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Dive into the research topics where Fabio Manenti is active.

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Featured researches published by Fabio Manenti.


BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth | 2014

A qualitative study on barriers to utilisation of institutional delivery services in Moroto and Napak districts, Uganda: implications for programming

Calistus Wilunda; Gianluca Quaglio; Giovanni Putoto; Peter Lochoro; Giovanni Dall’Oglio; Fabio Manenti; Andrea Atzori; Rose Miligan Lochiam; Risa Takahashi; Aline Mukundwa; Koyejo Oyerinde

BackgroundSkilled attendance at delivery is critical in prevention of maternal deaths. However, many women in low- and middle-income countries still deliver without skilled assistance. This study was carried out to identify perceived barriers to utilisation of institutional delivery in two districts in Karamoja, Uganda.MethodsData were collected through participatory rural appraisal (PRA) with 887 participants (459 women and 428 men) in 20 villages in Moroto and Napak districts. Data were analysed using deductive content analysis. Notes taken during PRA session were edited, triangulated and coded according to recurring issues. Additionally, participants used matrix ranking to express their perceived relative significance of the barriers identified.ResultsThe main barriers to utilisation of maternal health services were perceived to be: insecurity, poverty, socio-cultural factors, long distances to health facilities, lack of food at home and at health facilities, lack of supplies, drugs and basic infrastructure at health facilities, poor quality of care at health facilities, lack of participation in planning for health services and the ready availability of traditional birth attendants (TBAs). Factors related to economic and physical inaccessibility and lack of infrastructure, drugs and supplies at health facilities were highly ranked barriers to utilisation of institutional delivery.ConclusionA comprehensive approach to increasing the utilisation of maternal health care services in Karamoja is needed. This should tackle both demand and supply side barriers using a multi-sectorial approach since the main barriers are outside the scope of the health sector. TBAs are still active in Karamoja and their role and influence on maternal health in this region cannot be ignored. A model for collaboration between skilled health workers and TBAs in order to increase institutional deliveries is needed.


International Journal for Equity in Health | 2013

Measuring equity in utilization of emergency obstetric care at Wolisso Hospital in Oromiya, Ethiopia: a cross sectional study.

Calistus Wilunda; Giovanni Putoto; Fabio Manenti; Maria Castiglioni; Gaetano Azzimonti; Wagari Edessa; Andrea Atzori; Mario Merialdi; Ana Pilar Betrán; Joshua P. Vogel; Bart Criel

IntroductionImproving equity in access to services for the treatment of complications that arise during pregnancy and childbirth, namely Emergency Obstetric Care (EmOC), is fundamental if maternal and neonatal mortality are to be reduced. Consequently, there is a growing need to monitor equity in access to EmOC. The objective of this study was to develop a simple questionnaire to measure equity in utilization of EmOC at Wolisso Hospital, Ethiopia and compare the wealth status of EmOC users with women in the general population.MethodsWomen in the Ethiopia 2005 Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) constituted our reference population. We cross-tabulated DHS wealth variables against wealth quintiles. Five variables that differentiated well across quintiles were selected to create a questionnaire that was administered to women at discharge from the maternity from January to August 2010. This was used to identify inequities in utilization of EmOC by comparison with the reference population.Results760 women were surveyed. An a posteriori comparison of these 2010 data to the 2011 DHS dataset, indicated that women using EmOC were wealthier and more likely to be urban dwellers. On a scale from 0 (poorest) to 15 (wealthiest), 31% of women in the 2011 DHS sample scored less than 1 compared with 0.7% in the study population. 70% of women accessing EmOC belonged to the richest quintile with only 4% belonging to the poorest two quintiles. Transportation costs seem to play an important role.ConclusionsWe found inequity in utilization of EmOC in favour of the wealthiest. Assessing and monitoring equitable utilization of maternity services is feasible using this simple tool.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2011

Ambulance service within a comprehensive intervention for reproductive health in remote settings: a cost-effective intervention

Edgardo Somigliana; Alice Sabino; Richard Nkurunziza; Emmy Okello; Gianluca Quaglio; Peter Lochoro; Giovanni Putoto; Fabio Manenti

Objective  To assess the cost‐effectiveness of an ambulance service within a comprehensive hospital/community‐based program aimed at improving access and quality of reproductive health in poor‐resources settings.


