KUMJ | VOL. 13 | NO. 4 | ISSUE 52 | OCT-DEC, 2015
Assessment of Critical Knowledge on Maternal and Newborn care Services among Primary Level Nurse Mid-wives in Kapilvastu District of Nepal
Acharya D, Paudel R
Abstract: Background
Despite greater emphasis on maternal and neonatal health through policy and
programming in Nepal, maternal and neonatal health is still not impressive. Health
care providers’ knowledge assessment on maternal and neonatal care has been well
documented elsewhere, but it is very little understood in Nepal.
Objective
The primary objective of this study was to assess the critical knowledge of primary
level nurse- midwives on maternal and newborn care in Kapilvastu District of Nepal.
Method
This was an Institution based cross-sectional study, conducted in Kapilvastu district,
Nepal among sixty eight nurse-midwives. The participants were selected using
simple random sampling technique. For collecting the data, health institutions were
visited by enumerators for a month from 1st October to 1st November 2012. Data
were entered into Microsoft Excel, cleaned and analyzed using SPSS version 17.0.
Result
More than 3/4th of the nurse-midwives had 10-20 years of experience. Majority
of them (89.7%) had poor knowledge in taking action to prevent mother to child
transmission for HIV positive women. More than half of them (54.4%) had some
knowledge in performing the active management of third stage of labor whereas
almost half (51.5%) had poor knowledge to actions needed on post-partum
haemorrhage (PPH). Similarly, more than two third (69.1%) had poor knowledge
in newborn care.
Conclusion
Majority of the nurse-midwives were found to have either poor or some level of
knowledge in most of the components of maternal and newborn care services. So,
greater emphasis should be given to upgrade the knowledge of nurse mid-wives.
Keyword : Knowledge, maternal and newborn care services, nurse mid-wives