Improving maternal-neonatal outcomes through implementing Quality Midwifery Services in India: a case study of facilitators and barriers

Lead Research Organisation: Foundation for Research in HealthSystems
Department Name: Health Research

Abstract

Approximately 45,000 women die of pregnancy-related causes each year in India, and global evidence shows that 83% of these death can be prevented if competent midwives provide skilled birth attendance. India does not have independent midwives. Indian nurses, who have studied midwifery as part of their nursing studies work as the nurse-midwives in most of the health facilities in public and private sectors. Since India is striving to bring the maternal deaths down from 130 to 70 per 100,000 live births by 2030; the Government of India has acknowledged that introducing and strengthening midwifery in line with the international standards could be an effective strategy to achieve the target.
The Government of India has supported additional training of some nurse-midwives to prepare them as Nurse Practitioners in Midwifery in the states of Gujarat and Telangana. These Nurse Practitioners in Midwifery have been posted in public health facilities serving remote/rural/difficult-to-access geographical areas. In Gujarat, some Nurse Practitioners in Midwifery have been posted in Urban Family Welfare Centers too.
An Indo-UK consortium of researchers have developed this research proposal titled "Improving quality of care through implementing quality midwifery services in India: a case study of facilitators and barriers". This project will be implemented over a period of 12 months. The aim of this study is to document the perceptions and experiences of women, families, community influencers; the Nurse Practitioners in Midwifery, other nurse-midwives, and obstetricians about midwifery; and the facilitators and barriers for establishing independent midwifery in India. The study will also highlight gaps in the quality of care and identify important outcomes that could be used assess whether midwifery is effective.
Our research work will involve qualitative in-depth interviews/focus group discussions/group interviews with women, and community influencers (40 in total) and also with Nurse Practitioners in Midwifery, other nurse-midwives, and obstetricians (40 in total). Reviews of Indian and international literature will be carried out to identify the key maternal-neonatal outcome indicators; and 5 maternal and neonatal deaths from each state will be reviewed to see if reviews of death are a good way to identify gaps in care.
This study will pave the way to do further research to evaluate the impact of midwifery care on maternal and neonatal outcomes in the coming years; and lay the foundation to develop interventions to strengthen rolling-out midwifery care in India. The project will also train early-stage Indian researchers in research skills.

Technical Summary

The Indian Government's key strategy to improve the quality of maternal and newborn care and to reduce preventable mortality and morbidity is to implement high quality midwifery services. This preliminary study will investigate the lessons that can be learned from the first sites to implement professional midwifery to inform future scale-up across India.
The study uses ecological systems theory and quality care frameworks to analyse barriers and facilitators to the integration of the new cadre of Nurse Practitioners in Midwifery into the health system, and to highlight gaps in the quality of care. The study design combines community-based participatory research using human-centred design with case study methods to address three objectives: 1). to assess women's perceptions of current maternity services and the acceptability of midwives as key providers; 2) to identify barriers and facilitators to integrating professional midwives into current maternity services; and 3) to identify important outcomes measures that could be used in future research and to explore if review of maternal and newborn deaths is feasible to highlight gaps in care quality. The two case studies in Gujarat and Telangana comprise interviews and focus groups with a total 40 women and community influencers; in-depth interviews with 40 health providers including midwives, nurses and doctors; and exploratory case reviews of maternal and newborn deaths. We will conduct a systematic review to identify potential outcome measure for future research.
Aspects of the study, including an integrated knowledge transfer plan will be co-designed by a stakeholder working group that includes women, healthcare providers and policymakers to ensure outputs are relevant. The key outputs of the study is policy options to strengthen implementation of midwifery across India and a plans for future research to test feasibility of conducting a cost-effectiveness study of professional midwifery in India.

Planned Impact

The ultimate aim of this research is to contribute significantly to the implementation of quality midwifery services in India, thereby helping to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality and morbidity. This preliminary study will inform existing Government Policy to roll out midwifery across India. It aims to learn from the experiences of the first sites to implement professional midwifery in order to inform future research that will develop and test potential solutions to improve implementation across India. It has been identified that midwives, when providing the full package of care, fully trained to international standards and well integrated into the existing health care system, have the potential to reduce maternal deaths, stillbirths and neonatal deaths by as much as 83%. Such improvements in maternal and neonatal health will not only benefit women but also their families and communities.

