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Philippine Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology ; : 1-15, 2017.
Article | WPRIM | ID: wpr-960599

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT:BACKGROUND: The Millennium Development Goal (MDG) for 2015 has a target MMR of 52/100,000 live births but this goal been difficult to achieve. In the Philippines, 11 mothers die everyday from pregnancy related complications, a bulk contributed by Hypertension. Public health midwives sometimes attend to these obsterical emergencies often in the absence of a physician. this led to the BEmONC program, which addresses the rising morbidities from far-flung areas where resources are scarce, and helps train midwives in essential obsterical emergency care. The midwives are our allies in providing the best standard of care every mother and child rightfully deserves. Only thru periodic evaluation can we help strengthen BEmONC program, making it crucial to evaluate the midwives' knowledge and management practices in hypertension to help identify the setbacks that have impeded our progress in achieving the MDG.GENERAL OBJECTIVE: To access the knowledge and management practices of midwives in the management of hypertension in pregnancy in accourdance to the BEmONC protocol.STUDY DESIGN: Descriptive StudySTUDY SETTING: The 69 public health centers of Cebu CitySTUDY POPULATION: Public Health MidwivesMETHODOLOGY:This is descriptive study where a survey questionnaire was used and convenience sampling was done. Chi square and Fischer exact tests were employed to compare proportions. Descriptive statistics was used to summarize the data in proportion.RESULT: More than 70% of the midwives were knowledgeable regarding expected competencies, where BEmONC-trained midwives were 5-14x more likely to identity appropriate function. However, Only a dismal 22-36% will actually administer Magnesium Sulfate, which shows that knowledge is not translated into practice. Also, more than 70% were knowledgeable on the risk factors and danger signs of hypertension in pregnancy. It also showed that the midwives agreed to give antihypertensive medications- where Methyldopa was commonly given. Among those who agreed too give Methyldopa, majority were BEmONC-trained. A number also agreed to give hydralazine and diazepam in the setting of sever preeclampsia and eclampsia, where more non-BEmONC midwives agreed. Alarmlingly, only less than 50% will refer to a physician in the management og gestational hypertension and mild preeclampsia, and only 50%-60% agreed to facilitate hospital transport in the setting of severe preeclampsia and eclampsia.CONCLUSION: The BEmONC manual must be updated to keep up with current guidelines and ensure the conversation of knowledge into practice. The BEmONCcoverage of training must also be expanded so that all practicing midwives know the protocol. However, the DOH must further strengthen their role in the active surveillance of public health midwives and review the retention of their skills and regular practice of knowledge. Midwives must also be certified proficient, not merely trained. The must also be consulted to explore their problems in the implementation of current guidelines so we can better understand their situation as to why knowledge is not put into practice. By identifying deficiencies, we can improve and address setbacks that have impeded our progress towards achieving the Millennium Development Goal.


Subject(s)
Humans , Knowledge , Methyldopa , Antihypertensive Agents , Eclampsia , Hypertension, Pregnancy-Induced , Magnesium Sulfate , Midwifery , Pre-Eclampsia , Live Birth , Diazepam , Hydralazine , Obstetrics
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