chris morgan, burnet institute

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Newborn survival lessons from the Western Pacific region – two stories from our knowledge hub work Chris Morgan

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Page 1: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

Newborn survival lessons from the Western Pacific region – two stories from our knowledge hub work

Chris Morgan

Page 2: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

•  Places with the highest maternal and newborn mortality generally have the worst access to services, and higher rates of home-birth.

•  Most deaths of mothers and many deaths of babies occur on or near the day of birth,

•  WHO and national strategies recommend childbirth care in a health facility, but this takes time to scale up –  PNG Maternal Task Force

plans “60% of all pregnant women having skilled attendant at delivery by 2015 and 80% by 2020”

Like Nepal

or PNG, or Lao PDR or….

The problem in certain settings in our region

Page 3: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

Provoked one stream of knowledge collation

•  There are forms of community-based care at childbirth, that could be delivered by trained lay health workers or community-based staff

•  Some are interim measures to meet the immediate crisis in maternal deaths.

•  Could maybe reduce maternal and newborn deaths by 30% or more.

•  However, they must be introduced in a carefully measured fashion, using a systems approach, to monitor for impact and unforeseen consequences.

Established packages for newborn care (warmth, hygiene, EBF), clean delivery kits;

Community mobilisation, facilitated referral;

Oxytocics from trained workers or self-administered; Antibiotics from trained workers (lay or paid); and ? pre-filled injection devices for vaccination or oxytocics.

Recognising the many other determinants, such as

family planning, girls’ education and nutrition etc

Page 4: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

Site analyses

Page 5: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

Collaboration with World Vision for an “evidence-based policy-advocacy’ study

•  … on the potential of “Family and Community Care” that is: care by family and community members, rather than by health professionals” –  Eg by “trained lay health workers” – aka VHVs

•  We did a –  Comprehensive literature review of

international publications to find interventions or packages delivered by FCC

–  Determined a simple cost-effectiveness rating and excluded any that were not good value for money

–  Researched their current or past application on PNG through publication and contacting experts

Page 6: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

An interventions and service delivery analysis of Family and Community Care for maternal and child survival in PNG -

Page 7: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

What we concluded

•  In places where the maternal and newborn mortality rates are still relatively high…

•  FCC interventions could avert deaths: –  Up to one third of maternal

deaths –  Up to two thirds of newborn

deaths –  Up to half of child deaths

•  PNG already has a variety of experiences with nearly all interventions researched

Page 8: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

Two ways to view family and community care, provided by VHVs, in PNG

•  A complement to the current investment in re-building the health infrastructure, training more health workers (including midwives) and strengthening systems –  FCC can help engage communities in a stronger HSS

process •  A stop-gap for get some high impact interventions to

mothers and children, while the health system is being rebuilt –  Might require innovative approaches and some risk-benefit

analysis

Page 9: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

What came next

Page 10: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

Another story – unique to East Asia and the Western Pacific

•  Most of the operational research demonstrating the efficacy of community-based newborn care has come from South Asia

•  Meanwhile, in East Asia and the Pacific, it has been immunization programs that focused on the first 24 hours after birth –  The critical period during which vaccination against

hepatitis B can interrupt perinatal transmission of hepatitis B (the form most likely to lead to chronic liver disease and death)

•  Scale-up of this has been a major push for the WHO WPRO

Page 11: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

Rationale for early post-natal care and vaccination visits in homes - in Angoram District, East Sepik Province (our study site)

•  Coverage of HepB birth dose is low: –  National: 16% 2005 survey), 25% (2008 NHIS) –  East Sepik: 27% Prov, 18% Angoram (2008 NHIS)

•  Proportions of childbirth occurring in health facilities had not increased for 10 years - between 30 and 40% –  But our partner, Save International PNG, has a good

network of village health volunteers •  Maternal and newborn mortality is high and postnatal

care underutilised •  Indonesia has supported hepatitis B vaccine in Uniject,

–  makes injection by LHWs feasible

Page 12: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

THE STUDY: A small feasibility trial of expanded health services, in a “difficult” but characteristic location

•  To answer the questions: –  Can postnatal care be expanded for home births? –  Can birth-dose vaccination reach home births? –  Can combining the two result in synergy rather

than fragmentation or competition? •  Providing

–  birth-dose vaccination for hepatitis B vaccination (HBV) using UnijectTM in a real-world setting, including out-of-cold chain usage

–  Integrated with early post-natal visits for home births in a remote district

•  Provision by –  Trained lay Village Health Volunteers (VHV), –  Nursing Officers (NOs) and Community

Health Workers (CHWs)

Page 13: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

MINIMAL POSTNATAL PACKAGE for community or aid-post level •  Hepatitis B vaccine

–  within 24 hours of birth, w UnijectTM •  Essential information:

