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. 2013 May 9;3(5):e002326.
doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2012-002326.

Quality of newborn care: a health facility assessment in rural Ghana using survey, vignette and surveillance data

Affiliations

Quality of newborn care: a health facility assessment in rural Ghana using survey, vignette and surveillance data

Linda Vesel et al. BMJ Open. .

Abstract

Objective: To assess the structural capacity for, and quality of, immediate and essential newborn care (ENC) in health facilities in rural Ghana, and to link this with demand for facility deliveries and admissions.

Design: Health facility assessment survey and population-based surveillance data.

Setting: Seven districts in Brong Ahafo Region, Ghana.

Participants: Heads of maternal/neonatal wards in all 64 facilities performing deliveries.

Main outcome measures: Indicators include: the availability of essential infrastructure, newborn equipment and drugs, and personnel; vignette scores and adequacy of reasons given for delayed discharge of newborn babies; and prevalence of key immediate ENC practices that facilities should promote. These are matched to the percentage of babies delivered in and admitted to each type of facility.

Results: 70% of babies were delivered in health facilities; 56% of these and 87% of neonatal admissions were in four referral level hospitals. These had adequate infrastructure, but all lacked staff trained in ENC and some essential equipment (including incubators and bag and masks) and/or drugs. Vignette scores for care of very low-birth-weight babies were generally moderate-to-high, but only three hospitals achieved high overall scores for quality of ENC. We estimate that only 33% of babies were born in facilities capable of providing high quality, basic resuscitation as assessed by a vignette plus the presence of a bag and mask. Promotion of immediate ENC practices in facilities was also inadequate, with coverage of early initiation of breastfeeding and delayed bathing both below 50% for babies born in facilities; this represents a lost opportunity.

Conclusions: Unless major gaps in ENC equipment, drugs, staff, practices and skills are addressed, strategies to increase facility utilisation will not achieve their potential to save newborn lives.

Trial registration: http://clinicaltrials.gov NCT00623337.

Keywords: Epidemiology; Neonatology; Public health.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Hierarchy of health facilities in the Brong Ahafo Region, Ghana.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Vignette 1 (essential new-born care) scores by type of facility. The lines in the box plots show the range of scores, while the box captures the range of the middle 50%, with the central line being the median.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Vignette 2 (care for very low-birth-weight babies) scores by type of facility. The lines in the box plots show the range of scores, while the box captures the range of the middle 50%, with the central line being the median.
Figure 4
Figure 4
Live-births by socioeconomic quintile and place of birth in the Newhints cohort.

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