The aim of this report is to describe a health education intervention involving volunteer infant feeding and care counselors being implemented in Mchinji district, Malawi. The intervention was established in January 2004 and involves 72 volunteer infant feeding and care counselors, supervised by 24 government Health Surveillance Assistants, covering 355 villages in Mchinji district. It aims to change the knowledge, attitudes and behaviour of women to promote exclusive breastfeeding and other infant care practices. The main target population are women of child bearing age who are visited at five key points during pregnancy and after birth. Where possible, their partners are also involved. The visits cover exclusive breastfeeding and other important neonatal and infant care practices. Volunteers are provided with an intervention manual and picture book. Resource inputs are low and include training allowances and equipment for counselors and supervisors, and a salary, equipment and materials for a coordinator. It is hypothesized that the counselors will encourage informational and attitudinal change to enhance motivation and risk reduction skills and self-efficacy to promote exclusive breastfeeding and other infant care practices and reduce infant mortality. The impact is being evaluated through a cluster randomised controlled trial and results will be reported in 2012.
In: Cheshire , J , Jones , L , Munthali , L , Kamphinga , C , Liyaya , H , Phiri , T , Parry-Smith , W , Dunlop , C , Makwenda , C , Devall , A J , Tobias , A , Nambiar , B , Merriel , A , Williams , H M , Gallos , I , Wilson , A , Coomarasamy , A & Lissauer , D 2021 , ' The FAST-M complex intervention for the detection and management of maternal sepsis in low-resource settings : a multi-site evaluation ' , BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology , vol. 128 , no. 8 , pp. 1324-1333 . https://doi.org/10.1111/1471-0528.16658
Objective To evaluate whether the implementation of the FAST‐M complex intervention was feasible and improved the recognition and management of maternal sepsis in a low‐resource setting. Design A before‐and‐after design. Setting Fifteen government healthcare facilities in Malawi. Population Women suspected of having maternal sepsis. Methods The FAST‐M complex intervention consisted of the following components: the FAST‐M maternal sepsis treatment bundle and the FAST‐M implementation programme. Performance of selected process outcomes was compared between a 2‐month baseline phase and 6‐month intervention phase with compliance used as a proxy measure of feasibility. Main outcome result Compliance with vital sign recording and use of the FAST‐M maternal sepsis bundle. Results Following implementation of the FAST‐M intervention, women were more likely to have a complete set of vital signs taken on admission to the wards (0/163 [0%] versus 169/252 [67.1%], P < 0.001). Recognition of suspected maternal sepsis improved with more cases identified following the intervention (12/106 [11.3%] versus 107/166 [64.5%], P < 0.001). Sepsis management improved, with women more likely to receive all components of the FAST‐M treatment bundle within 1 hour of recognition (0/12 [0%] versus 21/107 [19.6%], P = 0.091). In particular, women were more likely to receive antibiotics (3/12 [25.0%] versus 72/107 [67.3%], P = 0.004) within 1 hour of recognition of suspected sepsis. Conclusion Implementation of the FAST‐M complex intervention was feasible and led to the improved recognition and management of suspected maternal sepsis in a low‐resource setting such as Malawi. Tweetable Abstract Implementation of a sepsis care bundle for low‐resources improved recognition & management of maternal sepsis.