Health system intervention packages on improving coverage of kangaroo mother care for preterm or LBW infants: a mixed-methods systematic review: Health and Medicine
2023 JUN 05 (NewsRx) -- By a
“Introduction. Global coverage of Kangaroo mother care (KMC) remains low and health system intervention strategies that may improve coverage are not known. Methods.
“We conducted a systematic review of studies evaluating the effect of health system intervention strategies for KMC implementation compared to no or different interventions, on KMC coverage in preterm or LBW infants. KMC coverage achieved by various studies was summarized. All included studies were classified as those that achieved increased KMC coverage (defined as ?25% increase from baseline, with final coverage ?50%) or low KMC coverage (defined as <25% increase from baseline or final coverage <50%). Studies that achieved increased KMC coverage were further classified based on the mean duration of skin-to-skin contact (SSC; hours per day) achieved. Health system interventions in different categories were summarized by WHO health system building blocks to understand factors linked to increased KMC coverage. Findings.
“We identified 16 studies evaluating 15 health system intervention packages for KMC implementation that applied interventions in one or more health system building blocks that reported KMC coverage. All three studies that applied interventions across 5-6 building blocks (100%), two of the four studies that applied interventions across 3-4 building blocks (50%), and three of the nine studies that applied interventions across 1-2 building blocks (33%), achieved increased KMC coverage. Studies that did not achieve increased coverage had interventions primarily targeting health workforce and service delivery and were weak on leadership and governance, financing, and health information systems. All three studies that achieved increased KMC coverage with mean SSC ?8h/d (100%), three of the five studies that achieved increased KMC coverage with mean SSC <8h/d (60%), and three of the eight studies with low KMC coverage (38%) had high-intensity interventions in at least one health system building blocks. High-level leadership engagement, KMC supportive policies, staff licensing, and facility standards regulations, strengthened numbers and capacity of nursing staff, government funding and expanded health insurance, wards with conducive environment, and recording KMC-specific indicators in clinical registers were key factors among studies that achieved increased KMC coverage. Conclusion. High-intensity interventions across multiple health system building blocks should be used for equitable scale-up of KMC.”
This preprint has not been peer-reviewed.
For more information on this research see: http://medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.05.16.23289958v1
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