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HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

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Page 1: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH

From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down

Maternal Mortality

Page 2: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

Project Deliverables

Provide antenatal care services to 500 expectant mothers.

Increase hospital birth to at least 20%.Increase utilization of skilled birth attendants

by 30% for home births.Increase immunization rate.Increase number of ANC visits per mother.

Page 3: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

Project Deliverables

Reduce maternal mortality for the women in this group by 50%.

Educate all 500 women on family planning.Educate the 500 women on maternal

nutrition.Decrease the occurrence of obstetric fistula

among the 500 women.

Page 4: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

Registering New Expectant Women Daily!

Page 5: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

Reporting

Number of expectant mothers who received antenatal care services, immunizations and education about family planning and proper maternal nutrition: 500

At each ANC visit, expectant women received: Folic Acid and Calcium supplements, counseling on postnatal Dos and Don'ts, exclusive breast feeding education, family planning, immunizations and nutrition counseling.

Page 6: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

Reporting

Number of hospital births: 44

A total of 245 women still need to deliver.

32 deliveries took place at HOPE, 2 at Cox’s Bazar District Hospital and 10 at other clinics. (Important to note, 113 women were unreachable by phone)

Page 7: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

Reporting

Utilization of skilled birth attendants: 39 out of 98 home births – 40%.

Number of antenatal care check-ups total for the group performed- 826 visits. (Visits will continue for women still pregnant)

Impact on maternal mortality and obstetric fistula- No maternal mortality and no obstetric fistula occurrences.

Page 8: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

Additional Information

No neonatal sepsis recorded.No neonatal death recorded.The youngest woman receiving care in the

project was 15 years old and the oldest 40.A total of 54 post-natal care visits have been

done thus far.

Page 9: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

Project Short-Term Impact

The seeking of antenatal care services by expectant community women has significantly increased. An additional 154 women have enrolled in the project after 500.

Women are being accompanied by their husbands and mother-in-laws- this is very rare!

Hospital delivery increased from 10% to 30%. Skilled birth attendance for home births increased from 7%

to 40%.Our community health communicators delivered critical

messages to their communities on maternal and child health.

Our midwifery students were involved in data collection, conducting the ANC visits and finding LMP dates.

Page 10: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

Project Long-Term Impact

Women in the community are vastly aware of our services and delivery capabilities.

The hospital has provided care to 500 women, increasing the likelihood that these women will bring their families to HOPE for care.

A database has been created which collects local maternal health data and racks the health of the mothers and their children.

HOPE is considering using this database of 500 women to deliver information via SMS-messages regarding the importance of vaccination for their children and racking the improvement of health and survival rates of these children up to age 1 and then again at age 5.

Page 11: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

HOPE Provisions

As One Sky funded more than the initial request, HOPE discounted hospital delivery costs: Normal Delivery- $13 down from $20Cesarean Section- $65 down from $90

Page 12: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

HOPE Provisions

HOPE has set-up a Maternity Care Corner that is open 24/7 to provide uninterrupted, one stop services. Two employees staff this, providing: pregnant women enrollment, counseling on dos and don'ts of pregnancy and postpartum period, providing supplementation, ANC visit scheduling and calling patients for follow-up and visit reminders.

Page 13: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

HOPE Maternity Care Corner

Page 14: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

Challenges

While the majority of women have a mobile phone or access to one, not all do. Some may lose their phones or not be able to afford service at any given time. HOPE was unable to contact 113 women regarding their delivery status after their received their ANC care.

Page 15: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

Please Remember…

Click icon to add pictureThis project is not finished! The last estimated delivery date for our most recent registered pregnant woman is May 14, 2015.

Page 16: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

Baby Akter, Age 20

Baby Akter is 20 years old while her husband, an automobile mechanic, is 27 years old. It was Baby Akter’s first pregnancy and naturally she was worried. After learning from her neighbors about the necessary services offered from HOPE Hospital and registering, Baby Akter received her ANC care at HOPE. During ANC the examining doctor informed the couple that Baby would have to undergo a caesarean operation and advised her to take all the necessary precautions. As it was their first baby to be delivered the couple did not take any risk. As per instruction Baby had a C-section at HOPE Hospital. Baby is exclusively breast feeding her baby and says she is relieved she was involved in this project to prevent complications.

Page 17: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

Johura Begum, Age 27

Johura Begum is 27 years old and has finished schooling up to class 8. This was Johura’s second pregnancy. In her first pregnancy she suffered uterine complications and to avert the recurrence this time she enrolled to ensure a safe delivery. During ANC, she came to know about the Dos and Don’ts during pregnancy and benefitted tremendously. While attending an interactive counseling session during ANC, Johura shared her experience about her first which was a home-based birth without skilled a skilled birth attendant. After giving birth to her second child at HOPE she found that HOPE provided her the necessary care and support. The baby is doing well and being exclusively breast-fed as recommended.

Page 18: HOPE FOUNDATION FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF BANGLADESH From Home to Hospital: a Project to Drive Down Maternal Mortality

Thank you for YOUR Support!