Transcript Dr. Caroline Phiri - Zambia UK Health Workforce Alliance
The MNCH Roadmap By Dr Caroline Phiri Chibawe Ag Director MCH MCDMCH
What is this MNCH Roadmap?
• A strategic document identified that highlights the need to address the problems of high maternal, neonatal, infant and under-5 mortality rates in Zambia over the next 10 years.
Goal
•
Accelerated reduction of maternal, newborn and childhood morbidity and mortality to attain set targets by 2015.
• (Thereafter focus on attaining universal coverage goals from 2016 to 2019 and aim to attain universal coverage (80% and above – nationally and within each district)
Objectives in MNCH Strategic plan
• • •
To reduce maternal mortality from 591 to 162 per 100,000 live births To reduce neonatal mortality from 34 to 20 per 1,000 live births To reduce Under-5 mortality rate from 119 to 64 per 1000 live births (based on ZDHS 2007)
Specific Objective
• • Provide skilled attendance during pregnancy, childbirth, and the postnatal period, at all levels of the health care delivery system Strengthen the capacities of individuals, families, communities, line Ministries, and the private sector to share responsibility and play their role in efforts to significantly improve MNCH outcomes for universal coverage to attain the set MDGs.
Situational Analysis
Maternal and newborn health situation in Zambia • • • • • • Maternal mortality ratio – 591/100,000 live births Neonatal mortality rate – 34/1000 live births Infant mortality Rate – 70/1000 live births Under five mortality rate – 119/1000 live births Fertility rate 6.8
HIV prevalence – 14 % Men – 12 % Women – 16 %
Comparison of MMR versus SBA
Martenal mortality ratio (Zambia)
800 Progress & trends towards reducing the Maternal Mortality Ratio [MMR] to attain the MDG target of 162 by 2015 in Zambia 729 700 649 600 591 500 400 300 200 100 0 1992 200 1996 2001 2007 Source: Zambia DHS data sets 2015 162 52% 50% 48% 46% 44% 42% 40% 38% Proportion of women (%) attended to by skilled health workers during birth in Zambia 1992 1996 1999 2001 2007 Source: Zambia DHS data sets
• • • • •
Issues around the high MMR and NMR in Zambia
TBA to train or not to train Three delay model Inadequate equipment Indirect effect of HIV, malaria and TB. reduced funding affected out reach services Reduced Human resources
Rural versus Urban disparities • • • • • •
Long distances to health facilities & high cost of care Uneducated, poor and living in rural areas. Less likely to attend 4 FANC visits, rarely seek ANC services in 1 st trimester ANC services tend to be poor quality with inadequate drugs, laboratory services more likely to be seen by an unskilled health worker and rarely by a physician.
Rural versus Urban disparities
• • • • • • Poor, rural, uneducated and multigravida women tend to deliver at home by unskilled TBA or relatives. No access to FP, postnatal and new born care No outreach services for Immunisation and GMP Schools have few teachers, high illiteracy rate, poverty, (access to social welfare ??) Early age marriages leading Obstetric complications, malnutrition ,
Key Strategies to be implemented
1. The continuum of care approach recognizes five critical phases in the life cycle of women and children which are: – Adolescence and pre-pregnancy – pregnancy, – childbirth and the postnatal period, – newborn and – childhood
Key Strategies to be implemented
2. Using a three dimensional approach in coming up with strategies and interventions; – ensuring engagement and synergy between the health system, communities, other line ministries and the private sector 3. Strengthening partnerships with the donor community and the private sector for sustainable long-term predictable financing to achieve universal coverage.
Advocacy and Resource Mobilization
• Advocacy efforts will : – Increasing the budget allocation for MNCH interventions from both internal and external resources – Revision of laws, policies that hinder effective provision of maternal, newborn and childcare services – Improving the production, employment, deployment and retention of a skilled health work force at all levels – Institutionalize the Maternal Death Reviews and make maternal deaths to be made notifiable events
Adolescence and pre-pregnancy
• •
investment in – Information – to prevent sexually transmitted diseases, HIV, and unwanted pregnancies – Education – Availability and easier access to contraceptive services and supplies. The underlying thinking is that a good outcome of pregnancy starts before conception.
Pregnancy
• •
The thrust in interventions is ensuring provision of skilled care during pregnancy. provide quality FANC – promote birth plan – helping the family prepare for good parenting.
