To understand stillbirth prioritization in Uganda, reference is first made to global events. Table 2 shows that stillbirths did not receive much global recognition before 2005. Earlier national-level efforts were mostly led by bereaved parents organizing themselves to bring the issue of stillbirths to the fore[29]. Specifically, International Stillbirth Alliance (ISA) started in the USA in 2003 by three mothers to stillborn babies aimed to push for improvements in bereavement care, prevention research, and clinical care which has grown into a global movement[30]. The publication of the count-down reports that reflected it as a missing maternal and child health indicator amplified these efforts [31]. Global momentum to draw attention to this omission was building alongside preterm birth and neonatal health and during 2009 a prematurity and stillbirth conference was held where participants designed a roadmap to address the issue[32]. Subsequent initiatives led to the publication of the Lancet stillbirth series in 2011[2] and its inclusion in the countdown report to raise global visibility and call to action[33]. National efforts to prioritize stillbirth reduction were not new to the health systems strategies but rather only received a boost from these global campaigns. With time, they were reflected in the Annual Health Sector performance reports with some interventions to reduce stillbirths as part of program components in maternal and newborn projects. Later, stillbirth reduction strategies were included in the national guidelines.
Table 2 Global key events and timelines
Transnational influence
Norm promotion
A key factor for transnational influence was the promotion of norms critical for addressing a public health challenge. Initially excluded as one of the indicators for tracking under the MDGs, stillbirth came to the fore while preparing the report for the countdown to the MDG targets in 2015[33]. The report was intended to act as an accountability measure to keep the MDG pace while recognizing achievements[12] wherein the 2010 countdown report reflected stillbirth as one of the indicators for tracking. The global estimate of stillbirth was approximately 18.9 per 1000 total births in 2009 translating to 2.64 million stillbirths worldwide [13]. Global campaigns held strong views that the burden of stillbirth was unacceptably high, receiving less attention from the health systems, negative cultural practices characterized by secret burial practices[11, 16] and yet many of the cases were largely preventable [33]. A call to policymakers and health systems managers in all countries was to pay attention to this problem by implementing proven low-cost interventions to address the same while global actors were called upon to increase global visibility and dedicate resources especially in regions with the highest-burden [10]. A Global Alliance to Prevent Prematurity and Stillbirth (GAPPS) conference held in May 2009 in Seattle [32] set an objective of developing a roadmap for global action. At the same time, the International Stillbirth Alliance (ISA) earlier started in 2003 by bereaved parents in the USA was expanding with a global influence. They drew attention to the problem while forming alliances with other national-level associations with shared objectives [29].
The 2011 Lancet stillbirth series was a call to action which adopted a mix of advocacy and hard data to promote normative consensus and was estimated to have reached 1 billion people in coverage[4, 34]. It drew attention to the invisibility of stillbirths from the global statistics and at the family level with secret bereavement rituals [11] while highlighting the potential of available low-cost interventions to address neonatal mortality and stillbirth [3]. The 2011 Lancet series was an effective tool for global advocacy[9] which called for the prioritization of stillbirth reduction by at least half of the 2009 baseline of 18.9 per 1000 total births by 2020, increase investment in stillbirth research while improving data systems[7]. The UN embraced the norm by endorsing the ENAP during the World Health Assembly in 2014, which operationalized the earlier United Nations (UN) Secretary General’s Global Strategy “Every Woman Every Child” through the World Health Assembly (WHA) resolution 67. Member countries committed to the strategy with explicit stillbirth reduction targets of 12/1000 by 2030 10/1000 total birth by 2035 especially for high burden countries [8]. Stillbirths were reflected as an indicator within the Maternal Newborn and Child Health [35]. Reflection of stillbirth as a vital indicator with deliberate actions to address the burden became a norm for the UN member countries to adopt. Uganda was one of the countdown priority countries and ENAP countries reporting country progress. ENAP targets were reflected in the Investment Case for the Sharpened Plan[36], the Health Sector Development Plan (HSDP) [14]. Besides, it was reported annually as an efficiency and quality of care indicator in the Annual Health Sector Performance Report (APHSR) [17]. Details are reflected in Table 2 below;
Resource provision
Technical and financial resources are critical for the political prioritization of public health problems. For stillbirths, political prioritization was enhanced by the increased funding for maternal and child health with interventions having a neonatal health component. Uganda is a recipient of numerous grants supporting projects that have generated evidence to address stillbirths. As one of the pilot countries for the Saving Mothers Giving Life project [37, 38]that piloted the use of the BABIES Matrix, the evidence-informed revisions to the national Maternal and Perinatal Death Surveillance and Responses (MPDSR) guidelines[39]. It streamlined the audit of perinatal death and helped in improving the classification of stillbirth as well as informing appropriate interventions. This was re-echoed by a national-level key informant that worked closely in generating and disseminating this evidence below;
Well [the] Ministry is spearheading along with implementing development partners to see that they tighten up on guidelines first of all; …. and there is also an aspect on quality improvement that the team focuses on and maybe I will just cite one example that we fronted to the Ministry of Health, it is called The Babies Matrix which is a quality improvement tool. It is a very simple tool for one to use both at the facility and even at the community level that focuses just on birth weight and age at death. So if you are able to collect that data you are able to determine the different categories of newborn deaths both pre-discharged and also those who died at the intrapartum; … and to know the various interventions to target. So those are the things that were fronted by the project and we believe through the continued technical working groups that are happening at the Ministry it is something that would be taken to scale.(KII_NLI019).
