Pregnancy support grant, MASCOT and Wotro
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Transcript of Pregnancy support grant, MASCOT and Wotro
Pregnancy support grant, MASCOT and Wotro
Ashar Dhana, Elinor Kern, Loveday Penn-Kekana, Josephine Kavanagh, Matthew
Chersich, Priya Mannava, Siphiwe ThwalaMascot study groupWotro study group
Maternity and early child support grant: Research methods
1. Desktop review: systematic review of models and evidence of impact
2. Analysis of population-level data (GHS 2010)3. In-depth interviews with pregnant women
and policy makers (n=33)4. Summary of strategic case, policy options
and cost5. Identify research gaps, respond
Income and expenditure in pregnancy• Formal sector aware of effects of pregnancy on income
(equity: only 25% pregnant women had income)• Pregnancy physically restricts ability to work, as does
breastfeeding & childcare • Many asked to leave job, employers reluctant to hire
them• Nationally, pregnant women 2.8-times less likely to
have own income than other adults• Most pregnancies unplanned, can’t prepare for rapid
changes of pregnancy, financial implications:– higher food needs, transport to health facility– preparation for newborn, needs of other children
Problem statement
In already vulnerable women, earnings reduce, at a time when needs increase markedly;
Heightened dependence on partners and families, mostly inconsistent or disempowering, conflict is common
Increased volume and range of foods required for healthy pregnancy
BUT high food insecurity:• 35% of pregnant women live in households which ran
out of money for food in past year, 37% of whom had this ≥5 times in past month (GHS)
• 25% of pregnant women live in households that experienced food insufficiency with hunger in past year, 1 in 20 experienced this often or always
• A third of pregnant women limited food variety due to resource constraints
• In interviews, poor respondents had very limited diet range
International experience
• 30 countries, about 40 programmes that specifically include pregnant women (13 only for pregnant women and newborns)
• Half CCTs, rest mostly targeted at poor
• Many multifaceted, attempt to link support to counselling or ANC/SBA attendance
• Mostly not pregnancy alone, also cover childbirth and postpartum; or as general support for vulnerable families or children
Support for poor and vulnerable women (mostly cash, few food parcels or vouchers)
Operational systems
Integrate social and health
Inform prospective recipients
Counter risks
Women, infants access support
Food securityMaternal &
newborn nutrition
Service utilisation
Empower women, household decision-making
Newborn & child health and develop
Maternal health and productivity
Household poverty
Reduced income inequity
Inter-generation effects
ACTIVITIES OUTPUTS OUTCOMES IMPACTINPUTS
Evidence of impact of MEC support
WOTRO: MH and Health systems• Main Focus Comparing Rwanda to South Africa, four years (2012-2016)
• Four sub-projects run concurrently: •Systematic review (all LMIC)•Realist review (selected sub-Saharan countries); •Case studies in Gauteng and EC; •Interventional research
Maternal health and systems• Key causes of maternal deaths can only be addressed
by improving health systems• EmOc requires coordinated inputs, a wide range of
professionals, and access to different levels of care• Underlying organisational & system weaknesses
responsible for deaths vary between settingsMuch unknown about how health systems’ knowledge
can be applied to improve maternal healthAssumption: MH would be improved if programme and
policy leaders focused on system interventions
Research questions• Broadly, which health system interventions were prioritised in
countries that achieved rapid declines in maternal mortality? • How do policy leaders and maternal health programme staff
conceptualise interactions between the health system building blocks and maternal health?
• What system interventions can improve MH (Rwanda, South Africa and case studies)
Hypothesis: Identifying the health system components that were responsible for improving maternal health in sub-Saharan Africa, and applying these, would optimise future initiatives to improve maternal health
Rationale• Little known about optimising performance of health
services, one of the worlds biggest and most important industries
• Maternal health initiatives do not draw sufficiently on health systems knowledge, a missed opportunity
• Health systems priorities for improving maternal health are poorly defined, and health systems frameworks seldom applied in maternal health
• Maternal health has improved in many countries, at different rates, and worsened in others: the system factors that account for this should be identified
The solution is too strengthen systems, but what does that mean practically: which aspects of the system are most important, and have positive effects on other blocks?
Health systems definition in review: 6 WHO Building Blocks
1. Service delivery: packages; delivery models; infrastructure; management; safety, quality, integration of care; adherence to treatment protocols; standards; licensing; certification; & accreditation
2. Health workforce: national workforce policies & investment plans; advocacy; norms, standards and data; and training.
3. Information: facility & population based information & surveillance systems; global standards, tools
4 Medical equipment, infrastructure, products, vaccines & technologies: norms, standards, policies; reliable procurement; equitable access; quality
5. Financing: national health financing policies; tools and data on health expenditures; costing; risk sharing/pooling; insurance; protection; & purchasing
6. Leadership and governance: health sector policies; harmonization and alignment; oversight and regulation; and support services such as standards and norms
PLUS• Demand-side interventions, including community education; community needs,
involvement, participation, responsiveness ; and male involvement• We will also assess relationships between the individual building blocks items
(listed as 1-6 above) and how these components interact with each other, and with patient demand.
