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The Lancet | 2014

Ebola in Africa: beyond epidemics, reproductive health in crisis

Alexandre Delamou; Rachel Hammonds; Séverine Caluwaerts; Bettina Utz; Thérèse Delvaux

According to WHO, more than 5000 people have died from Ebola, including 240 health workers. We are deeply concerned about the devastating effect of Ebola on reproductive health in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone in the context of continuous deterioration of socioeconomic conditions and general health in aff ected countries. The indirect negative effect of Ebola on reproductive health stems mainly from the desertion of already understaffed health facilities by health-care workers who are fearful of contracting Ebola. This fear is further increased because most reproductive health life-saving interventions include handling blood or bodily fluids from patients whose Ebola status is often unknown and health staff often do not have access to appropriate protection. Most referral maternity wards in the three most affected countries (Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone) do not have equipment to do real-time screening for Ebola (eg, PCR), which could lead to the denial of care for women suspected to be pregnant. Additionally, the absence of providers offering relevant services, the inability to differentiate between Ebola and other febrile diseases, and the fear of contracting Ebola at a health facility can prevent users seeking reproductive health services. Statistics from Matam maternity hospital in Conakry, Guinea, show a substantial drop in attendance between March, 2014, and September, 2014, compared with 2013 (fi gure). A decrease in paediatric or maternal admissions because of fear of contracting Ebola has also been reported by Medecins Sans Frontieres in Sierra Leone. We are concerned that women in need of reproductive health care because of pregnancy, childbirth, and post-partum related complications, including haemorrhage, eclampsia, obstructed labour, and abortion, will not have necessary and even life-saving care and attention. United Nations Population Fund estimates that 15% of the 800 000 women who will give birth in the next 12 months in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone could die of complications because of inade quate emergency obstetric care, and thousands of others could develop devastating pathological conditions, such as obstetric fistula. Increased support to fight Ebola is needed in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone coupled, with specific attention to reproductive health services. Adequate measures, including health system strengthening and community mobilisation coupled with an enabling environment for provision of emergency obstetric care, need to be put in place urgently to avoid devastating short-term and long-term effects for thousands of women.


Clinical Diabetes | 2015

Screening for Gestational Diabetes Mellitus: Are Guidelines From High-Income Settings Applicable to Poorer Countries?

Bettina Utz; Patrick Kolsteren; Vincent De Brouwere

Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is increasingly acknowledged as a public health problem in developing countries, resulting in both immediate and long-term health effects for mothers and their newborns (1,2). Maternal and fetal complications of GDM range from adaptation problems of the newborn (e.g., asphyxia, respiratory distress, and hypoglycemia) to major obstetric complications such as shoulder dystocia, prolonged or obstructed labor, preeclampsia, or postpartum hemorrhage (2,3). In low-resource settings, where shortages of health care providers as well as lack of skills to manage such complications prevail (4), untreated GDM and its associated conditions can endanger the life of mothers and their newborns. Screening and management of GDM often is not part of routine care in the majority of low-resource settings. Because of this, data on the prevalence of GDM and the incidence of related obstetric and newborn complications are scarce. Most of the research on GDM to date has been conducted in high-income countries where GDM screening is already an established part of antenatal care, and specific procedures are clearly defined in national guidelines. Such guidelines are often absent in low-resource settings where, until now, GDM has played a minor role in the shadow of more obvious determinants of maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality. Where guidelines are available, they often are not standardized. In various GDM projects in low-resource settings, different guidelines have been used for screening and subsequently had to be adapted to fit into the local context (5). Based on the results of the Hyperglycemia and Adverse Pregnancy Outcome study (6), the World Health Organization (WHO) modified previously recommended criteria for the diagnosis of GDM (7) to serve as a basis for universal guidelines. This review will assess which criteria are applied by countries with routine screening for GDM in place and how congruent …


Global Health Action | 2016

Diagnosis a posteriori? Assessing gestational diabetes screening and management in Morocco

Bettina Utz; Bouchra Assarag; Amina Essolbi; Amina Barkat; Yassir Ait Benkaddour; Vincent De Brouwere

