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INTRODUCTION: The World Health Organization's (WHO) Labour Care Guide (LCG) is a "next-generation" partograph based on WHO's latest intrapartum care recommendations. It aims to optimize clinical care provided to women and their experience of care. We evaluated the LCG's usability, feasibility, and acceptability among maternity care practitioners in clinical settings. METHODS: Mixed-methods evaluation with doctors, midwives, and nurses in 12 health facilities across Argentina, India, Kenya, Malawi, Nigeria, and Tanzania. Purposively sampled and trained practitioners applied the LCG in low-risk women during labor and rated experiences, satisfaction, and usability. Practitioners were invited to focus group discussions (FGDs) to share experiences and perceptions of the LCG, which were subjected to framework analysis. RESULTS: One hundred and thirty-six practitioners applied the LCG in managing labor and birth of 1,226 low-risk women. The majority of women had a spontaneous vaginal birth (91.6%); two cases of intrapartum stillbirths (1.63 per 1000 births) occurred. Practitioner satisfaction with the LCG was high, and median usability score was 67.5%. Practitioners described the LCG as supporting precise and meticulous monitoring during labor, encouraging critical thinking in labor management, and improving the provision of woman-centered care. CONCLUSIONS: The LCG is feasible and acceptable to use across different clinical settings and can promote woman-centered care, though some design improvements would benefit usability. Implementing the LCG needs to be accompanied by training and supportive supervision, and strategies to promote an enabling environment (including updated policies on supportive care interventions, and ensuring essential equipment is available).
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Trabajo de Parto , Servicios de Salud Materna , Parto Obstétrico , Estudios de Factibilidad , Femenino , Humanos , Embarazo , Organización Mundial de la SaludRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Current intramuscular magnesium dosing regimens in low and middle-income countries are based on indirect absorption parameters to inform pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic response. OBJECTIVE: To determine if therapeutic serum magnesium levels are obtained in women with severe preeclampsia receiving intramuscular administration of magnesium sulfate using the Pritchard regimen and to compare the key pharmacokinetic variables to those previously published. STUDY DESIGN: Serum magnesium levels were obtained at multiple time points at baseline and after magnesium sulfate administration from women with severe preeclampsia receiving the standard Pritchard regimen for seizure prophylaxis at Bayero University, Kano, Nigeria. The pharmacokinetic profiles were constructed for the study cohort and the updated pharmacokinetic model was compared with the one that was previously published. RESULTS: A total of 80 blood samples were collected from 20 women with severe preeclampsia (45 collected before childbirth and 35 collected after childbirth). After 11.5 hours of magnesium sulfate administration, 63% of women in the cohort had serum magnesium levels of ≥2.0 mmol/L. Data from women receiving the Pritchard regimen combined with data from women previously modeled after the receipt of intravenous magnesium sulfate were adequately described using a 2-compartment model with first-order absorption and linear elimination from the central compartment. All structural pharmacokinetic parameters including clearance, central volume of distribution, peripheral volume of distribution, and intercompartment clearance were adjusted for maternal weight, and the clearance was further adjusted for serum creatinine level and antepartum or postpartum status. The simulated pharmacokinetic profiles of the updated pharmacokinetic model and the previously published pharmacokinetic model are similar. In previously published pharmacokinetic modeling, absorption rate constant=0.32 and absolute bioavailability=0.86. In the updated pharmacokinetic model, absorption rate constant=0.45 and absolute bioavailability=0.91. CONCLUSION: These data support the use of the Pritchard regimen as acceptable to achieve therapeutic serum magnesium levels and support the reported simulation of serum magnesium levels and eclampsia response associated with different intramuscular regimens.