The World Bank’s support through the Global Financing Facility has one of its aims to reduce 21 million stillbirths in high burden countries by 2030[40]. Through this support, Uganda is implementing an integrated health systems approach that has fast-tracked implementation of interventions to address stillbirths[17] in line with the first MCH conference-2015 statement calling for the implementation of scalable programs beyond pilots [41]. Other components under this support include improvements in data capturing through support for a community arm and civic registration systems, operationalize the ENAP strategic objective to count every newborn through investing in birth and death registration[42]. A respondent thus noted;
we have accessed a loan (WB) whereby it has 3 components and one is system strengthening and the other is result-based financing at least to finance health care delivery through the system and the 3rd component is through National Identification and Registration Authority (NIRA). We have birth and death registration. So Ministry of Health is working together with NIRA to develop the tools, to build a system that can capture the data and deaths and also the aspects on macerated deaths, some few reasons why that death happened for quality so that we have a system of notifying the maternal deaths and the perinatal deaths and also we shall go into another arm of notification which is the verbal autopsy. The biggest deaths of mothers are in communities and this system(DHIS2) cannot capture that but now with NIRA, we shall have a community arm through maybe the VHTs, maybe it could be a community system to capture them and they are notified to the districts to the NIRA office and then we capture that. It will improve on our notification and registration(KII_NLI007).
International organizations and funders also contributed resources specifically towards fast-tracking the policy-making processes to streamline policies responsive to stillbirths as echoed by a respondent.
Currently, UNICEF is sponsoring the Newborn Steering Committee meetings to see that the policies on newborns are going ahead. They work with UNFPA that is really improving maternal mortality rate. They are working with different [partners]; like Save the Children, USAID to see that some of these policies are implemented. I think they are trying their level best, and they are also working with different associations like AOGU, UPA and WHO as well.
(KII_NLI016)
Domestic advocacy
Policy community cohesion
National efforts to enhance stillbirths as a political priority are partly attributed to a cohesive policy community converging around the Maternal and Child Health-Technical Working Group (MCH-TWG) known as the MCH cluster. Its diverse composition included researchers, professional associations, practitioners, implementing partners, policy implementers, and policy makers among others. The group sifts through the evidence for policy consideration[39] and its members have previously supported moves for resource mobilization [43]. The level of organization and proximity to decision-making worked in favor of promoting stillbirth prioritization. Commenting about the work of this team, a respondent thus noted;
we have what we call the RMNCH [cluster]; the technical working group which meets every month and now there is a bigger forum which brings on board other multi-sector practitioners who meet on a quarterly basis. So these two I think have added a lot of value because when we meet we share experiences and we try to identify the bottlenecks and solutions. I think that has helped and of course there is also the Health Assembly which is held once a year that brings together even practitioners from the District. So all these are forums that have harnessed the synergies of civil society, private practitioners to come together and find ways of improving this, but the Assembly also gives an opportunity to citizens to speak and say what they think.(KII_NLI013).
The ability to mobilize members and vet on issues where evidence is synthesized before recommending policy actions was mentioned as one of its strengths. A respondent recalled an incident where this technical working group vetoed against a guideline which was being pushed without their involvement and other stakeholders in a participatory manner.
they call stake holders from the Regional Referral Hospitals to come and input into the policy formulation or guidelines making [process] except that recently the SRH guideline we were not happy about the involvement because you don’t get a Consultant to revise a guideline which is going to affect the whole country no wonder it was rejected.(KII_NLI009).
The diversity of the MCH cluster meant that they hold diverse forms of power such as knowledge, fiscal and political which is crucial in influencing the agenda and framing of the stillbirth issues in the country. Unique to the ongoing monitoring of policy implementation was the feedback loop linking subnational and national policymakers such as the Parliament of Uganda for up-to-date information on policy implications of the strategies implemented. Commenting on this relationship, a respondent observed;
We have quarterly meetings with stakeholders at the districts and we share the data and now on the quarterly basis, we visit the parliament to brief it[them] on issues of maternal newborn to lobby for resources, lobby for attention which is a good platform.
