Provider perspectives on the enabling environment required for skilled birth attendance: a qualitative study in western Nepal

Type Journal Article - Tropical Medicine & International Health
Title Provider perspectives on the enabling environment required for skilled birth attendance: a qualitative study in western Nepal
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2014
URL http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25252172
Abstract
Objectives
In Nepal, where difficult geography and an under-resourced health system contribute to poor health care access, the government has increased the number of trained skilled birth attendants (SBAs) and posted them in newly constructed birthing centres attached to peripheral health facilities that are available to women 24 h a day. This study describes their views on their enabling environment.

Methods
Qualitative methods included semi-structured interviews with 22 SBAs within Palpa district, a hill district in the Western Region of Nepal; a focus group discussion with ten SBA trainees, and in-depth interviews with five key informants.

Results
Participants identified the essential components of an enabling environment as: relevant training; ongoing professional support; adequate infrastructure, equipment and drugs; and timely referral pathways. All SBAs who practised alone felt unable to manage obstetric complications because quality management of life-threatening complications requires the attention of more than one SBA.

Conclusions
Maternal health guidelines should account for the provision of an enabling environment in addition to the deployment of SBAs. In Nepal, referral systems require strengthening, and the policy of posting SBAs alone, in remote clinics, needs to be reconsidered to achieve the goal of reducing maternal deaths through timely management of obstetric complications.

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