Global Health Action (Dec 2024)

The maternal and newborn health eCohort to track longitudinal care quality: study protocol and survey development

  • Catherine Arsenault,
  • Katherine Wright,
  • Tefera Taddele,
  • Ashenif Tadele,
  • Anagaw Derseh Mebratie,
  • Firew Tiruneh Tiyare,
  • Rose J. Kosgei,
  • Jacinta Nzinga,
  • Bethany Holt,
  • Irene Mugenya,
  • Emma Clarke-Deelder,
  • Adiam Nega,
  • Dorairaj Prabhakaran,
  • Sailesh Mohan,
  • Nompumelelo Gloria Mfeka-Nkabinde,
  • Londiwe Mthethwa,
  • Damen Haile Mariam,
  • Gebeyaw Molla,
  • Theodros Getachew,
  • Prashant Jarhyan,
  • Monica Chaudhry,
  • Munir Kassa,
  • Margaret E. Kruk

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2024.2392352
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1

Abstract

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The MNH eCohort was developed to fill gaps in maternal and newborn health (MNH) care quality measurement. In this paper, we describe the survey development process, recruitment strategy, data collection procedures, survey content and plans for analysis of the data generated by the study. We also compare the survey content to that of existing multi-country tools on MNH care quality. The eCohort is a longitudinal mixed-mode (in-person and phone) survey that will recruit women in health facilities at their first antenatal care (ANC) visit. Women will be followed via phone survey until 10-12 weeks postpartum. User-reported information will be complemented with data from physical health assessments at baseline and endline, extraction from MNH cards, and a brief facility survey. The final MNH eCohort instrument is centered around six key domains of high-quality health systems including competent care (content of ANC, delivery, and postnatal care for the mother and newborn), competent systems (prevention and detection, timely care, continuity, integration), user experience, health outcomes, confidence in the health system, and economic outcomes. The eCohort combines the maternal and newborn experience and, due to its longitudinal nature, will allow for quality assessment according to specific risks that evolve throughout the pregnancy and postpartum period. Detailed information on medical and obstetric history and current health status of respondents and newborns will allow us to determine whether women and newborns at risk are receiving needed care. The MNH eCohort will answer novel questions to guide health system improvements and to fill data gaps in implementing countries.

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