(KII_NLI007)
Policy entrepreneurs
Policy entrepreneurs have been critical in the national MCH agenda particularly newborn survival contributing through the MCH cluster and global collaborators on research and actively involved in global stillbirth working groups. The professional bodies particularly the Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Uganda (AOGU) and Uganda pediatrics Association (UPA) were part of the strategic partnerships offering technical support to project implementation and policy. An Assistant Commissioner within the child health division of the Ministry of Health was designated as the national focal point officer for newborns to track country progress towards ENAP targets including stillbirth reduction[44]. The leader of the Centre of Excellence for Maternal and Newborn Health Research at Makerere University is a newborn health researcher who spearheaded the first Maternal and Newborn Health Conference in Uganda in 2015. As part of global stillbirth coalitions, he is involved in both global and national level advocacy and contribution to setting newborn research priorities [45]. Recognizing this contribution, a respondent thus noted;
Maybe I start from the newborn committee at the Ministry and the School of Public Health; ……. doing his things in project mode but at least communicates and passes on the information and the evidence to the Ministry hoping that they would catch fire and continue.
(KII_NLI007)
Credible indicators
National level stillbirth indicators were for long masked within perinatal mortality in the routine data. The sharpened plan relied on data from the Uganda Demographic and Health Survey (UDHS) 2011 to make a case for the national stillbirth burden. However, it was also reported under the perinatal mortality data to reflect the hidden burden. At the household, community, and facility level, the burden and effects of stillbirth were a felt problem. The lack of reliable stillbirth data triggered national efforts to address the issue. In response, the Ministry of Health first migrated to the DHIS2 in 2012/13 and by 2015, the country had a stillbirth rate of 21 per 1,000 total births[46]. It was later followed up with the inclusion of stillbirth as a notifiable condition captured through the surveillance systems and also as an indicator for monitoring district and health facility performance captured through the routine data systems. The focus was on responding to facility-based fresh stillbirths while interventions during antenatal care continued to address macerated stillbirth. Commenting on this approach, a respondent noted that whereas attention was paid to both, the focus was more on fresh stillbirths;
They capture data for both macerated and FSBs but you know a fresh stillbirth can be easily more avoidable than an MSB. The factors are there like a mother comes and then you delay to operate, so all those things and they can be easily addressed. Of course for macerated stillbirths, we need to improve our quality of antenatal care which also still bits; much as mothers attend antenatal you may find that our antenatal care is still not quality.
(KII_NLI016)
Commenting on the desire to improve quality of care as the rationale for prioritizing fresh stillbirths, another respondent thus noted;
we are saying that the 3rd delay is dominating and If all the facilities are providing quality, we will be able to provide safe obstetric care so that we reduce on the fresh stillbirths.
(KII_NLI008)
It was again echoed that the need to find the cause and identify possible interventions to address the problem was another reason for prioritizing fresh stillbirths;
Because fresh is easy to prevent and you know fresh it has just died. So you want to quickly know what is it that has caused this baby to die, and how can we address this gap which caused the baby to die. The macerated is in antenatal, the woman is at home and you know that is a bit (.) these [fresh births] are easier to address than the macerated. (KII_NLI009).
The 3rd Health Sector Development Plan (HSDP) translated both the ENAP and the UN Global strategy Every Woman Every Child into national policies[14] where facility-based fresh stillbirth reduction target as a health sector performance indicator was set at 11/1000 by 2020 using the 2013 baseline prevalence of 16/1000. This was in line with the ENAP national stillbirth reduction target of 12 or less by 2030 and 10 or less by 2035 if global stillbirth reduction targets were to be achieved[42]. Ever since performance has exceeded target year on and by 2018/19 the rate stood at 9/1000 above the HSDP target of 12/1000[17] with stillbirth consistently performing ahead of other indicators used for computing the district annual health performance (Fig. 1).
From 2016 stillbirths were included among the indicators for measuring and comparing health performance across districts. At the health facility level, it is a measure of the quality of care during antenatal care for macerated stillbirths and delivery services for fresh stillbirths[17]. For the national referral hospital, it is considered an indicator for measuring efficiency as viewed from inputs against outputs. Commenting on the role of documentation about facilitating reflections to devise strategies for improvement, a respondent thus noted;
and then, of course, the issue of documentation, the HMIS but also locally be able to look at their own data in the Districts and identify what the problem is and of course the way they are working towards to locally address it…… I have been looking at stillbirths I would say that one of the things which came through with HMIS which was actually very important that we collect proper data right from the grass roots to the Ministry where it is analyzed and that actually shows where the problem is and once you have the problem then they identify what should be done to actually prevent the problem you see at the end.
