Perceptions and experiences of Congolese midwives implementing a low-cost battery-operated heart rate meter during newborn resuscitation
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Thornton, Madeline, et al. Perceptions and Experiences of Congolese Midwives Implementing a Low-cost Battery-operated Heart Rate Meter During Newborn Resuscitation. 2022. https://doi.org/10.17615/y01n-yc28APA
Thornton, M., Ishoso, D., Lokangaka, A., Berkelhamer, S., Bauserman, M., Eilevstjønn, J., Iyer, P., Kamath Rayne, B., Mafuta, E., Myklebust, H., & Patterson, J., Tshefu, A., Bose, C., & Patterson, J. (2022). Perceptions and experiences of Congolese midwives implementing a low-cost battery-operated heart rate meter during newborn resuscitation. https://doi.org/10.17615/y01n-yc28Chicago
Thornton, Madeline, Daniel Ishoso, Adrien Lokangaka, Sara Berkelhamer, Melissa Bauserman, Joar Eilevstjønn, Pooja Iyer et al. 2022. Perceptions and Experiences of Congolese Midwives Implementing a Low-Cost Battery-Operated Heart Rate Meter During Newborn Resuscitation. https://doi.org/10.17615/y01n-yc28- Creator
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Thornton, Madeline
- Affiliation: School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics
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Ishoso, Daniel
- Other Affiliation: University of Kinshasa
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Lokangaka, Adrien
- Other Affiliation: University of Kinshasa
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Berkelhamer, Sara
- Other Affiliation: University of Washington
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Bauserman, Melissa
- Affiliation: School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics
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Eilevstjønn, Joar
- Other Affiliation: Laerdal Medical
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Iyer, Pooja
- Other Affiliation: RTI International
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Kamath-Rayne, Beena D.
- Other Affiliation: American Academy of Pediatrics
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Mafuta, Eric
- Other Affiliation: University of Kinshasa
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Myklebust, Helge
- Other Affiliation: Laerdal Medical
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Patterson, Janna
- Other Affiliation: RTI International
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Tshefu, Antoinette
- Other Affiliation: University of Kinshasa
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Bose, Carl
- Affiliation: School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics
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Patterson, Jackie K.
- Affiliation: School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics
- Abstract
- Background 900,000 newborns die from respiratory depression each year; nearly all of these deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries. Deaths from respiratory depression are reduced by evidence-based resuscitation. Electronic heart rate monitoring provides a sensitive indicator of the neonate's status to inform resuscitation care, but is infrequently used in low-resource settings. In a recent trial in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, midwives used a low-cost, battery-operated heart rate meter (NeoBeat) to continuously monitor heart rate during resuscitations. We explored midwives' perceptions of NeoBeat including its utility and barriers and facilitators to use. Methods After a 20-month intervention in which midwives from three facilities used NeoBeat during resuscitations, we surveyed midwives and conducted focus group discussions (FGDs) regarding the incorporation of NeoBeat into clinical care. FGDs were conducted in Lingala, the native language, then transcribed and translated from Lingala to French to English. We analyzed data by: (1) coding of transcripts using Nvivo, (2) comparison of codes to identify patterns in the data, and (3) grouping of codes into categories by two independent reviewers, with final categories determined by consensus. Results Each midwife from Facility A used NeoBeat on an estimated 373 newborns, while each midwife at facilities B and C used NeoBeat an average 24 and 47 times, respectively. From FGDs with 30 midwives, we identified five main categories of perceptions and experiences regarding the use of NeoBeat: (1) Providers' initial skepticism evolved into pride and a belief that NeoBeat was essential to resuscitation care, (2) Providers viewed NeoBeat as enabling their resuscitation and increasing their capacity, (3) NeoBeat helped providers identify flaccid newborns as liveborn, leading to hope and the perception of saving of lives, (4) Challenges of use of NeoBeat included cleaning, charging, and insufficient quantity of devices, and (5) Providers desired to continue using the device and to expand its use beyond resuscitation and their own facilities. Conclusion Midwives perceived that NeoBeat enabled their resuscitation practices, including assisting them in identifying non-breathing newborns as liveborn. Increasing the quantity of devices per facility and developing systems to facilitate cleaning and charging may be critical for scale-up.
- Date of publication
- 2022
- Keyword
- DOI
- Identifier
- Resource type
- Article
- Rights statement
- In Copyright
- License
- Attribution 4.0 International
- Journal title
- Frontiers in Pediatrics
- Journal volume
- 10
- Language
- English
- Version
- Publisher
- ISSN
- 2296-2360
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