Clan-involved approaches to increasing antenatal care use in a rural minority area of China: implementation research
2018
AIM: This study aimed to test a model which involved clans and health providers to increase antenatal care attendance in rural minority areas of China with high HIV prevalence. METHODS: Formative research was conducted to determine barriers and facilitators to antenatal care use. A strategy involving clans in addressing the barriers identified was developed. Implementation of the new strategy was done through three plan-do-study-act (PDSA) cycles, lasting four months each. RESULTS: Awareness and uptake of antenatal care increased significantly after the intervention. The proportion of post-partum women who used any antenatal care increased from 21.3% to 64.5% (p < 0.001), and the proportion who knew that antenatal care is necessary increased from 77.8% to 89.8% (p < 0.001). The proportion of pregnant women who attended antenatal care (p < 0.001) and the proportion of pregnant women who went for a first antenatal care visit in early pregnancy (p < 0.001) all showed increasing trends during the study period. CONCLUSION: Involving clans in antenatal care programmes in rural minority areas of China had an impact on antenatal care use. A quality improvement approach incorporating PDSA cycles can help local health authorities make context-specific, evidence-informed decisions to improve uptake of health services.
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