Abstract
BackgroundIn LMICs including Pakistan, neonatal health and survival is a critical challenge, and therefore improving the quality of facility-based newborn care services is instrumental in averting newborn mortality. This paper presents the perceptions of the key stakeholders in the public sector to explore factors influencing the care of small and sick newborns and young infants in inpatient care settings across Pakistan.MethodsThis exploratory study was part of a larger study assessing the situation of newborn and young infant in-patient care provided across all four provinces and administrative regions of Pakistan. We conducted 43 interviews. Thirty interviews were conducted with the public sector health care providers involved in newborn and young infant care and 13 interviews were carried out with health planners and managers working at the provincial level. A semi-structured interview guide was used to explore participants’ perspectives on enablers and barriers to the quality of care provided to small and sick newborns at the facility level. The interviews were manually analyzed using thematic content analysis.FindingsThe study respondents identified multiple barriers contributing to the poor quality of small and sick newborn care at inpatient care settings. This includes an absence of neonatal care standards, inadequate infrastructure and equipment for the care of small and sick newborns, deficient workforce for neonatal case management, inadequate thermal care management for newborns, inadequate referral system, absence of multidisciplinary approach in neonatal case management and need to institute strong monitoring system to prevent neonatal deaths and stillbirths. The only potential enabling factor was the improved federal and provincial oversight for reproductive, maternal, and newborn care.ConclusionThis qualitative study was insightful in identifying the challenges that influence the quality of inpatient care for small and sick newborns and the resources needed to fix these. There is a need to equip Sick Newborn Care Units with needed supplies, equipment and medicines, deployment of specialist staff, strengthening of in-service training and staff supervision, liaison with the neonatal experts in customizing neonatal care guidelines for inpatient care settings and to inculcate the culture for inter-disciplinary team meetings at inpatient care settings across the country.
Highlights
Facility-based newborn care refers to the specialized health care services provided by skilled health care personnel 24/7 at the secondary and tertiary care units [1, 2]
Improving the quality of inpatient care is instrumental in reducing neonatal mortality rate (NMR), in low and middle-income countries (LMICs); which accounts for 98% of neonatal deaths [3, 4]
Of the 23 public sector health care facilities, 12 facilities were supported by United Nations International for Children’s Education Fund (UNICEF), while the remaining 11 facilities were without UNICEF support
Summary
Facility-based newborn care refers to the specialized health care services provided by skilled health care personnel 24/7 at the secondary and tertiary care units [1, 2]. Improving the quality of inpatient care is instrumental in reducing neonatal mortality rate (NMR), in low and middle-income countries (LMICs); which accounts for 98% of neonatal deaths [3, 4]. In pursuit of achieving the target of reducing neonatal mortality to 12 per 1000 live births of Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 3 [5], it is imperative to improve the quality of inpatient care services. Despite slower progress in reducing neonatal mortality globally; facility-based neonatal care has remained under-prioritized and underfunded, in resource-constrained settings [7]. In LMICs including Pakistan, neonatal health and survival is a critical challenge, and improving the quality of facility-based newborn care services is instrumental in averting newborn mortality.
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