Dr Kumar (right) with local doctors, nurses and midwives |
Monash
doctors recently visited rural India, where they upskilled local health workers
to help prevent deaths associated with difficult births.
Monash
Health obstetrician Dr Arunaz Kumar and neonatologist Dr Atul Malhotra—who are
also Monash University senior lecturers—piloted the combined maternal and
neonatal simulation workshops in rural Punjab last month.
“Complications
associated with difficult obstetric and neonatal situations can be prevented in
rural India,” said Dr Kumar, who has extensive experience in leading interprofessional
simulation workshops both at Monash University and Monash Health.
Dr Malhotra (left) with local doctors, nurses and midwives |
“We used low
technology simulation equipment to educate community health workers, doctors
and nurses.”
The workshop
covered common child birth emergency scenarios including obstructed labour, postpartum
haemorrhage and perinatal asphyxia.
“Postpartum
haemorrhage and perinatal asphyxia are the leading causes of maternal and
neonatal mortality in the developing world,” said Dr Malhotra.
Drs Kumar
and Malhotra conducted three workshops over two days with the help of local
medical leaders and regional collaborator Assistant Professor Tarundeep Singh
from the School of Public Health, Post Graduate Institute of Medical Research,
Chandigarh.
Dr Malhotra
said around 70 participants attended the workshops, involving hands-on skills
training with the help of manikins.
“The
workshops incorporated discussion of various scenarios, and local resources and
knowledge was factored into patient management,” said Dr Malhotra.
“The staff
had never been exposed to simulation training before and loved the experience
of being able to practise child birth and neonatal resuscitation in a safe
environment.”
The pilot
work was supported by a grant from the Royal Australasian College of
Physicians. The team hopes to continue this training regularly and is seeking local
and international public and philanthropic funding to sustain the initiative.
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