The MOMENTUM study: Putting the 'Three Delays' to work to evaluate access to emergency obstetric and neonatal care in a remote island community in Western Kenya

Despite worldwide improvements in maternal and infant mortality, mothers and babies in remote, low-resource communities remain disproportionately vulnerable to adverse health outcomes. In these settings, delays in accessing emergency care are a major driver of poor outcomes. The 'Three Delays&#...

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Veröffentlicht in:Global public health 2020-07, Vol.15 (7), p.1016-1029
Hauptverfasser: DesLauriers, Nicholas R., Ogola, Evance, Ouma, Gor, Salmen, Marcus, Muldoon, Lily, Pederson, Ben L., Hines, Kelsi, Ssenkusu, John M., Mattah, Brian, Okeyo, Robinson, Okinyi, Peres, Magerenge, Richard, Friberg, Nyika, McCoy, Molly, Prasad, Shailendra, Ndunyu, Louisa, Salmen, Charles R.
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container_end_page 1029
container_issue 7
container_start_page 1016
container_title Global public health
container_volume 15
creator DesLauriers, Nicholas R.
Ogola, Evance
Ouma, Gor
Salmen, Marcus
Muldoon, Lily
Pederson, Ben L.
Hines, Kelsi
Ssenkusu, John M.
Mattah, Brian
Okeyo, Robinson
Okinyi, Peres
Magerenge, Richard
Friberg, Nyika
McCoy, Molly
Prasad, Shailendra
Ndunyu, Louisa
Salmen, Charles R.
description Despite worldwide improvements in maternal and infant mortality, mothers and babies in remote, low-resource communities remain disproportionately vulnerable to adverse health outcomes. In these settings, delays in accessing emergency care are a major driver of poor outcomes. The 'Three Delays' model is now widely utilised to conceptualise these delays. However, in out-of-hospital contexts, operational and methodological constraints present major obstacles in practically quantifying the 'Three Delays'. Here, we describe a novel protocol for the MOMENTUM study (Monitoring of Maternal Emergency Navigation and Triage on Mfangano), a 12-month cohort design to assess delays during obstetric and neonatal emergencies within the remote villages of Mfangano Island Division, Lake Victoria, Kenya. This study also evaluates the preliminary impact of a community-based intervention called the 'Mfangano Health Navigation' programme. Utilising participatory case audits and contextually specific chronological reference strategies, this study combines quantitative tools with deeper-digging qualitative inquiry. This pragmatic design was developed to empower local research staff and study participants themselves as assets in unravelling the complex socio-economic, cultural, and logistical dynamics that contribute to delays, while providing real-time feedback for locally driven intervention. We present our methods as an adaptive framework for researchers grappling with similar challenges across fragmented, rural health landscapes.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Taylor & Francis:Master (3349 titles); PAIS Index; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Babies
Clinical outcomes
Community-based programs
Emergencies
Emergency medical care
Emergency obstetric care
Emergency services
Evaluation
health navigation
Health services
Health status
Infant mortality
Infants
Intervention
Kenya
Landscape
Maternal and infant welfare
Momentum
Mothers
Navigation
Neonatology
Obstetrics
Qualitative research
Rural areas
rural health care
Socioeconomic factors
three delays
Triage
Villages
title The MOMENTUM study: Putting the 'Three Delays' to work to evaluate access to emergency obstetric and neonatal care in a remote island community in Western Kenya
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