TY - JOUR
T1 - Scaling up Locally Adapted Clinical Practice Guidelines for Improving Childbirth Care in Tanzania
T2 - A Protocol for Programme Theory and Qualitative Methods of the PartoMa Scale-up Study
AU - Sørensen, Jane Brandt
AU - Housseine, Natasha
AU - Maaløe, Nanna
AU - Bygbjerg, Ib Christian
AU - Pinkowski Tersbøl, Britt
AU - Konradsen, Flemming
AU - Sequeira Dmello, Brenda
AU - van den Akker, Thomas
AU - van Roosmalen, Jos
AU - Mookherji, Sangeeta
AU - Siaity, Eunice
AU - Osaki, Haika
AU - Khamis, Rashid Saleh
AU - Kujabi, Monica Lauridsen
AU - John, Thomas Wiswa
AU - Wolf Meyrowitsch, Dan
AU - Mbekenga, Columba
AU - Skovdal, Morten
AU - l. Kidanto, Hussein
N1 - Funding Information: The overall PartoMa Scale-up Study in Dar es Salaam is supported by the Danida Fellowship Centre (DFC), Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark (DFC file no. 18-08-KU,Enabling best possible childbirth care in Tanzania). Additional funding for embedded sub-studies has been granted by the Laerdal Foundation for Acute Medicine;, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, UNICEF, Global Affairs Canada, Comprehensive Community-Based Rehabilitation in Tanzania (CCBRT), Thorvald Madsens Legat, and Reinholdt W. Jorck og Hustrus Fond; We acknowledge the birth attendants working in low-resource settings as well as the women giving birth in sometimes difficult contexts. Especially, we recognize the doctors and nurse-midwives in charge of the five study sites and birth attendants and women playing a tremendous part of this study. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2022/3/21
Y1 - 2022/3/21
N2 - Effective, low-cost clinical interventions to improve facility-based care during childbirth are critical to reduce maternal and perinatal mortality and morbidity in low-resource settings. While health interventions for low- and lower-middle-income countries are often developed and implemented top-down, needs and circumstances vary greatly across locations. Our pilot study in Zanzibar improved care through locally co-created intrapartum clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) and associated training (the PartoMa intervention). This intervention was context-tailored with health-care providers in Zanzibar and now scaled up within five maternity units in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. This PartoMa Scale-up Study thereby provides an opportunity to explore the co-creation process and modification of the intervention in another context and how scale-up might be successfully achieved. The overall protocol is presented in a separate paper. The aim of the present paper is to account for the Scale-up Study’s programme theory and qualitative methodology. We introduce social practice theory and argue for its value within the programme theory and towards qualitative explorations of shifts in clinical practice. The theory recognizes that the practice we aim to strengthen–safe and respectful clinical childbirth care–is not practiced in a vacuum but embedded within a socio-material context and intertwined with other practices. Methodologically, the project draws on ethnographic and participatory methodologies to explore current childbirth care practices. In line with our programme theory, explorations will focus on meanings of childbirth care, material tools and competencies that are being drawn upon, birth attendants’ motivations and relational contexts, as well as other everyday practices of childbirth care. Insights generated from this study will not only elucidate active ingredients that make the PartoMa intervention feasible (or not) but develop the knowledge foundation for scaling-up and replicability of future interventions based on the principles of co-creation and contextualisation.
AB - Effective, low-cost clinical interventions to improve facility-based care during childbirth are critical to reduce maternal and perinatal mortality and morbidity in low-resource settings. While health interventions for low- and lower-middle-income countries are often developed and implemented top-down, needs and circumstances vary greatly across locations. Our pilot study in Zanzibar improved care through locally co-created intrapartum clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) and associated training (the PartoMa intervention). This intervention was context-tailored with health-care providers in Zanzibar and now scaled up within five maternity units in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. This PartoMa Scale-up Study thereby provides an opportunity to explore the co-creation process and modification of the intervention in another context and how scale-up might be successfully achieved. The overall protocol is presented in a separate paper. The aim of the present paper is to account for the Scale-up Study’s programme theory and qualitative methodology. We introduce social practice theory and argue for its value within the programme theory and towards qualitative explorations of shifts in clinical practice. The theory recognizes that the practice we aim to strengthen–safe and respectful clinical childbirth care–is not practiced in a vacuum but embedded within a socio-material context and intertwined with other practices. Methodologically, the project draws on ethnographic and participatory methodologies to explore current childbirth care practices. In line with our programme theory, explorations will focus on meanings of childbirth care, material tools and competencies that are being drawn upon, birth attendants’ motivations and relational contexts, as well as other everyday practices of childbirth care. Insights generated from this study will not only elucidate active ingredients that make the PartoMa intervention feasible (or not) but develop the knowledge foundation for scaling-up and replicability of future interventions based on the principles of co-creation and contextualisation.
KW - Practice theory
KW - co-creation
KW - intervention
KW - obstetrics
KW - respectful maternity care
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85126755939&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85126755939&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2022.2034136
DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2022.2034136
M3 - Article
C2 - 35311627
SN - 1654-9880
VL - 15
JO - Global health action
JF - Global health action
IS - 1
M1 - 2034136
ER -