4.5 Article

Chlorhexidine for facility-based umbilical cord care: EN-BIRTH multi-country validation study

Journal

BMC PREGNANCY AND CHILDBIRTH
Volume 21, Issue SUPPL, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12884-020-03338-4

Keywords

Birth; Newborn; Coverage; Validity; Survey; Hospital records; Health management systems; 7; 1% chlorhexidine; Umbilical cord care; Neonatal sepsis

Funding

  1. Children's Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF)
  2. London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
  3. Swedish Research Council
  4. CIFF

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The study found that chlorhexidine coverage for umbilical cord care was very high in all three hospitals, ranging from 89.3% to 99.4%. Exit survey-reported coverage underestimated the observer-assessed coverage with substantial don't know responses. Routine register-recorded coverage was closer to observer-assessed coverage than survey reports, suggesting the importance of including chlorhexidine cord care into registers in countries with national policies.
BackgroundUmbilical cord hygiene prevents sepsis, a leading cause of neonatal mortality. The World Health Organization recommends 7.1% chlorhexidine digluconate (CHX) application to the umbilicus after home birth in high mortality contexts. In Bangladesh and Nepal, national policies recommend CHX use for all facility births. Population-based household surveys include optional questions on CHX use, but indicator validation studies are lacking. The Every Newborn Birth Indicators Research Tracking in Hospitals (EN-BIRTH) was an observational study assessing measurement validity for maternal and newborn indicators. This paper reports results regarding CHX.MethodsThe EN-BIRTH study (July 2017-July 2018) included three public hospitals in Bangladesh and Nepal where CHX cord application is routine. Clinical-observers collected tablet-based, time-stamped data regarding cord care during admission to labour and delivery wards as the gold standard to assess accuracy of women's report at exit survey, and of routine-register data. We calculated validity ratios and individual-level validation metrics; analysed coverage, quality and measurement gaps. We conducted qualitative interviews to assess barriers and enablers to routine register-recording.ResultsUmbilical cord care was observed for 12,379 live births. Observer-assessed CHX coverage was very high at 89.3-99.4% in all 3 hospitals, although slightly lower after caesarean births in Azimpur (86.8%), Bangladesh. Exit survey-reported coverage (0.4-45.9%) underestimated the observed coverage with substantial don't know responses (55.5-79.4%). Survey-reported validity ratios were all poor (0.01 to 0.38). Register-recorded coverage in the specific column in Bangladesh was underestimated by 0.2% in Kushtia but overestimated by 9.0% in Azimpur. Register-recorded validity ratios were good (0.9 to 1.1) in Bangladesh, and poor (0.8) in Nepal. The non-specific register column in Pokhara, Nepal substantially underestimated coverage (20.7%).ConclusionsExit survey-report highly underestimated observed CHX coverage in all three hospitals. Routine register-recorded coverage was closer to observer-assessed coverage than survey reports in all hospitals, including for caesarean births, and was more accurately captured in hospitals with a specific register column. Inclusion of CHX cord care into registers, and tallied into health management information system platforms, is justified in countries with national policies for facility-based use, but requires implementation research to assess register design and data flow within health information systems.

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