Providing education and tools increases nurses’ and midwives’ assessment for puerperal sepsis in a regional referral hospital in South Western Uganda
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Date
2022
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Background: Puerperal sepsis causes at least 75,000 maternal deaths every year, mostly in low-income countries.
Early identification of sepsis and initiation of sepsis care bundles are crucial the survival of patients. Education
about the surviving sepsis campaign guidelines is critical for nurses to understand the indicators for sepsis that
inform accurate screening and initiation of life-saving interventions. We sought to establish the effect of an
education intervention and implementation of screening tools on maternal sepsis screening in a Regional Referral
hospital in South Western Uganda.
Methods: A pretest–posttest quasi-experimental study design was employed to determine the change in the level
of knowledge regarding sepsis among a purposively selected sample of 16 midwives and 2 intern nurses.
Translation of knowledge to practice was determined by pre-intervention retrospective chart review and post intervention evaluation of the maternal sepsis screening.
The statistically significant change in knowledge and practice following the educational intervention was
determined by Paired t-tests and Chi-square tests using SPSS version 16.
Results: There was an improvement in knowledge scores post the educational intervention from a mean score of
5.78 to 7.13. There was a statistically significant difference in the documentation of vital signs observed between
the retrospective chart review and the screening done after the education intervention.
Conclusion: This study demonstrated that the provision of education and sepsis screening tools created an in cremental improvement in puerperal sepsis screening which is an important step toward reducing maternal
mortality.
Description
Providing education and tools increases nurses’ and midwives’ assessment
for puerperal sepsis in a regional referral hospital in South Western Uganda
Keywords
Maternal Sepsis, Puerperal sepsis. Sepsis, Sepsis bundles, Sepsis Screening, Surviving Sepsis Campaign
Citation
www.elsevier.com/locate/ijans