AI Article Synopsis

  • The SEA-ORCHID study focuses on improving maternal and infant health in developing countries by evaluating current perinatal practices against best practice recommendations.
  • An audit of over 9,500 medical records from hospitals in four South East Asian countries revealed that while some evidence-based practices were widely adopted, critical interventions like antibiotic prophylaxis for cesarean sections were lacking.
  • The results highlight the need for better recording of clinical practices to enhance the overall quality of maternal and child health care.

Article Abstract

Background: The burden of mortality and morbidity related to pregnancy and childbirth remains concentrated in developing countries. SEA-ORCHID (South East Asia Optimising Reproductive and Child Health In Developing countries) is evaluating whether a multifaceted intervention to strengthen capacity for research synthesis, evidence-based care and knowledge implementation improves adoption of best clinical practice recommendations leading to better health for mothers and babies. In this study we assessed current practices in perinatal health care in four South East Asian countries and determined whether they were aligned with best practice recommendations.

Methodology/principal Findings: We completed an audit of 9550 medical records of women and their 9665 infants at nine hospitals; two in each of Indonesia, Malaysia and The Philippines, and three in Thailand between January-December 2005. We compared actual clinical practices with best practice recommendations selected from the Cochrane Library and the World Health Organization Reproductive Health Library. Evidence-based components of the active management of the third stage of labour and appropriately treating eclampsia with magnesium sulphate were universally practiced in all hospitals. Appropriate antibiotic prophylaxis for caesarean section, a beneficial form of care, was practiced in less than 5% of cases in most hospitals. Use of the unnecessary practices of enema in labour ranged from 1% to 61% and rates of episiotomy for vaginal birth ranged from 31% to 95%. Other appropriate practices were commonly performed to varying degrees between countries and also between hospitals within the same country.

Conclusions/significance: Whilst some perinatal health care practices audited were consistent with best available evidence, several were not. We conclude that recording of clinical practices should be an essential step to improve quality of care. Based on these findings, the SEA-ORCHID project team has been developing and implementing interventions aimed at increasing compliance with evidence-based clinical practice recommendations to improve perinatal practice in South East Asia.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2440816PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0002646PLOS

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

south east
16
east asia
12
developing countries
12
practice recommendations
12
pregnancy childbirth
8
asia optimising
8
optimising reproductive
8
reproductive child
8
child health
8
health developing
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!