Knowledge and Skills of Healthcare Providers in Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia before and after Competency-Based Training in Emergency Obstetric and Early Newborn Care.

Healthcare provider training in Emergency Obstetric and Newborn Care (EmOC&NC) is a component of 65% of intervention programs aimed at reducing maternal and newborn mortality and morbidity. It is important to evaluate the effectiveness of this.We evaluated knowledge and skills among 5,939 health...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Charles A Ameh, Robert Kerr, Barbara Madaj, Mselenge Mdegela, Terry Kana, Susan Jones, Jaki Lambert, Fiona Dickinson, Sarah White, Nynke van den Broek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5179026?pdf=render
_version_ 1818588857673711616
author Charles A Ameh
Robert Kerr
Barbara Madaj
Mselenge Mdegela
Terry Kana
Susan Jones
Jaki Lambert
Fiona Dickinson
Sarah White
Nynke van den Broek
author_facet Charles A Ameh
Robert Kerr
Barbara Madaj
Mselenge Mdegela
Terry Kana
Susan Jones
Jaki Lambert
Fiona Dickinson
Sarah White
Nynke van den Broek
author_sort Charles A Ameh
collection DOAJ
description Healthcare provider training in Emergency Obstetric and Newborn Care (EmOC&NC) is a component of 65% of intervention programs aimed at reducing maternal and newborn mortality and morbidity. It is important to evaluate the effectiveness of this.We evaluated knowledge and skills among 5,939 healthcare providers before and after 3-5 days 'skills and drills' training in emergency obstetric and newborn care (EmOC&NC) conducted in 7 sub-Saharan Africa countries (Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Zimbabwe) and 2 Asian countries (Bangladesh, Pakistan). Standardised assessments using multiple choice questions and objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) were used to measure change in knowledge and skills and the Improvement Ratio (IR) by cadre and by country. Linear regression was performed to identify variables associated with pre-training score and IR.99.7% of healthcare providers improved their overall score with a median (IQR) increase of 10.0% (5.0% - 15.0%) for knowledge and 28.8% (23.1% - 35.1%) for skill. There were significant improvements in knowledge and skills for each cadre of healthcare provider and for each country (p<0.05). The mean IR was 56% for doctors, 50% for mid-level staff and nurse-midwives and 38% for nursing-aides. A teaching job, previous in-service training, and higher percentage of work-time spent providing maternity care were each associated with a higher pre-training score. Those with more than 11 years of experience in obstetrics had the lowest scores prior to training, with mean IRs 1.4% lower than for those with no more than 2 years of experience. The largest IR was for recognition and management of obstetric haemorrhage (49-70%) and the smallest for recognition and management of obstructed labour and use of the partograph (6-15%).Short in-service EmOC&NC training was associated with improved knowledge and skills for all cadres of healthcare providers working in maternity wards in both sub-Saharan Africa and Asia. Additional support and training is needed for use of the partograph as a tool to monitor progress in labour. Further research is needed to assess if this is translated into improved service delivery.
first_indexed 2024-12-16T09:31:25Z
format Article
id doaj.art-a6618e70cff64c3b9488f7479b7ff268
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-16T09:31:25Z
publishDate 2016-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-a6618e70cff64c3b9488f7479b7ff2682022-12-21T22:36:32ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-011112e016727010.1371/journal.pone.0167270Knowledge and Skills of Healthcare Providers in Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia before and after Competency-Based Training in Emergency Obstetric and Early Newborn Care.Charles A AmehRobert KerrBarbara MadajMselenge MdegelaTerry KanaSusan JonesJaki LambertFiona DickinsonSarah WhiteNynke van den BroekHealthcare provider training in Emergency Obstetric and Newborn Care (EmOC&NC) is a component of 65% of intervention programs aimed at reducing maternal and newborn mortality and morbidity. It is important to evaluate the effectiveness of this.We evaluated knowledge and skills among 5,939 healthcare providers before and after 3-5 days 'skills and drills' training in emergency obstetric and newborn care (EmOC&NC) conducted in 7 sub-Saharan Africa countries (Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Zimbabwe) and 2 Asian countries (Bangladesh, Pakistan). Standardised assessments using multiple choice questions and objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) were used to measure change in knowledge