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Transition to skilled birth attendance: is there a future role for trained traditional birth attendants?

Author: Lynn M. Sibley, Theresa Ann Sipe 
InfoShare Partner: ICDDR,B
Publication Date: December 2006
Type of Document: Article/Report/Paper
Topics: Child health/survival, Maternal health/survival, Reproductive health, general, Service delivery
Region: Global
Language: English
Additional information: Sectional PDF and HTML files available on the website
Number of Pages: 7
File Size: 1 KB
File Format: Web Page

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A brief history of training of traditional birth attendants (TBAs), summary of evidence for effectiveness of TBA training, and consideration of the future role of trained TBAs in an environment that empha­sizes transition to skilled birth attendance are provided. Evidence of the effectiveness of TBA training, based on 60 studies and standard meta-analytic procedures, includes moderate-to-large improvements in behaviours of TBAs relating to selected intrapartum and postnatal care practices, small significant increases in women’s use of antenatal care and emergency obstetric care, and small significant decreas­es in perinatal mortality and neonatal mortality due to birth asphyxia and pneumonia. Such findings are consistent with the historical focus of TBA training on extending the reach of primary healthcare and a few programmes that have included home-based management of complications of births and the new­borns, such as birth asphyxia and pneumonia. Evidence suggests that, in settings characterized by high mortality and weak health systems, trained TBAs can contribute to the Millennium Development Goal 4—a two-thirds reduction in the rate of mortality of children aged less than 14 years by 2015—through participation in key evidence-based interventions.

Journal of Health, Population and Nutrition, 24(4):472-478