Effectiveness of Ng’adakarin Bamocha model in improving access to ante-natal and delivery services among nomadic pastoralist communities of Turkana West and Turkana North Sub-Counties of Kenya

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Effectiveness of Ng’adakarin Bamocha model in improving access to ante-natal and delivery services among nomadic pastoralist communities of Turkana West and Turkana North Sub-Counties of Kenya

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dc.contributor.author Jillo, Ali Jillo
dc.contributor.author Ofware, Peter Obonyo
dc.contributor.author Njuguna, Susan
dc.contributor.author Mwaura-Tenambergen, Wanja
dc.date.accessioned 2019-09-06T09:30:20Z
dc.date.available 2019-09-06T09:30:20Z
dc.date.issued 2015-04-23
dc.identifier.citation Effectiveness of Ng’adakarin Bamocha model in improving access to ante-natal and delivery services among nomadic pastoralist communities of Turkana West and Turkana North Sub-Counties of Kenya.Jillo, Ali Jillo (et..al)Pan African Medical Journal,2015 en_US
dc.identifier.issn 3 doi:10.11604/pamj.2015.20.403.4896
dc.identifier.uri http://repository.daystar.ac.ke/xmlui/handle/123456789/2966
dc.description.abstract Introduction: Access to maternal and child health care services among the nomadic pastoralists community in Kenya and African continent in general is unacceptably low. In Turkana, only 18.1% of the women had seen a nurse or a midwife for antenatal care during pregnancy while only 1.3% of pregnant women reported delivery at health facilities in 2005. Ng’adakarin BAMOCHA model, based on migratory routes of the Turkana pastoralists and container clinics was adopted in 2007 to improve access to maternal and child health services by the nomads. Methods: A crosssectional study design was used to establish the effectiveness of Ng’adakarin BAMOCHA model on accessibility and uptake of ante-natal care and delivery services. A total of 360 households and 400 households were interviewed for pre-intervention and post-intervention respectively. The study compared the pre-intervention and post-intervention findings. Structured questionnaires and focus group discussion were used for data collection. Results: There was no improvement in the fourth ante-natal care visits between pre-intervention and post-intervention groups at 119(51.5%) and 111(41.9%) respectively (p<0.05). Knowledge of the community on the importance of ANC visits improved from 60%-72% with significance level of p<0.05. There was a significant increase 6%-17% of deliveries under a skilled health worker (p<0.05). TBA assisted deliveries increased from 7.5%- 20.2% with a p<0.05.There was significant reduction in home deliveries from 89.5%-79.5% with a p<0.05. Conclusion: The Ng’adakarin Bamocha model had a positive effect on the improving maternal health care among the nomadic pastoralist community in Turkana. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Pan African Medical Journal en_US
dc.subject Turkana en_US
dc.subject Ng´adakarin Bamocha en_US
dc.subject Nomads en_US
dc.subject Pastoralist en_US
dc.subject Skilled delivery services en_US
dc.subject Health facility delivery en_US
dc.subject Traditional birth attendants en_US
dc.subject Container clinics en_US
dc.title Effectiveness of Ng’adakarin Bamocha model in improving access to ante-natal and delivery services among nomadic pastoralist communities of Turkana West and Turkana North Sub-Counties of Kenya en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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