Childbirth and the postnatal period
• • Focus on skilled, professional care during childbirth – providing access to professional skilled care before, during and after childbirth; – Train Health workers to provide quality Emergency obstetric and newborn care – Skilled and professional care should also be available to the mother during the postnatal period
Newborn (neonatal):
•
bridging the postnatal and postpartum gap, ensuring no interruption in the continuum of care, and – establish mechanisms for communication and handover between maternal and child programmes – mix of approaches, from the improved care of newborns within the home, through home visits by health workers, better uptake of services in case of problems and referral when needed.
Childhood
• • The Expanded programme on Immunisation • “Integrated Management of Childhood Illness” (IMCI) • • Management of the newborn, • nutrition promotion, the strengthening of school health programmes, shifting focus from health centres alone to a continuum of care that implicates families and communities, health centres, and referral-level hospitals
Health System Strengthening and Capacity Development
• Health system strengthening for MNCH will comprise of improving service delivery by strengthening: – The health workforce, – Adopting Results Based Management (RBM) approaches, – The health management information system (HMIS), – The logistics management of medical products, vaccines and technologies, – Increased financing to comply with Abuja target of 15%, – Improving the infrastructure for service delivery, and – Strengthened planning, leadership and governance
Referral System
• Improve referral system through:
• appropriate transportation and improving linkages between community and referral facilities • Communications equipment (e.g., radio calls and mobile phones).
• Community structures for handling MNCH emergencies • Mothers’ waiting shelters
Community Mobilization
– Educating and sensitising communities on community-based MNCH interventions – Mobilizing resources at the village level for MNCH including emergency referral as well as building and strengthening health facilities.
– Orienting the facility governing committees to the MNCH Strategic Plan to ensure effective – implementation of the plan at the health facility and community levels – Institutionalizing ‘village health days’
Behaviour Change Communication (BCC)
• • •
Use of BCC approaches for quality MNCH including nutrition and adolescent sexual reproductive health.
Target community-based initiatives Use of targeted mass campaigns
Fostering Partnerships and Accountability
• Effective implementation of this MNCH Strategic Plan will require • stimulating and establishing strategic partnerships • improve coordination and collaboration between communities, partners • galvanizing political will and mobilizing resources for long-term sustainable MNCH interventions.
• Coordinate regular planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of MNCH interventions to assess progress towards attainment of the MDGs.
Monitoring and Evaluation Framweork
• • • • • • • One agreed indicator of maternal, newborn and child health interventions will be evaluated 33 operational targets developed Include nutrition, water and sanitation and systems strengthening Quantitative indicators Qualitative indicators obtained through periodic and commissioned studies. Sources of data will include both the routine and non-routine health information systems The indicators will be updated from time to time as need arises
Operational targets
Indicator
Unmet need for Contraceptives Modern Contraceptive rate for women of Reproductive age Teenage Pregnancy % of women accessing ANC in first Trimester % of women accessing 4 or more ANC visits % of women on IPT 2 or more % of women accessing PMTCT Proportion of women delivered by skilled HW Proportion of women accessing postnatal care within 2 days weeks
Current status
27% 33%
Target
14% 58% 28% 19% 60% 66% 18% 58% 80% 80% 47% 39% 75% 55%
Operational targets
Indicator
% of women initiating early and exclusive breastfeeding % of districts with 50% HF implementing kangaroo care % of children receiving correct treatment for fever % Vitamin A supplementation % of households women accessing improved drinking water % of households accessing improved sanitation % of districts conducting maternal death reviews
Current status
63% % 38% 60% 24% 42% 50%
Target
90% 80% 80% 80% 80% 80% 100%
Implementation Arrangements
•
Involvement of a multisector approach to increase access to health services • MCDMCH and Ministry of Health • Other Ministries such as Finance, Information, chiefs and traditional affairs, Local Government, Agriculture, Work and supply, Education, gender, DMMU • Cooperating partners- NGO and private sectors
Conclusion • • •
The strategies are packages of interventions for each phase of life cycle and at each level of intervention within each selected intervention.
The interventions have been costed Implementation of the MNCH plan should not be done in silos but comprehensively.
For a healthy nation, invest in us now!
A prosperous, middle income Zambia requires healthy mothers and healthy newborns.