Objectives: To improve maternal health services in rural
areas, the Palestinian Ministry of Health launched a midwifeled
continuity model in the West Bank in 2013. Midwives
were deployed weekly from governmental hospitals to
provide antenatal and postnatal care in rural clinics. We
studied the intervention’s impact on use and quality indicators
of maternal services after 2 years’ experience.
Design: A non-randomised intervention design was
chosen. The study was based on registry data only
available at cluster level, 2 years before (2011 and 2012)
and 2 years after (2014 and 2015) the intervention.
Setting: All 53 primary healthcare clinics in Nablus and
Jericho regions were stratified for inclusion.
Primary and secondary outcomes: Primary outcome
was number of antenatal visits. Important secondary
outcomes were number of referrals to specialist care and
number of postnatal home visits. Differences in changes
within the two groups before and after the intervention
were compared by using mixed effect models.
Results: 14 intervention clinics and 25 control clinics were
included. Number of antenatal visits increased by 1.16 per
woman in the intervention clinics, while declined by 0.39 in
the control clinics, giving a statistically significant difference
in change of 1.55 visits (95% CI 0.90 to 2.21). A statistically
significant difference in number of referrals was observed
between the groups, giving a ratio of rate ratios of 3.65
(2.78–4.78) as number of referrals increased by a rate ratio
of 3.87 in the intervention group, while in the control the rate
ratio was only 1.06. Home visits increased substantially in
the intervention group but decreased in the control group,
giving a ratio of RR 97.65 (45.20 - 210.96)
Conclusion: The Palestinian midwife-led continuity model
improved use and some quality indicators of maternal
services. More research should be done to investigate if the
model influenced individual health outcomes and satisfaction
with care.