Partners
1. Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam & Amsterdam Institute for Global Health and Development (AMC/AIGHD), The Netherlands
2. Gauteng Province, Department of Health 3. Human Rights Watch (HRW), Kenya 4. Ministry of Health, Maternal and Child Health, Rwanda 5. National University of Rwanda (NUR), Butare, Rwanda 6. Nijmegen International Center for Health Systems Research
and Education, Radboud University, Nijmegen Medical Center, The Netherlands
7. School of Public Health, University of the Western Cape8. Society of Midwives South Africa (SOMSA)
MASCOT: MCH inequities and research systems•EU FP-7 project 2011-2014
•Collaboration between Africa, Europe and Latin America (12 countries) •Multilateral Association for Studying Health Inequalities and Enhancing North-South and South-South Cooperation
•Map of MCH inequalities (DHS-type data)
•Research systems tackling MCH inequities
•SR of interventions to tackle MCH inequities
PROGRESS-Plus
• This acronym defines disadvantage, the key nexus of social stratification.
• Categories are: Place of Residence, Race/Ethnicity, Occupation, Gender, Religion, Education, Socioeconomic Status, and Social Capital, and Plus represents additional categories such as Age, Disability, and Sexual Orientation.
• Acronym used by the Campbell and Cochrane Equity methods Group and the Cochrane Public Health Review Group.
Systematic review
• Why not narrate?
2-STAGE SYSTEMATIC REVIEW FOR WOTRO and MASCOT
STAGE 1
1. Finalise protocol for Stage 12. Search databases, upload references3. Screen on title/abstract, applying broad inclusion criteria4. Map evidence on health systems interventions for MH5. Prioritise in-depth review topics
STAGE 2Several in-depth SRs (standard PICO SR except: no screening and you know
how many studies there are)1. Apply inclusion criteria of each PICO to studies included from stage 1 2. Full data extraction, quality appraisal3. Narrative synthesis/Grade table/Meta-analysis (very unlikely)
2 STAGES AND MIXED METHODS APPROACH
STAGE 1: PROTOCOL and SCREEN
STAGE 1: MAP of AVAILABLE STUDIES
STAGE 2: SEVERAL PICO PROTOCOLS
CLASSIC SYSTEMATIC REVIEW
•Quality appraisal extraction
•Data extraction
•Narrative synthesis/Grade table
REALIST REVIEW•Quality appraisal extraction
•Data extraction
•Meta-ethnography/narrative synthesis
CROSS-STUDY SYNTHESIS?
Search filters and limitsFilters• Maternal health• LMICsLimits• Dates 2000-2012• Humans onlySearch • CINAHL, EMBASE, Popline, PsycINFO,
PubMED, Web of Knowledge, LILACS (+/-34,000 titles/abstracts after duplicates removed)
Stage 1 Review parameters
• MH (pregnancy, childbirth, postpartum, including adolescents and abortion)
• Health system interventions, multiple interventions, tracer conditions
• Languages: English, French, Japanese, Portuguese, Spanish
• Any study design (quantitative and qualitative)• Dates 2000-2012
Rationale• Little known about optimising performance of health
services, one of the worlds biggest and most important industries
• Maternal health initiatives do not draw sufficiently on health systems knowledge, a missed opportunity
• Health systems priorities for improving maternal health are poorly defined, and health systems frameworks seldom applied in maternal health
• Maternal health has improved in many countries, at different rates, and worsened in others: the system factors that account for this should be identified
The solution is too strengthen systems, but what does that mean practically: which aspects of the system are most important, and have positive effects on other blocks?
INCLUSION CRITERIA: INFORMATION IN SYSTEMATIC MAP
•Include Interventional Topic (multiple-response)•Health systems (and studies of multiple-clinical interventions)•Community-based interventions•Maternal HIV/STIs•Maternal malaria•Maternal BP/Hypertension•Antepartum postpartum haemorrhage•Pregnancy sepsis
•Include Other •Service utilisation
EXCLUSION CRITERIA: INFORMATION IN MAP
On title or abstract, and reason (hierarchy approach: only highest applicable item on list): •Languages other than English, French, Japanese, Portuguese, Spanish•Publication pre-2000•Population not maternal health•No intervention•Single clinical intervention (other than the 5 selected tracer conditions)•Not LIMC•Not research (opinion pieces)
Operationalising WHO building blocks & demand definitionStudies reporting outcomes of: health systems interventions for
improving maternal health; other multiple/complex interventions for improving maternal health; health services research; organisation of care interventions; outcomes of national or district-level maternal health programmes, including socio-economic interventions, such as improving water supply.
