Can changes to improve person-centred maternity care be spread across public health facilities in Uttar Pradesh, India?
May SudhinarasetKatie GiesslerMichelle Kao NakphongKali Prosad RoyAnanta Basudev SahuKovid SharmaDominic MontaguCathy GreenPublished in: Sexual and reproductive health matters (2021)
Poor quality person-centred maternity care (PCMC) leads to delays in care and adverse maternal and newborn outcomes. This study describes the impact of spreading a Change Package, or interventions that other health facilities had previously piloted and identified as successful, to improve PCMC in public health facilities in Uttar Pradesh, India. A quasi-experimental design was used including matched control-intervention facilities and pre-post data collection. This study took place in Uttar Pradesh, India in 2018-2019. Six large public health facilities participated in the evaluation of the spread study, including three intervention and three control facilities. Intervention facilities were introduced to a quality improvement (QI) Change Package to improve PCMC. In total, 1200 women participated in the study, including 600 women at baseline and 600 women at endline. Difference-in-difference estimators are used to examine the impact of spreading a QI Change Package across spread sites vs. control sites and at baseline and endline using a validated PCMC scale. Out of a 100-point scale, a 24.93 point improvement was observed in overall PCMC scores among spread facilities compared to control facilities from baseline to endline (95% CI: 22.29, 27.56). For the eight PCMC indicators that the Change Package targeted, spread facilities increased 33.86 points (95% CI: 30.91, 36.81) relative to control facilities across survey rounds. Findings suggest that spread of a PCMC Change Package results in improved experiences of care for women as well as secondary outcomes, including clinical quality, nurse and doctor visits, and decreases in delivery problems.Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT04208841..
Keyphrases
- public health
- healthcare
- palliative care
- quality improvement
- randomized controlled trial
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- mental health
- clinical trial
- pregnancy outcomes
- primary care
- pregnant women
- physical activity
- machine learning
- pain management
- risk assessment
- emergency department
- social media
- affordable care act
- open label
- insulin resistance
- gestational age
- health insurance
- phase ii
- birth weight