Birth Attendants Trained in Prevention of Mother-to-Child HIV Transmission Provide Care in Rural Cameroon, Africa

Language:

English

Author:

Wanyu B et al.

Series/Journal Title:

Journal of Midwifery and Women’s Health

Volume:

52

Issue:

4

Pages:

8

Cost:

Free of charge to individuals or institutions in developing countries. Charge for all others.

Description:

This article discusses a program that established primary health centers in remote villages and trained literate women in these villages as birth attendants to offer antenatal care, low-risk delivery, and triage of high-risk mothers to larger health facilities. In 2002, the birth attendants were trained to provide Prevention of Maternal-to-Child HIV Transmission (PMTCT) services, including counseling, voluntary testing, performing oral rapid HIV tests, posttest counseling, and administering single-dose nevirapine to HIV-positive women, to be taken in labor, and to their newborns. Ongoing supervision is provided by nurse supervisors. [adapted from abstract]

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Subject

Geographic Focus

Resource Type