Quality Improvement Interventions for Nutritional Assessment among Pregnant Mothers in Northeastern Uganda

Biomed Res Int. 2017:2017:8036535. doi: 10.1155/2017/8036535. Epub 2017 May 30.

Abstract

Introduction: Assessment of pregnant mothers for nutritional status is a neglected intervention. In Kaabong Hospital, nutritional status of pregnant mothers was not assessed during antenatal care (ANC) visits. A quality improvement (QI) project was initiated to increase nutritional assessment using midupper arm circumference (MUAC) among pregnant mothers during ANC visits from 0 to 90% between April and September 2015.

Method: Baylor-Uganda formed ANC Work Improvement Team (WIT) that reviewed ANC register, identified gaps in quality of care, analyzed root causes using cause-effect diagram, developed solutions, and tested and implemented the solution using Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles. Planned and tested changes included the provision of anthropometric tools, integrated ANC register, and data use.

Result: In April 2015 (baseline), none (0/235) of the pregnant women were assessed for nutritional status using MUAC. Following QI interventions, nutritional assessment improved to 79% (200/252) in May 2015 and to 100% (241/241) in June 2015. The 100% performance was sustained until August 2016. Overall, 39 cases of malnutrition-1 (2.6%) severe (MUAC < 19.0 cm) and 38 (97.4%) moderate acute malnutrition (MUAC 19-22.0 cm)-were identified and linked to nutritional rehabilitation program.

Conclusion: QI interventions are critical in achieving high rates of nutritional status assessment and identifying malnourished pregnant women during ANC visits.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Nutrition Assessment*
  • Pregnancy
  • Prenatal Care / methods*
  • Prenatal Care / standards
  • Registries*
  • Uganda