Background In Morocco, gestational diabetes affects 1 in 10 pregnant women, but knowledge about screening and management practices outside university settings is limited. Objective To provide a comprehensive picture about the current situation of screening and management of gestational diabetes at different levels of care and to highlight existing challenges. Design We conducted a descriptive mixed methods study in the districts of Al Haouz and Marrakech by using both quantitative and qualitative methods, including document reviews of 369 antenatal cards and 299 hospital files, health facility inventories related to resource availability, 20 key informant interviews as well as focus group discussions with 32 pregnant women and exit interviews with 122 antenatal care (ANC) clients. Quantitative data were descriptively analyzed using STATA Version 13, whereas qualitative data were thematically analyzed using NVIVO Version 10. Results The findings revealed that sensitization of women about gestational diabetes is low, and only 34.4% have ever heard about it before attending ANC. Fasting blood sugar is used for screening, and women are sent to external laboratories for testing. A fasting blood sugar of 0.92 g/l and above was documented in 12.3% of all antenatal cards examined. Women diagnosed with gestational diabetes are usually referred to a specialist despite general practitioners at health center level being responsible for the management of non-pregnant diabetic patients. Conclusions Decentralization of screening for gestational diabetes and initial management of uncomplicated cases at the primary level of care could ease access to care and reduce the number of mothers who are diagnosed after a complication occurred.Background In Morocco, gestational diabetes affects 1 in 10 pregnant women, but knowledge about screening and management practices outside university settings is limited. Objective To provide a comprehensive picture about the current situation of screening and management of gestational diabetes at different levels of care and to highlight existing challenges. Design We conducted a descriptive mixed methods study in the districts of Al Haouz and Marrakech by using both quantitative and qualitative methods, including document reviews of 369 antenatal cards and 299 hospital files, health facility inventories related to resource availability, 20 key informant interviews as well as focus group discussions with 32 pregnant women and exit interviews with 122 antenatal care (ANC) clients. Quantitative data were descriptively analyzed using STATA Version 13, whereas qualitative data were thematically analyzed using NVIVO Version 10. Results The findings revealed that sensitization of women about gestational diabetes is low, and only 34.4% have ever heard about it before attending ANC. Fasting blood sugar is used for screening, and women are sent to external laboratories for testing. A fasting blood sugar of 0.92 g/l and above was documented in 12.3% of all antenatal cards examined. Women diagnosed with gestational diabetes are usually referred to a specialist despite general practitioners at health center level being responsible for the management of non-pregnant diabetic patients. Conclusions Decentralization of screening for gestational diabetes and initial management of uncomplicated cases at the primary level of care could ease access to care and reduce the number of mothers who are diagnosed after a complication occurred.


Reproductive Health | 2017

Improving detection and initial management of gestational diabetes through the primary level of care in Morocco: protocol for a cluster randomized controlled trial

Bettina Utz; Bouchra Assarag; Amina Essolbi; Amina Barkat; Nawal El Ansari; Bouchra Fakhir; Alexandre Delamou; Vincent De Brouwere

BackgroundMorocco is facing a growing prevalence of diabetes and according to latest figures of the World Health Organization, already 12.4% of the population are affected. A similar prevalence has been reported for gestational diabetes (GDM) and although it is not yet high on the national agenda, immediate and long-term complications threaten the health of mothers and future generations. A situational analysis on GDM conducted in 2015 revealed difficulties in access to screening and delays in receiving appropriate care. This implementation study has as objective to evaluate a decentralized GDM detection and management approach through the primary level of care and assess its potential for scaling up.MethodsWe will conduct a hybrid effectiveness-implementation research using a cluster randomized controlled trial design in two districts of Morocco. Using the health center as unit of randomization we randomly selected 20 health centers with 10 serving as intervention and 10 as control facilities. In the intervention arm, providers will screen pregnant women attending antenatal care for GDM by capillary glucose testing during antenatal care. Women tested positive will receive nutritional counselling and will be followed up through the health center. In the control facilities, screening and initial management of GDM will follow standard practice. Primary outcome will be birthweight with weight gain during pregnancy, average glucose levels and pregnancy outcomes including mode of delivery, presence or absence of obstetric or newborn complications and the prevalence of GDM at health center level as secondary outcomes. Furthermore we will assess the quality of life /care experienced by the women in both arms. Qualitative methods will be applied to evaluate the feasibility of the intervention at primary level and its adoption by the health care providers.DiscussionIn Morocco, gestational diabetes screening and its initial management is fragmented and coupled with difficulties in access and treatment delays. Implementation of a strategy that enables detection, management and follow-up of affected women at primary health care level is expected to positively impact on access to care and medical outcomes.Trial registrationThe trial has been registered on clininicaltrials.gov; identifier NCT02979756; retrospectively registered 22 November 2016.


Primary Care Diabetes | 2017

Knowledge and practice related to gestational diabetes among primary health care providers in Morocco: Potential for a defragmentation of care?