–  breast-feeding and nutrition for the mother and baby

–  warmth and hygiene (inc. cord care) –  signs of infection in mother/baby,

how to prevent and respond •  Additional information and care

–  weighing the baby and information on care of low-birth weight babies, especially for temperature control

–  routine postnatal care for mother and baby, including further routine immunisations

–  family planning •  Vitamin A for the mother

Page 14: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

Trainers Manual

IEC brochure draft

Both translated into Tok Pisin

Page 15: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

IMPLEMENTATION

•  Training of staff and VHVs: –  13 rural health staff (NOs & CHWs) –  212 VHVs (175 female)

•  Provision of services in four health centre catchments: –  UnijectTM HBV procurement and distribution via govt systems –  Services to more than 364 mothers

•  Monitoring and supervision by a locally based project officer

–  birth and postnatal visit record form, designed for use by VHVs –  calendar to ensure vaccine out of the cold chain < 30 days

•  Evaluation –  using project databases - 2 for triangulation –  two visits with structured questionnaires for qualitative data

gathering - involved National Dept of Health and WHO

Page 16: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

Extract from the VHV birth and postnatal care record form

Page 17: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

EVALUATION - POSITIVE OUTCOMES

•  Coverage with birth-dose increased –  83% overall (cf district average 24%) –  74% (homebirths), 93% (health centre)

•  Use of VHVs extended coverage: –  ~ 10 VHVs for every paid staff member

•  VHVs vaccinated safely, using Uniject •  Out-of-cold chain management of HBV

feasible and appropriate, vaccine vial monitors used appropriately

•  Active VHVs credited the level of support provided by Save and Burnet

•  Most of postnatal package provided most of the time (but Vit A only 62%)

•  Having a vaccine role motivated greater attendance at birth for VHVs

•  Good community acceptance

VHV Unitha Longhi providing birth-dose vaccination w UnijectTM

Page 18: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

EVALUATION - SURPRISES

•  Births in health centres increased –  often a VHV accompanied and

attended the birth in the health facility, with staff on stand-by

•  UnijectTM use in health centres –  contributed to increased coverage there as well as

at community level –  staff found it far easier the multi-dose vial

•  Considerable new information regarding birth outcomes and care-seeking behaviour –  very high rates of obstetric complications and

death persist –  our program could only really influence newborn

outcomes and possibly puerperal sepsis

Page 19: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

Global extensions •  2009 WHO Position Paper adopted the policy led by

WPRO –  “In all regions of the world, all infants should receive the

first dose of hepatitis B vaccine as soon as possible (<24 hours) after birth. This should be followed by two or three doses to complete the series.”

–  Adopted as part of the World Health Assembly’s resolution on the control of viral hepatitis in 2010

–  New global hepatitis program established at WHO in 2011

•  Implications for other regions –  African and South Asian settings with high home birth rates

that have not yet introduced birth dose vaccination –  Can vaccination leverage better maternal/newborn care or

will it be a burden on over-stretched systems?

Page 20: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

WCH Knowledge Hub supported WHO expansion efforts •  WHO global consultation on birth-dose held in Melbourne, Dec 2010

•  Systematic review of global practices to provide birth-dose vaccination –  A chance to ensure that

integration with postnatal care for newborn and maternal survival was highlighted

Page 21: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

Issues for newborns: -  timing of home visit -  preventive care only, or therapeutic as well -  integration with maternal and immunisation programs

Issues for mothers: -  risk encouraging home births or distracting from facility care -  misoprostol - treatment or prevention; vs oxytocin, timing -  unknowns around puerperal sepsis in the community

Issues for both: -  introduce in concert with health system strengthening -  comprehensive PHC still offers best health system environment

To finish: Some critical service delivery questions for us

Page 22: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

The value of kangaroo care

Morgan and Rongong. Use of Kangaroo Nursing Method in Western Nepal; J Nepal Med Assoc, Jul-Sep 1997 (36): 320 - 323

Page 23: Chris Morgan, Burnet Institute

Thank you

A short history of baby care •  BC 2000

–  “Just carry it next to your skin. Breastfeed it whenever it is hungry.”

•  AD1660 –  “Breastfeeding is undignified. Hand it over to a wet-

nurse.” •  AD 1850

–  “Wet-nurses are low class and have an undesirable influence on the child. Get a good experienced nanny to bottle feed it cow’s milk, and wean it on to a cup as soon as possible.”

•  AD 1930 –  "Cow’s milk is unsuitable for babies. It must be

bottle fed on a special infant formula.” •  AD 1950

–  “Bottle feeding at all hours is bad for the baby. Follow a strict routine, let it sleep in its own room and ignore it when it cries at other times.”

•  AD 2000 –  “Bottle feeding is unsuitable, a strict time-table is

nonsense, babies don’t like being alone, and crying is stressful. Just carry it next to your skin. Breastfeed it whenever it is hungry.”

(Joan Norton, 2001)