Frontiers in Pediatrics (Mar 2021)

Midwives' Evaluation of a Neonatal Resuscitation in High- and Low-Resource Settings

  • Francesco Cavallin,
  • Serena Calgaro,
  • Serena Calgaro,
  • Martina Borellini,
  • Martina Borellini,
  • Margherita Magnani,
  • Margherita Magnani,
  • Greta Beltramini,
  • Amir Hussein Abubacar Seni,
  • Bonifacio Rodriguez Cebola,
  • Ana Nicolau Tambo,
  • Giovanni Putoto,
  • Daniele Trevisanuto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2021.644308
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

Read online

Aim: To assess midwives' evaluation of a real-life neonatal resuscitation and their opinion on importance of resuscitation interventions.Methods: Multicenter, multi-country study.Setting: Beira Central Hospital (Mozambique) and Azienda Ospedale-Università di Padova (Italy).Subjects: Sixteen Mozambican midwives and 18 Italian midwives.Interventions: Midwives' assessment was evaluated by using a predefined score, which graded each resuscitation intervention (0–2 points) and summed to a total score for each step (initial steps, bag-mask ventilation, and chest compressions). All scores were compared with referral scores given by two expert neonatologists.Results: Both Mozambican and Italian midwives overestimated their performance regarding of initial steps taken during resuscitation, chest compressions, high-oxygen concentrations (p < 0.01), and underestimated the importance of stimulation (p < 0.05). Mozambicans overestimated suctioning (p < 0.001). Participants agreed with experts about the importance of equipment preparation, using a warmer, drying the newborn, removing wet linen and heart rate assessment.Conclusion: Mozambican and Italian midwives overestimated the performance of a real-life neonatal resuscitation, with heterogeneous evaluation of the importance of several aspects of neonatal resuscitation. These findings may be useful for identifying educational goals.

Keywords