Bettina Utz; Bouchra Assarag; Amina Essolbi; Amina Barkat; Alexandre Delamou; Vincent De Brouwere

INTRODUCTION The objective of this study was to assess knowledge and practices of general practitioners, nurses and midwives working at primary health care facilities in Morocco regarding screening and management of gestational diabetes (GDM). METHODS Structured interviews with 100 doctors, midwives and nurses at 44 randomly selected public health care centers were conducted in Marrakech and Al Haouz. All data were descriptively analyzed. Ethical approval for the study was granted by the institutional review boards in Belgium and Morocco. RESULTS Public primary health care providers have a basic understanding of gestational diabetes but screening and management practices are not uniform. Although 56.8% of the doctors had some pre-service training on gestational diabetes, most nurses and midwives lack such training. After diagnosing GDM, 88.5% of providers refer patients to specialists, only 11.5% treat them as outpatients. DISCUSSION Updating knowledge and skills of providers through both pre- and in-service-training needs to be supported by uniform national standards enabling first line health care workers to manage women with GDM and thus increase access and provide a continuity in care. Findings of this study will be used to pilot a model of GDM screening and initial management through the primary level of care.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2016

Pregnancy and childbirth after repair of obstetric fistula in sub‐Saharan Africa: Scoping Review

Alexandre Delamou; Bettina Utz; Thérèse Delvaux; Abdoul Habib Beavogui; Asm Shahabuddin; Akoï Koïvogui; Alain Levêque; Wei Hong Zhang; Vincent De Brouwere

To synthesise the evidence on pregnancy and childbirth after repair of obstetric fistula in sub‐Saharan Africa and to identify the existing knowledge gaps.


BMJ Open | 2016

Determinants and trends in health facility-based deliveries and caesarean sections among married adolescent girls in Bangladesh

Asm Shahabuddin; Thérèse Delvaux; Bettina Utz; Azucena Bardají; Vincent De Brouwere

Objective To identify the determinants and measure the trends in health facility-based deliveries and caesarean sections among married adolescent girls in Bangladesh. Methods In order to measure the trends in health facility-based deliveries and caesarean sections, Bangladesh Demographic Health Survey (BDHS) data sets were analysed (BDHS; 1993–1994, 1996–1997, 1999–2000, 2004, 2007, 2011). The BDHS 2011 data sets were analysed to identify the determinants of health facility-based deliveries and caesarean sections. A total of 2813 adolescent girls (aged 10–19 years) were included for analysis. Bivariate and multivariate analyses were performed. Results Health facility-based deliveries have continuously increased among adolescents in Bangladesh over the past two decades from 3% in 1993–1994 to 24.5% in 2011. Rates of population-based and facility-based caesarean sections have increased linearly among all age groups of women including adolescents. Although the countrys overall (population-based) caesarean section rate among adolescents was within acceptable range (11.6%), a rate of nearly 50% health facility level caesarean sections among adolescent girls is alarming. Among adolescent girls, use of antenatal care (ANC) appeared to be the most important predictor of health facility-based delivery (OR: 4.04; 95% CI 2.73 to 5.99), whereas the wealth index appeared as the most important predictor of caesarean sections (OR: 5.7; 95% CI 2.74 to 12.1). Conclusions Maternal health-related interventions should be more targeted towards adolescent girls in order to encourage them to access ANC and promote health facility-based delivery. Rising trends of caesarean sections require further investigation on indication and provider–client-related determinants of these interventions among adolescent girls in Bangladesh.


Experimental Diabetes Research | 2016

Detection and Management of Diabetes during Pregnancy in Low Resource Settings: Insights into Past and Present Clinical Practices.

Bettina Utz; Alexandre Delamou; Loubna Belaid; Vincent De Brouwere

Background. Timely and adequate treatment is important to limit complications of diabetes affecting pregnancy, but there is a lack of knowledge on how these women are managed in low resource settings. Objective. To identify modalities of gestational diabetes detection and management in low and lower middle income countries. Methods. We conducted a scoping review of published literature and searched the databases PubMed, Web of Science, Embase, and African Index Medicus. We included all articles published until April 24, 2016, containing information on clinical practices of detection and management of gestational diabetes irrespective of publication date or language. Results. We identified 23 articles mainly from Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. The majority of studies were conducted in large tertiary care centers and hospital admission was reported in a third of publications. Ambulatory follow-up was generally done by weekly to fortnightly visits, whereas self-monitoring of blood glucose was not the norm. The cesarean section rate for pregnancies affected by diabetes ranged between 20% and 89%. Referral of newborns to special care units was common. Conclusion. The variety of reported provider practices underlines the importance of promoting latest consensus guidelines on GDM screening and management and the dissemination of information regarding their implementation.


The Lancet | 2015

Improving midwifery care worldwide

Bettina Utz; Abdul Halim


The Lancet | 2015

Tackling obesity: challenges ahead

Bettina Utz; Vincent De Brouwere

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Vincent De Brouwere

Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp

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Alexandre Delamou

Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp

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Bouchra Assarag

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Thérèse Delvaux

Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp

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Asm Shahabuddin

Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp

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Alain Levêque

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Karen Van der Veken

Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp

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