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Including ultrasound scans in antenatal care in low-resource settings: Considering the complementarity of obstetric ultrasound screening and maternity waiting homes in strengthening referral systems in low-resource, rural settings

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dc.contributor.author Mirza, Waseem
dc.contributor.author Muyodi, David
dc.contributor.author Figueroa, Lester
dc.contributor.author Goldsmith, Nicole
dc.contributor.author Kanaiza, Nancy
dc.date.accessioned 2020-08-11T09:56:21Z
dc.date.available 2020-08-11T09:56:21Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.uri https://doi.org/10.1053/j.semperi.2019.03.017
dc.identifier.uri http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/3412
dc.description.abstract Recent World Health Organization (WHO) antenatal care recommendations include an ultrasound scan as a part of routine antenatal care. The First Look Study, referenced in the WHO recommendation, subsequently shows that the routine use of ultrasound during antenatal care in rural, low-income settings did not improve maternal, fetal or neonatal mortality, nor did it increase women's use of antenatal care or the rate of hospital births. This article reviews the First Look Study, reconsidering the assumptions upon which it was built in light of these results, a supplemental descriptive study of interviews with patients and sonographers that participated in the First Look study intervention, and a review of the literature. Two themes surface from this review. The first is that focused emphasis on building the pregnancy risk screening skills of rural primary health care personnel may not lead to adaptations in referral hospital processes that could benefit the patient accordingly. The second is that agency to improve the quality of patient reception at referral hospitals may need to be manufactured for obstetric ultrasound screening, or remote pregnancy risk screening more generally, to have the desired impact. Stemming from the literature, this article goes on to examine the potential for complementarity between obstetric ultrasound screening and another approach encouraged by the WHO, the maternity waiting home. Each approach may address existing shortcomings in how the other is currently understood. This paper concludes by proposing a path toward developing and testing such a hybrid approach. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Science direct en_US
dc.subject Ultrasound scan en_US
dc.subject Antenatal care en_US
dc.title Including ultrasound scans in antenatal care in low-resource settings: Considering the complementarity of obstetric ultrasound screening and maternity waiting homes in strengthening referral systems in low-resource, rural settings en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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