Include general health systems strengthening interventions (such as building more PHC clinics), but that measure effects of such interventions on MH.
Include single health system interventions (exclude single clinical interventions)
Interventions around TBAs are included (human resources building block).
Comparisons of different indicators of maternal health are included (information building block).
Assessment of outcomes of implementing clinical practice guidelines or similar guidelines are included. Descriptions of clinical guidelines without any process or impact outcomes are excluded.
Maternal health definition in review
• Classified as pregnancy, childbirth and the postpartum period (defined as the first two years after childbirth). Fertility treatment is excluded. Only family planning services specifically provided for women in the postpartum period will be included, not other family planning services. Women of all ages included in review, including adolescents
Community-based interventions
Interventions delivered in community settings (any activities occurring outside of health facilities) are included provided they describe some outcome (including process/uptake outcomes), even delivery of single clinical interventions
Pre-specified single clinical interventions, as tracer conditions
• Key health system lessons will be drawn from study of the effectiveness of interventions for these tracer conditions, and how such effectiveness varies across settings.
• For example, the review team will compare the health system requirements of malaria versus PMTCT. The conditions considered tracers in this review are those addressing maternal: HIV/STIs (including PMTCT); malaria, hypertension, haemorrhage and pregnancy sepsis.
• Outcomes of interventions must be described (even process or uptake outcomes, any outcome).
Search terms
X
Stage 1: Mapping inclusion criteria in screening
X
End in mind: Stage 2 In-depth reviews
1. Equity-framed systematic reviews of effectiveness of health systems interventions for MCH
2. Only certain MCH outcomes, or building blocks or tracer conditions
3. Updating of existing reviews, adopting an ‘equity lens’
4. Country- or region-specific reviews 5. Methodology articles:Methods of assessing
equity in coverage reports
Examples of Stage 2 themes
1. Can MH be improved through interventions to strengthen health system building blocks, or to enhance patient demand? Which building blocks (one review per block)?
2. Are some health system interventions more effective than others in particular contexts? (equity effects)
Stage 2 PICO examples• Effectiveness of male involvement in MH• Effectiveness of health financing in enhancing
patient demand for MH services • Review of equity effects of interventions to
increase skilled birth attendant use• Methodology reviews: Sum methods used to
measure socio-economic status in MH studies, comparing Latin America to Africa
• .... We open to review questions, sharing database etc.
For each Stage 2 PICO we will define
• Research question • Inclusion criteria • Types of study design and participants • Exclusion criteria, including languages • Types of interventions to be compared • Outcome measures• Quality appraisal
Progress and timelines
1. Seven databases searched, duplicates removed2. Codes piloted and protocol finalised3. Codes applied in duplicate (+/-15,000 of about
32,000 unique items)4. To complete screening end January 20135. Clean database and map end Feb 20136. Stage 2 begins March 2013
Review timelinesPhase 1. Review piloting 2. Identify eligible
literature & Stage 1 finalise protocol
3. Screen articles in Stage 1
4. Stage 2: PICO reviews
Timing March-August 2012
September-mid December 2012
Jan-Feb 2013 March 2013-October 2014
Output Piloted search & extraction codes for Stage 1. Searched databases. Uploaded references into EPPI-reviewer.Core team of about 10 trained reviewers.
Removed duplicate articles. Finalised Stage 1 methods and protocol.Screened +/-15,000 references in duplicate.
Complete duplicate screening for Stage 1, reconcile discordance and queries (full-text check).
Define PICO questions, assign lead to each review. For each PICO, adapt full data extraction tools and protocol Extract data. Peer-reviewed article(s)
Review so far
Review Statistics Items
Total number of documents 45,888
Duplicates 9385
Items to be screened 31,229
Screened so far 15,000
Exclusion codes Items (N=1513)
Publication year pre-2000 884
Population: not maternal 327
No intervention or outcome 248
Single clinical intervention 50
Not LMIC 2
Language 2
Inclusion codes Items (n=265)
Health systems or multiple intervention 202
Community-based interventions 39
Maternal BP/Hypertension 30
Maternal HIV/STIs 48
Pregnancy sepsis 6
Antepartum/postpartum haemorrhage 35
Maternal malaria 12
Service utilisation 42
Have not yet completed reconciling of discordancies of all screened items