Health workers' perspectives on the quality of maternal and newborn health care around the time of childbirth: Results of the Improving MAternal Newborn carE in the EURO Region (IMAgiNE EURO) project in 12 countries of the World Health Organization European Region
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35532Dato
2024-09-06Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Valente, Emanuelle Pessa; Mariani, Ilaria; Bomben, Arianna; Morano, Sandra; Gemperle, Michael; Otelea, Marina Ruxandra; Miani, Céline; Elden, Helen; Sarantaki, Antigoni; Costa, Raquel; Baranowska, Barbara; König-Bachmann, Martina; Kongslien, Sigrun; Drandić, Daniela; Rozée, Virginie; Nespoli, Antonella; Abderhalden-Zellweger, Alessia; Nanu, Ioana; Batram-Zantvoort, Stephanie; Linden, Karolina; Metallinou, Dimitra; Dias, Heloísa; Tataj-Puzyna, Urszula; D'Costa, Elisabeth; Nedberg, Ingvild Hersoug; Kurbanović, Magdalena; de La Rochebrochard, Elise; Fumagalli, Simona; Grylka-Baeschlin, Susanne; Handra, Claudia Mariana; Zaigham, Mehreen; Orovou, Eirini; Barata, Catarina; Szlendak, Beata; Zenzmaier, Christoph; Vik, Eline Skirnisdottir; Liepinaitienė, Alina; Drglin, Zalka; Arendt, Maryse; Sacks, Emma; Lazzerini, MarziaSammendrag
Methods HWs involved in maternal/neonatal care for at least one year between March 2020 and March 2023 answered an online validated WHO standards-based questionnaire collecting 40 quality measures for improving QMNC. A QMNC index (score 0–400) was calculated as a synthetic measure.
Results Data from 4143 respondents were analysed. For 39 out of 40 quality measures, at least 20% of HWs reported a ‘need for improvement’, with large variations across countries. Effective training on healthy women/newborns management (n = 2748, 66.3%), availability of informed consent job aids (n=2770, 66.9%), and effective training on women/ newborns rights (n=2714, 65.5%) presented the highest proportion of HWs stating ‘need for improvement’. Overall, 64.8% (n = 2684) of respondents declared that HWs numbers were insufficient for appropriate care (66.3% in Portugal and 86.6% in Poland), and 22.4% described staff censorship (16.3% in Germany and 56.7% in Poland). The reported QMNC index was low in all countries (Poland median (MD) = 210.60, interquartile range (IQR) = 155.71, 273.57; Norway MD=277.86; IQR=244.32, 308.30). The ‘experience of care’ domain presented in eight countries had significantly lower scores than the other domains (P<0.001). Over time, there was a significant monthly linear decrease in the QMNC index (P<0.001), lacking correlation with the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic trends (P>0.05). Multivariate analyses confirmed large QMNC variation by country. HWs with <10 years of experience, HWs from public facilities, and midwives rated QMNC with significantly lower scores (P<0.001).
Conclusions HWs from 12 European countries reported significant gaps in QMNC, lacking association with COVID-19 pandemic trends. Routine monitoring of QMNC and tailored actions are needed to improve health services for the benefit of both users and providers.