A major impact from this study will be to accelerate progress towards the roll out of high quality professional midwifery in India by enabling policy makers and health practitioners to learn from the experiences of the first sites to implement professional midwifery. The study will co-produce significant new understandings of women's views of current maternity services and of midwives as key providers of maternal and neonatal care, and will identify actionable knowledge of barriers and facilitators to integrating professional midwives into current maternity services. It will also identify relevant and important outcomes and indicators that could be used to measure the impact of professional midwifery services on the quality of maternity care provision. Through involving users of maternity services and the full range of stakeholders responsible for the provision of care to mothers and newborns (e.g. a range maternity care providers, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA), these activities will produce knowledge that will directly inform modifications and interventions for future scale-up of midwifery services. This will ultimately benefit users of the services, a range of health professionals and health system functioning at district, primary care and facility levels. This learning will also inform policy makers and service planners to ensure the evidence informed roll out of midwifery is as effective and resource efficient as possible - providing not only coverage but high quality midwifery services.

The study will also continue to build research capacity in India and UK researchers will gain further experience of working in a LMIC developing strong partnerships for future work. Researchers recruited to work on the project will receive training in participatory approaches and case study methodology and will be mentored through working in partnership with experienced researchers from within India and the UK. They will also develop skills in data analysis and dissemination and importantly implementation science. Through the use of participatory approaches this research will empower women and health professionals, ensuring their voices and expectations are incorporated. Inclusion of women and health professionals' opinions also keeps the study grounded to the reality of maternity service delivery experienced by both groups, making it context-specific and relevant. This will lead to community level acceptance and utility.

This study will also have impact more broadly producing knowledge and insights of benefit not only to other areas in India, but also transferable to other low and middle income countries in the South East Asia Region e.g. Bangladesh, Pakistan, Nepal, that are looking to strengthen or introduce high quality professional midwifery and that may face similar challenges.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description The study included 26 pregnant/newly-delivered women, 14 community influencers, 43 healthcare providers (NPMs, nurses, obstetricians) and six stakeholders. Preliminary findings suggest that women appreciate the care provided by NPMs, but face challenges at health facilities e.g., lack of privacy and cleanliness. The NPM participants reported that they gained good knowledge and skills from their training, but institutional barriers such as lack of a career pathway, unclear distinction between NPM and nursing roles, and lack of acceptance/confidence by obstetricians limited their scope of practice. Community awareness of midwives was limited but was increasing through mother-to-mother recommendations.
Conclusions : The findings will identify barriers and facilitators to the integration of NPMs into the health system, and highlight gaps in the quality of maternity care. The findings will be valuable in informing implementation of midwifery in countries that do not have professional midwives.
Key message: Integration of quality midwifery services in India should address institutional barriers and community awareness, alongside education and employment of midwives
Exploitation Route The PI has initiated communication with the Office of Nursing Advisor, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India - overseeing the midwifery services in India - to inform them about project findings and recommendations to further strengthen the processes to roll-out women-centric midwifery in India. Since health is a State matter in India, Co-PIs have been in touch with the State Government Officials in States of Gujarat and Telangana, to keep them informed about the project progress and have involved the government officials in State-level stakeholder groups to share ground level observations and to seek their advice on how to make the study findings more relevant for policy implementation perspective, without deviating from original project objectives. The verbal dialogue has resulted in better involvement of policy makers (government officials) in this project, improving the chances of acceptance and amalgamation of study findings in future policies.
Sectors Communities and Social Services/Policy,Healthcare

 
Description The project was supported through a seed grant for a feasibility study on improving maternal and neonatal health outcomes by improving quality of midwifery services in India, therefore there are no non-academic successes that can be directly attributed singularly to this project. However, the project did result in cementing the collaboration between the involved organizations and guided our focus to a research focus that has been vastly understudied in India: postnatal care. The old collaboration continues and we have identified new organizations that allow us to reach the hard-to-reach populations in need of postnatal care and who may not have been represented in any of the previous studies on postnatal care in India; it also allows us to move forward using a participatory approach, keeping the women, their families and care providers involved through all stages of our project.
First Year Of Impact 2022
Sector Communities and Social Services/Policy,Healthcare
Impact Types Policy & public services

 
Description State-level Stakeholder workshops (two) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact The state-level stakeholder workshops (two each) were held online, engaging the policy makers, government officials, representatives of development partners, higher education institutes offering midwifery education for the states of Gujarat and Telangana, representatives from the state-chapters of the professional association "Society of Midwives, India" and representative midwives (not participating in the study) to orient them to our research project, objectives, data collection methods and tools used (workshop 1) and to orient them to the emerging findings and whether a finding needed to be further explored for better 'fleshing out' the context and cultural nuances. these workshops resulted in deeper reflections on part of the participants on 1) what could be the reasons that some midwife-led care units seemed to do much better while the others were barely functional? 2) what kind of support development partners could provide the government to monitor this on a long-term basis and how could further research by our research group could supplement the monitoring with ground-level evidence?
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021,2023