixed-methods approach of both quantitative and qualitative components in this research to support and explain the information obtained from quantitative observation with the help of qualitative interviews on the fidelity of KMC practice. We used an observation checklist to find the fidelity of KMC practice and used semi-structured guidelines to explain and understand the moderators of fidelity through key informant interviews and in-depth interviews. We undertook eight facility visits in four districts, observed twenty-three neonates and their caregivers during KMC practice at those facilities, and conducted twenty-seven key informant interviews with facility managers, health care providers, and five in-depth interviews with caregivers. Extracted information was triangulated and arranged under the themes of the fidelity framework.ResultsDespite being a low-cost intervention, findings exhibit some adherence to the national guideline with several gaps in practice. Leadership played a critical role in ensuring the KMC practice. Specific components of KMC practice, like duration, nutrition maintenance, discharge criteria, and follow-up, were not consistent as recommended. Infrastructure, human resources, developmental partner support, and the demand-side and supply-side responsiveness played a critical role in enacting this human-centric approach’s fidelity. The observed interruption found in the implementation process posed threats to achieve the intended outcome as these caused violations of the basic principles of KMC.ConclusionsThe study findings will help find ways to effectively deliver this intervention so that fidelity of practice is maintained, enhancing KMC services’ quality and advocating towards the successful scale-up of this program.

Highlights

  • Kangaroo mother care (KMC) is a proven low-cost intervention to prevent neonatal mortality of preterm and low birth weight babies and is very relevant to Bangladesh

  • The World Health Organization (WHO) has officially endorsed KMC as a strategy to stabilize babies born with a birth weight of less than 2000 g in health facilities as a safe complement to conventional neonatal care [5,6,7,8]

  • It was likely that the implementation fidelity, as well as the facilitators and challenges related to the KMC implementation, would vary at different levels

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Summary

Introduction

Kangaroo mother care (KMC) is a proven low-cost intervention to prevent neonatal mortality of preterm and low birth weight babies and is very relevant to Bangladesh. The clients’ challenges, such as existing socio-cultural barriers, the lack of acceptability of KMC, lack of engagement and support from fathers/male members in the community, and poor accessibility to the health centers make the successful implementation of KMC service challenging [7, 14,15,16]. These findings highlight the importance of in-depth examination of the implementation processes and a better understanding of the fidelity of a program to make it successful [12]

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