and skills and the Improvement Ratio (IR) by cadre and by country. Linear regression was performed to identify variables associated with pre-training score and IR.99.7% of healthcare providers improved their overall score with a median (IQR) increase of 10.0% (5.0% - 15.0%) for knowledge and 28.8% (23.1% - 35.1%) for skill. There were significant improvements in knowledge and skills for each cadre of healthcare provider and for each country (p<0.05). The mean IR was 56% for doctors, 50% for mid-level staff and nurse-midwives and 38% for nursing-aides. A teaching job, previous in-service training, and higher percentage of work-time spent providing maternity care were each associated with a higher pre-training score. Those with more than 11 years of experience in obstetrics had the lowest scores prior to training, with mean IRs 1.4% lower than for those with no more than 2 years of experience. The largest IR was for recognition and management of obstetric haemorrhage (49-70%) and the smallest for recognition and management of obstructed labour and use of the partograph (6-15%).Short in-service EmOC&NC training was associated with improved knowledge and skills for all cadres of healthcare providers working in maternity wards in both sub-Saharan Africa and Asia. Additional support and training is needed for use of the partograph as a tool to monitor progress in labour. Further research is needed to assess if this is translated into improved service delivery.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5179026?pdf=render
spellingShingle Charles A Ameh
Robert Kerr
Barbara Madaj
Mselenge Mdegela
Terry Kana
Susan Jones
Jaki Lambert
Fiona Dickinson
Sarah White
Nynke van den Broek
Knowledge and Skills of Healthcare Providers in Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia before and after Competency-Based Training in Emergency Obstetric and Early Newborn Care.
PLoS ONE
title Knowledge and Skills of Healthcare Providers in Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia before and after Competency-Based Training in Emergency Obstetric and Early Newborn Care.
title_full Knowledge and Skills of Healthcare Providers in Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia before and after Competency-Based Training in Emergency Obstetric and Early Newborn Care.
title_fullStr Knowledge and Skills of Healthcare Providers in Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia before and after Competency-Based Training in Emergency Obstetric and Early Newborn Care.
title_full_unstemmed Knowledge and Skills of Healthcare Providers in Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia before and after Competency-Based Training in Emergency Obstetric and Early Newborn Care.
title_short Knowledge and Skills of Healthcare Providers in Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia before and after Competency-Based Training in Emergency Obstetric and Early Newborn Care.
title_sort knowledge and skills of healthcare providers in sub saharan africa and asia before and after competency based training in emergency obstetric and early newborn care
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5179026?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT charlesaameh knowledgeandskillsofhealthcareprovidersinsubsaharanafricaandasiabeforeandaftercompetencybasedtraininginemergencyobstetricandearlynewborncare
AT robertkerr knowledgeandskillsofhealthcareprovidersinsubsaharanafricaandasiabeforeandaftercompetencybasedtraininginemergencyobstetricandearlynewborncare
AT barbaramadaj knowledgeandskillsofhealthcareprovidersinsubsaharanafricaandasiabeforeandaftercompetencybasedtraininginemergencyobstetricandearlynewborncare
AT mselengemdegela knowledgeandskillsofhealthcareprovidersinsubsaharanafricaandasiabeforeandaftercompetencybasedtraininginemergencyobstetricandearlynewborncare
AT terrykana knowledgeandskillsofhealthcareprovidersinsubsaharanafricaandasiabeforeandaftercompetencybasedtraininginemergencyobstetricandearlynewborncare
AT susanjones knowledgeandskillsofhealthcareprovidersinsubsaharanafricaandasiabeforeandaftercompetencybasedtraininginemergencyobstetricandearlynewborncare
AT jakilambert knowledgeandskillsofhealthcareprovidersinsubsaharanafricaandasiabeforeandaftercompetencybasedtraininginemergencyobstetricandearlynewborncare
AT fionadickinson knowledgeandskillsofhealthcareprovidersinsubsaharanafricaandasiabeforeandaftercompetencybasedtraininginemergencyobstetricandearlynewborncare
AT sarahwhite knowledgeandskillsofhealthcareprovidersinsubsaharanafricaandasiabeforeandaftercompetencybasedtraininginemergencyobstetricandearlynewborncare
AT nynkevandenbroek knowledgeandskillsofhealthcareprovidersinsubsaharanafricaandasiabeforeandaftercompetencybasedtraininginemergencyobstetricandearlynewborncare