Reproductive Health | 2015

Availability, utilisation and quality of maternal and neonatal health care services in Karamoja region, Uganda: a health facility-based survey

Calistus Wilunda; Koyejo Oyerinde; Giovanni Putoto; Peter Lochoro; Giovanni Dall’Oglio; Fabio Manenti; Giulia Segafredo; Andrea Atzori; Bart Criel; Alessio Panza; Gianluca Quaglio

BackgroundMaternal mortality is persistently high in Uganda. Access to quality emergency obstetrics care (EmOC) is fundamental to reducing maternal and newborn deaths and is a possible way of achieving the target of the fifth millennium development goal. Karamoja region in north-eastern Uganda has consistently demonstrated the nation’s lowest scores on key development and health indicators and presents a substantial challenge to Uganda’s stability and poverty eradication ambitions. The objectives of this study were: to establish the availability of maternal and neonatal healthcare services at different levels of health units; to assess their utilisation; and to determine the quality of services provided.MethodsA cross sectional study of all health facilities in Napak and Moroto districts was conducted in 2010. Data were collected by reviewing clinical records and registers, interviewing staff and women attending antenatal and postnatal clinics, and by observation. Data were summarized using frequencies and percentages and EmOC indicators were calculated.ResultsThere were gaps in the availability of essential infrastructure, equipment, supplies, drugs and staff for maternal and neonatal care particularly at health centres (HCs). Utilisation of the available antenatal, intrapartum, and postnatal care services was low. In addition, there were gaps in the quality of care received across these services. Two hospitals, each located in the study districts, qualified as comprehensive EmOC facilities. The number of EmOC facilities per 500,000 population was 3.7. None of the HCs met the criteria for basic EmOC. Assisted vaginal delivery and removal of retained products were the most frequently missing signal functions. Direct obstetric case fatality rate was 3%, the met need for EmOC was 9.9%, and 1.7% of expected deliveries were carried out by caesarean section.ConclusionsTo reduce maternal and newborn morbidity and mortality in Karamoja region, there is a need to increase the availability and the accessibility of skilled birth care, address the low utilisation of maternity services and improve the quality of care rendered. There is also a need to improve the availability and accessibility of EmOC services, with particular attention to basic EmOC.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Assessing Coverage, Equity and Quality Gaps in Maternal and Neonatal Care in Sub- Saharan Africa: An Integrated Approach

Calistus Wilunda; Giovanni Putoto; Donata Dalla Riva; Fabio Manenti; Andrea Atzori; Federico Calia; Tigist Assefa; Bruno Turri; Onapa Emmanuel; Manuela Straneo; Firma Kisika; Giorgio Tarmbulini

Background Gaps in coverage, equity and quality of health services hinder the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals 4 and 5 in most countries of sub-Saharan Africa as well as in other high-burden countries, yet few studies attempt to assess all these dimensions as part of the situation analysis. We present the base-line data of a project aimed at simultaneously addressing coverage, equity and quality issues in maternal and neonatal health care in five districts belonging to three African countries. Methods Data were collected in cross-sectional studies with three types of tools. Coverage was assessed in three hospitals and 19 health centres (HCs) utilising emergency obstetric and newborn care needs assessment tools developed by the Averting Maternal Death and Disability program. Emergency obstetrics care (EmOC) indicators were calculated. Equity was assessed in three hospitals and 13 HCs by means of proxy wealth indices and women delivering in health facilities were compared with those in the general population to identify inequities. Quality was assessed in three hospitals using the World Health Organization’s maternal and neonatal quality of hospital care assessment tool which evaluates the whole range of aspects of obstetric and neonatal care and produces an average score for each main area of care. Results All the three hospitals qualified as comprehensive EmOC facilities but none of the HCs qualified for basic EmOC. None of the districts met the minimum requisites for EmOC indicators. In two out of three hospitals, there were major quality gaps which were generally greater in neonatal care, management of emergency and complicated cases and monitoring. Higher access to care was coupled by low quality and good quality by very low access. Stark inequities in utilisation of institutional delivery care were present in all districts and across all health facilities, especially at hospital level. Conclusion Our findings confirm the existence of serious issues regarding coverage, equity and quality of health care for mothers and newborns in all study districts. Gaps in one dimension hinder the potential gains in health outcomes deriving from good performances in other dimensions, thus confirm the need for a three-dimensional profiling of health care provision as a basis for data-driven planning.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2009

Poverty, inequality and health: the challenge of the double burden of disease in a non-profit hospital in rural Ethiopia.

Sandro Accorsi; Nejmudin Kedir; Pasquale Farese; Shallo Dhaba; Vincenzo Racalbuto; Abera Seifu; Fabio Manenti

This study was aimed at describing disease patterns in a rural zone of Oromiya region, Ethiopia through a retrospective analysis of discharge records for 22,377 inpatients of St. Luke Hospital, Wolisso, Ethiopia in the period 2005-2007. The leading cause of admission was childbirth, followed by injuries, malaria and pneumonia. Injuries were the leading cause of in-hospital deaths, followed by pneumonia, malaria, cardiovascular disease and AIDS. Vulnerable groups (infants, children and women) accounted for 73.3% of admissions. Most of the disease burden resulted from infectious diseases, the occurrence of which could be dramatically reduced by cost-effective preventive and curative interventions. Furthermore, a double burden of disease is already emerging at the early stage of the epidemiological transition, with a mix of persistent, emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases and increasing prevalence of chronic conditions and injuries. This will lead to fundamental changes in the volume and composition of demand for healthcare, with a more complex case mix and more costly service utilization patterns. The challenge is to address the double burden of disease, while focusing on poverty-related conditions and targeting vulnerable groups. Monitoring disease and service utilization patterns through routine hospital information systems can provide sustainable, low-cost support for evidence-based health practice.


