A descriptive analysis of a medical humanitarian aid initiative for quality perinatal management in war-torn Ukraine

Abstract Background Russian’s invasion of Ukraine has seriously disrupted perinatal care. In a humanitarian initiative, emergency obstetric and neonatal equipment and drugs were provided by Maternal and Childhealth Advocacy International and distributed by Ukrainian partners to a selected 61 materni...

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Main Authors: Iryna Mogilevkina, Dmytro Dobryanskyy, Rhona MacDonald, Diane Watson, David Southall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-02-01
Series:Conflict and Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13031-025-00644-6
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author Iryna Mogilevkina
Dmytro Dobryanskyy
Rhona MacDonald
Diane Watson
David Southall
author_facet Iryna Mogilevkina
Dmytro Dobryanskyy
Rhona MacDonald
Diane Watson
David Southall
author_sort Iryna Mogilevkina
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Russian’s invasion of Ukraine has seriously disrupted perinatal care. In a humanitarian initiative, emergency obstetric and neonatal equipment and drugs were provided by Maternal and Childhealth Advocacy International and distributed by Ukrainian partners to a selected 61 maternity hospitals throughout Ukraine. The programme included engaging mothers in labour to undertake fetal heart rate monitoring using a battery operated, portable, doppler ultrasound probe. This paper describes some characteristics of participants and analyses differences in fetal distress management and maternal / neonatal outcomes following different approaches to fetal health surveillance. Methods Data from 28,808 births were collected in specially developed database which contained information on maternal characteristics, course of pregnancy and childbirth, maternal and neonatal outcomes and donated drugs and equipment used. After informed consent, mothers (n = 13735) who agreed to use in labour fetal self-monitoring in addition to standard intrapartum fetal health surveillance, monitored and recorded fetal heart rate changes on a “contraction-by-contraction” basis into a special form. Data on maternal experience with self-monitoring were collected. Cases where fetal heart rate changes were identified (n = 1434) were extracted and analysed for differences in case management and maternal and neonatal outcomes in different approaches: joint monitoring (mother plus staff, n = 901) vs. staff only monitoring (n = 533) and different actors in case of joint monitoring (mothers, n = 512, vs. staff, n = 389). Results Vacuum assisted delivery was utilised in only < 2% cases. Caesarean section rate was 27%. Mothers reported their experience with self-monitoring as great or good in 79%. Preterm deliveries were less frequent where fetal monitoring was provided by both staff and mothers jointly. In the staff plus mother group, more often lateral tilt, intravenous fluid, spontaneous vaginal and vacuum assisted delivery and less often caesarean sections were undertaken even when fetal distress alone was an indication for operative delivery at term pregnancy. Conclusion Involvement of women may help to make delivery safer for mothers as complications may be recognized earlier and appropriately treated. Overall, the data shows that despite the full-scale war in Ukraine, it remained possible for high quality perinatal health care to continue.
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spelling doaj-art-f75ef264fb2f4e25b555b7a0d874e67d2025-02-02T12:27:20ZengBMCConflict and Health1752-15052025-02-0119111410.1186/s13031-025-00644-6A descriptive analysis of a medical humanitarian aid initiative for quality perinatal management in war-torn UkraineIryna Mogilevkina0Dmytro Dobryanskyy1Rhona MacDonald2Diane Watson3David Southall4Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study, Department of Womens’ and Childrens’ Health, Uppsala UniversityDepartment of Pediatrics No. 2, Danylo Halytsky Lviv National Medical UniversityMaternal and Childhealth Advocacy InternationalMaternal and Childhealth Advocacy InternationalMaternal and Childhealth Advocacy InternationalAbstract Background Russian’s invasion of Ukraine has seriously disrupted perinatal care. In a humanitarian initiative, emergency obstetric and neonatal equipment and drugs were provided by Maternal and Childhealth Advocacy International and distributed by Ukrainian partners to a selected 61 maternity hospitals throughout Ukraine. The programme included engaging mothers in labour to undertake fetal heart rate monitoring using a battery operated, portable, doppler ultrasound probe. This paper describes some characteristics of participants and analyses differences in fetal distress management and maternal / neonatal outcomes following different approaches to fetal health surveillance. Methods Data from 28,808 births were collected in specially developed database which contained information on maternal characteristics, course of pregnancy and childbirth, maternal and neonatal outcomes and donated drugs and equipment used. After informed consent, mothers (n = 13735) who agreed to use in labour fetal self-monitoring in addition to standard intrapartum fetal health surveillance, monitored and recorded fetal heart rate changes on a “contraction-by-contraction” basis into a special form. Data on maternal experience with self-monitoring were collected. Cases where fetal heart rate changes were identified (n = 1434) were extracted and analysed for differences in case management and maternal and neonatal outcomes in different approaches: joint monitoring (mother plus staff, n = 901) vs. staff only monitoring (n = 533) and different actors in case of joint monitoring (mothers, n = 512, vs. staff, n = 389). Results Vacuum assisted delivery was utilised in only < 2% cases. Caesarean section rate was 27%. Mothers reported their experience with self-monitoring as great or good in 79%. Preterm deliveries were less frequent where fetal monitoring was provided by both staff and mothers jointly. In the staff plus mother group, more often lateral tilt, intravenous fluid, spontaneous vaginal and vacuum assisted delivery and less often caesarean sections were undertaken even when fetal distress alone was an indication for operative delivery at term pregnancy. Conclusion Involvement of women may help to make delivery safer for mothers as complications may be recognized earlier and appropriately treated. Overall, the data shows that despite the full-scale war in Ukraine, it remained possible for high quality perinatal health care to continue.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13031-025-00644-6Ukraine warHumanitarian aidFetal heart rate monitoring by mothersManagement of fetal distress
spellingShingle Iryna Mogilevkina
Dmytro Dobryanskyy
Rhona MacDonald
Diane Watson
David Southall
A descriptive analysis of a medical humanitarian aid initiative for quality perinatal management in war-torn Ukraine
Conflict and Health
Ukraine war
Humanitarian aid
Fetal heart rate monitoring by mothers
Management of fetal distress
title A descriptive analysis of a medical humanitarian aid initiative for quality perinatal management in war-torn Ukraine
title_full A descriptive analysis of a medical humanitarian aid initiative for quality perinatal management in war-torn Ukraine
title_fullStr A descriptive analysis of a medical humanitarian aid initiative for quality perinatal management in war-torn Ukraine
title_full_unstemmed A descriptive analysis of a medical humanitarian aid initiative for quality perinatal management in war-torn Ukraine
title_short A descriptive analysis of a medical humanitarian aid initiative for quality perinatal management in war-torn Ukraine
title_sort descriptive analysis of a medical humanitarian aid initiative for quality perinatal management in war torn ukraine
topic Ukraine war
Humanitarian aid
Fetal heart rate monitoring by mothers
Management of fetal distress
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13031-025-00644-6
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