Abstract:
INTRODUCTION : Uganda has high maternal, neonatal, and under-five mortality rates. This study documents stakeholder
perspectives on best practices in a maternal and newborn health (MNH) quality-improvement programme implemented
in the West Nile region of Uganda to improve delivery and utilisation of MNH services.
METHODS : This exploratory cross-sectional qualitative study, conducted at the end of 2021, captured the perspectives
of stakeholders representing the different levels of the healthcare system. Data were collected in four districts
through: interviews with key informants working at all levels of the health system; focus group discussions with parents
and caretakers and with community health workers; and interviews with individual community members whose
lives had been impacted by the MNH programme. The initial content analysis was followed by a deductive synthesis
pitched according to the different levels of the health system and the health-systems building blocks.
RESULTS : The findings are summarised according to the health-systems building blocks and an account is given of
three of the interventions most valued by participants: (1) data use for evidence-based decision making (with regard
to human resources, essential reproductive health commodities, and financing); (2) establishment of special newborn
care units and high-dependency maternity units at district hospitals and training of the health workforce (also with
reference to other infrastructural improvements such as the provision of water, sanitation and hygiene facilities at
health facilities); and (3) community referral of pregnant women through a commercial motorcycle voucher referral
system.
CONCLUSION : The MNH programme in the West Nile region adopted a holistic and system-wide approach to addressing
the key bottlenecks in the planning, delivery, and monitoring of quality MNH services. There was general stakeholder
appreciation across the board that the interventions had the potential to improve quality of care and newborn and maternal health outcomes. However, as the funding was largely donor-driven, questions about government
ownership and sustainability in the context of limited resources remain.