Season's Greetings

Added on :20 December 2020

By:Quality of Care Network Secretariat

Dear Members and Friends,

The challenges brought by the COVID-19 pandemic during 2020 pushed all Network countries and partners to adapt and innovate to ensure the continuity of MNCH services with quality. What has emerged have been incredible efforts of learning, adaptation, adaptability to ensure quality of care for MNCH. Throughout the year, the Network countries have continued to identify and test solutions to old and new problems. During the webinar series Delivering essential quality MNCH services during COVID-19, organized in collaboration with the Child Health Task Force and UNICEF, countries and partners have been sharing lessons from improving quality of care during COVID 19.
 
2021 holds much promise and expectation for the Network activities. National Quality of Care Fora will take place throughout 2021 and will provide a venue to share learning and experiences in quality improvement. The fora will also document the impact to date and look to the next steps needed in each country to act creatively and determinedly to ensure that mothers and babies receive quality care when they need it. 
 
Work that started in 2020 will continue in 2021. We will continue to build on and leverage the enthusiasm regarding sharing learning among countries and partners. New WHO guidance for 
Integrating stakeholder and community engagement in quality of care initiatives for MNCH and the Standards for improving the quality of care for small and sick newborns in health facilities will be operationalized as part of the implementation of the Network. Countries will continue to implement quality of care interventions and will start to share data from learning districts. The Quality of Care Common Indicators Data Platform will go live in tandem with orientating Network countries on using the platform as a key monitoring and evaluation tool.  Further key agendas earmarked for expansion in 2021 include; advancing the quality of pediatric care and communities of practice for community engagement and for private sector engagement.  
 
We wish you a safe, restful and peaceful end to 2020 and look forward to continued collaboration and partnership to meet challenges and opportunities that await us in 2021.
 
Season’s Greetings from The Quality of Care Network Secretariat.

 

Updates

Final webinar in a series on ‘Delivering quality essential maternal, newborn and child health services during COVID-19’

Disruptions in care seeking and access to quality health care for children at primary health facilities and in communities increase children’s risk of severe illness and death. How do countries ensure safe continuation of child health services during COVID-19? How were case management algorithms and patient flow adapted and re-organized, infection control measures implemented, PPE and uninterrupted supplies ensured? How were children screened for COVID-19 while continuing routine case management for common childhood illnesses? Did approaches differ based on local transmission of COVID-19?

This webinar shared practical examples and experiences on how two countries, Uganda and Senegal, adapted and implemented changes in integrated community case management (iCCM) and Integrated Management of newborn and childhood illness (IMNCI) to provide continued quality care for young children.

Part of a series on ‘Delivering quality essential maternal, newborn and child health services during COVID-19’, co-hosted by the Network for Improving Quality of Care for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health and the QoC subgroup of the Child Health Task Force.

See the whole series

© UNICEF/UNI279454/Modola

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Third webinar in a series

Despite one in every three facility births occurring in private facilities in India, efforts to improve the quality of maternal health around the time of birth have largely focused on public health facilities in the country.

Manyata, a certification programme with both quality improvement and assurance components, is designed to strengthen quality of maternal health services in private facilities. Since its launch in 2013, Manyata has developed a viable business model for quality assurance and laid the groundwork for sustainable quality improvement efforts in the private maternal health care sector in India. The programme, now in its third phase, is implemented in Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand and Maharashtra by Jhpiego and in Rajasthan, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu by other partners.

This webinar shared Manyata’s approach to initiate a private sector endeavour and develop a successful public-private partnership for quality of care, the value it provided for private providers to invest in quality of care, and its plan to expand its activities to other states. A representative of the Government of Maharashtra  also explained how the state government plays a critical role to ensure private facilities adopt standards of care under the LaQshya-Manyata initiative.

This is the third webinar in a series on ‘ Engaging the private sector for quality maternal, newborn and child health care’, co-organized by the Network for Improving Quality of Care for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health and the World Health Organization.

Photo:© UNICEF/UNI173763/Altaf Qadri

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