International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 2015

A hospital‐centered approach to improve emergency obstetric care in South Sudan

Lavinia Groppi; Edgardo Somigliana; Vincenzo Pisani; Michelina Ika; Joseph L. Mabor; Henry N. Akec; John A. Nhial; Michel S. Mading; Chiara Scanagatta; Fabio Manenti; Giovanni Putoto

To assess provision of emergency obstetric care (EmOC) in Greater Yirol, South Sudan, after implementation of a hospital‐centered intervention with an ambulance referral system.


International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 2016

Ambulance referral for emergency obstetric care in remote settings

Ademe Tsegaye; Edgardo Somigliana; Tadesse Alemayehu; Federico Calia; Massimo Maroli; Paola Barban; Fabio Manenti; Giovanni Putoto; Sandro Accorsi

To evaluate the functionality of an ambulance service dedicated to emergency obstetric care (EmOC) that referred pregnant women to health centers for delivery assistance or to a hospital for the management of obstetric complications.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Nitric Oxide Donor Molsidomine Positively Modulates Myogenic Differentiation of Embryonic Endothelial Progenitors

Mario Tirone; Valentina Conti; Fabio Manenti; Pier Andrea Nicolosi; Cristina D’Orlando; Emanuele Azzoni; Silvia Brunelli

Embryonic VE-Cadherin-expressing progenitors (eVE-Cad+), including hemogenic endothelium, have been shown to generate hematopoietic stem cells and a variety of other progenitors, including mesoangioblasts, or MABs. MABs are vessel-associated progenitors with multilineage mesodermal differentiation potential that can physiologically contribute to skeletal muscle development and regeneration, and have been used in an ex vivo cell therapy setting for the treatment of muscular dystrophy. There is currently a therapeutic need for molecules that could improve the efficacy of cell therapy protocols; one such good candidate is nitric oxide. Several studies in animal models of muscle dystrophy have demonstrated that nitric oxide donors provide several beneficial effects, including modulation of the activity of endogenous cell populations involved in muscle repair and the delay of muscle degeneration. Here we used a genetic lineage tracing approach to investigate whether the therapeutic effect of nitric oxide in muscle repair could derive from an improvement in the myogenic differentiation of eVE-Cad+ progenitors during embryogenesis. We show that early in vivo treatment with the nitric oxide donor molsidomine enhances eVE-Cad+ contribution to embryonic and fetal myogenesis, and that this effect could originate from a modulation of the properties of yolk sac hemogenic endothelium.


Pediatrics | 2018

Thermal effect of a woolen cap in low birth weight infants during kangaroo care

Francesco Cavallin; Giulia Segafredo; Damiano Pizzol; William Massavon; Marta Lusiani; Olivier Wingi; Manuela De Vivo; Liviana Da Dalt; Chiara Boscardin; Fabio Manenti; Giovanni Putoto; Daniele Trevisanuto

A woolen cap does not improve time spent in normothermia in LBWIs during KMC in a low-resource setting. BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: World Health Organization guidelines recommend covering the head during kangaroo mother care (KMC), but the effect of a cap on neonatal thermal control during KMC remains to be defined. Our objective was to assess the effectiveness and safety of a woolen cap in maintaining low birth weight infants (LBWIs) in normal thermal range during KMC. METHODS: Three hundred LBWI candidates for KMC in 3 African hospitals were randomly assigned to KMC with (CAP group) or without (NOCAP group) a woolen cap in a 1:1 ratio during the first week after birth. Axillary temperature was measured every 6 hours. Maternal and room temperature and adherence to skin-to-skin contact were registered at the same time points. RESULTS: A total number of 5064 measurements were recorded (median 19 measurements per subject; interquartile range: 10–25). Mean time spent in normal temperature range was 55% (SD 24) in CAP and 56% (SD 24) in NOCAP groups. Multivariable analysis estimated a rate ratio of 0.92 (95% confidence interval: 0.84 to 1.00; P = .06) for the effect of the cap versus no cap on time spent in the normal temperature range. CONCLUSIONS: In these 3 African, low-resource settings and so many days post birth, the use of a woolen cap was safe but provided no advantages in maintaining LBWI in the normal thermal range while being in a KMC ward. LBWIs spent only half of the time in the normal temperature range despite warm rooms and skin-to-skin contact. Maintaining normothermia in LBWIs remains an unfinished challenge in low-resource settings.

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Sandro Accorsi

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Risa Takahashi

Tenri Health Care University

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