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- Maternal health - World Health Organization (WHO)
Maternal health refers to the health of women during pregnancy, childbirth and the postnatal period Each stage should be a positive experience, ensuring women and their babies reach their full potential for health and well-being
- Standards for maternal and neonatal care - World Health Organization (WHO)
The Standards for Maternal and Neonatal Care consists of a set of user-friendly leaflets that present World Health Organization (WHO) key recommendations on the delivery of maternal and neonatal care in health facilities, starting from the first level of care
- RESPECFUL MATERNITY CARE ORIENTATION PACKAGE for Health Care Providers
By the end of this session you will learn about the concept of respectful maternity care, current global and context-specific maternal health status Determinants of skilled birth attendants and contributing
- Pregnancy, Childbirth, Postpartum and Newborn Care - WHO
required is essential care during pregnancy,the assistance of a person with midwifery skills during childbirth and the immediate postpartum period,and a few critical interventions for the newborn during the first days of life It is against this background that we are proud to present the document Pregnancy,Childbirth,
- ENABLE THE CONTINUUM OF CARE - Partnership for Maternal, Newborn . . .
Evidence shows that an effective continuum of care, which includes intervention packages from pre-pregnancy through to childhood up to age 5, is thus essential to the well-being of this and the next generation, across all developing countries © UNICEF NYHQ2009-1973 Nesbitt
- Postnatal Care for Mothers and Newborns - World Health Organization (WHO)
Respectful maternity care is an essential part of postnatal care particularly in health facilities It promotes best practices (such as rooming in, unless separation is medically necessary), recognizes that women and their families should be fully
- A Network for Improving Quality of Care for Maternal, Newborn and Child . . .
quality care around the time of childbirth, to set benchmarks against which improvements can be measured, and to drive and monitor quality-of-care improvement The standards cover routine care and management of complications occurring for women and their babies during labour, childbirth and the early postnatal period, including those
- STANDARDS FOR IMPROVING QUALITY OF MATERNAL AND NEWBORN CARE IN HEALTH . . .
The framework contains eight domains of quality of care that should be assessed, improved and monitored within the health system The health system provides the structure for access to high-quality care in the two important, inter-linked dimensions of provision and experience of care
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