Abstract

The Indian government has committed to implementing high-quality midwifery care to achieve universal health coverage and reduce the burden of maternal and perinatal mortality and morbidity. There are multiple challenges, including introducing a new cadre of midwives educated to international standards and integrating midwifery into the health system with a defined scope of practice. The objective of this review was to examine the facilitators and barriers to providing high-quality midwifery care in India. We searched 15 databases for studies relevant to the provision of midwifery care in India. The findings were mapped to two global quality frameworks to identify barriers and facilitators to providing high-quality midwifery care in India. Thirty-two studies were included. Key barriers were lack of competence of maternity care providers, lack of legislation recognizing midwives as autonomous professionals and limited scope of practice, social and economic barriers to women accessing services, and lack of basic health system infrastructure. Facilitators included providing more hands-on experience during training, monitoring and supervision of staff, utilizing midwives to their full scope of practice with good referral systems, improving women's experiences of maternity care, and improving health system infrastructure. The findings can be used to inform policy and practice. Overcoming the identified barriers will be critical to achieving the Government of India's plans to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality through the introduction of a new cadre of midwives. This is unlikely to be effective until the facilitators described are in place.

Highlights

  • The Indian government has committed to implementing high-quality midwifery care to achieve universal health coverage and reduce the burden of maternal and perinatal mortality and morbidity

  • Overcoming the identified barriers will be critical to achieving the Government of India's plans to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality through the introduction of a new cadre of midwives

  • India has maintained a steadily declining maternal mortality ratio (MMR) from 212 in 2009 to 130 per 100 000 live births in 2014.2 This is high compared with global standards, and the number of maternal deaths—32 000 in 20183—is large, as India accounts for one fifth of global births

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Summary

Introduction

The Indian government has committed to implementing high-quality midwifery care to achieve universal health coverage and reduce the burden of maternal and perinatal mortality and morbidity. Overcoming the identified barriers will be critical to achieving the Government of India's plans to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality through the introduction of a new cadre of midwives This is unlikely to be effective until the facilitators described are in place. By 2030, maternity services in India will need to respond to approximately 35 million births per year, nearly 75% of them in rural settings.[1] India has maintained a steadily declining maternal mortality ratio (MMR) from 212 in 2009 to 130 per 100 000 live births in 2014.2 This is high compared with global standards, and the number of maternal deaths—32 000 in 20183—is large, as India accounts for one fifth of global births This rapidly declining trend in MMR is not reflected in perinatal and neonatal mortality rates (PMR and NMR). Action is needed to achieve the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 3 targets of reduction of global average MMR to less than 70 per 100 000 births and NMR to less than 12 per 1000 live births by 2030

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