(KII_NLI017)
Focusing events
At the global level, the GAPPS conference in Seattle with major funders present was one of such focusing events to draw attention towards addressing stillbirths and come up with a roadmap[32]. The launch of the Global strategy Every Woman Every Child and the subsequent inclusion of stillbirths in the countdown reports [33] were the other focusing events with the turning point being the publication of the 2011 stillbirth Lancet series: call to action[2]. Another stillbirth Lancet series published in 2016 ending preventable stillbirth was also a key focusing event[22]. It drew attention to the potential of available low-cost interventions to address stillbirth risk factors[4]. The launch of the ENAP and its adoption during the World Health Assembly the same year drew political commitment from 194 member countries to address the problem. Consequently, some of the key targets and elements from ENAP were reflected in national guidelines such as the Health Sector Development Plan and the Sharpened Plan. A respondent thus noted;
one of the big ones is the Sharpened plan. Having written this Sharpened plan, the next level will be the implementation. The implementation of the sharpened plan is actually working through the investment case. So investment case I think is an important area that is trying to translate the policy.
(KII_NLI004)
The first Maternal and Newborn Health conference held in 2015 with support from Save the Children had an objective of linking the country’s ENAP outcomes, global research, and advocacy into action to support the implementation of national policies and guidelines was another such focusing event. The conference highlighted the national stillbirth burden and drew the attention of stakeholders towards doing things differently in the post MDG[41]. Other funding for newborn health interventions provided evidence for the policy as well as systems strengthening to address stillbirth. Among these was the World Bank’s launch of the Business plan for maternal and child health in 2015 is yet another focusing event for political prioritization of stillbirth in Uganda[40]. Its implementation in the country has seen fast-tracking of interventions at the subnational level which will see an implementation of activities like perinatal death audits and improving civic registration systems among others. A chronology of key events at the national level are presented in Table 3 below;
Table 3 Key events for national stillbirth prioritization Clear policy alternatives
Addressing stillbirths through attention to health systems strengthening coincided with government efforts towards the same in response to maternal and child mortality reduction. Global strategies highlighted in the 2011 Lancet Stillbirth series[7, 9] and the Every Newborn Action Plan 2014[8, 42, 47] observed the need for health systems strengthening through improved quality of services during delivery through Basic and Comprehensive Emergency Obstetric care due to its highest effect on stillbirths[10]. National strategies for achieving the MDG targets witnessed some interventions rolled out to improve emergency obstetric care services at the subnational level. HCIVs were to be headed by Medical Doctors specifically to deliver emergency obstetric care among other services[48], prioritization of training, and recruitment of rare cadres at HCIV such as anesthesiologists. Other initiatives included increased training and deployment of midwives at HCII to offer outpatient maternal health services and improving HCIII to provide inpatient maternal health services and Basic Emergency Obstetric Care among others[48].
The MoH Health systems strengthening plans were accelerated by the new PEPFAR change of strategy to scale down direct donor support announced by the US government in 2012 [49]. PEPFAR the lead financer for HIV response was switching from emergency response to targeted sustainable approach with greater country ownership [50] under the PEPFAR 3.0 (2013–2019) strategy aiming to maximize evidence-based intervention through the impact of investment by providing technical support. Part of the transition process included the targeting of resources to high burden regions through geographical pivoting [51] where facilities were prepared to receive that support from the government. During 2012/2013 FY the government spent 7.4 % of the annual budget towards financing health systems strengthening [52]. These would later turn out to be the same interventions to improve maternal health services thereby prevent stillbirth, especially at the facility level. The emphasis for improved care during ANC received attention right from the MDG era with interventions for early reporting for the first antenatal care visit and increase completion rates of the recommended four visits. Interventions like focused antenatal care (FANC), male involvement in birth preparedness, addressing the distance to health facilities, provision of MAMA kits for pregnant mothers, the Village Health Team strategy. Although global stillbirth campaigns recommended improvement in the delivery of advanced antenatal care services, they cautioned that it would come at a higher cost, and yet the call was for the implementation of interventions that suited the health systems capacity to deliver the same. This resonated well with another recommendation calling for delivery of linked services.
National political environment
Political transition
A major political transition that shaped the acceptance and integration of global stillbirth recommendations into national priorities was the decentralization system of service delivery[48, 53]. Under the arrangement, decision-making responsibilities were delegated at the subnational level with a focal person in charge of maternal and child health services at every district. Although these processes had happened sometime back, they worked to anchor interventions responding to stillbirth at the subnational level. Unique to the health sector, another managerial layer below the district and headquartered at HCIV known as the Health Sub-district introduced to improve management at the subnational level[53]. Infrastructural improvements have seen renovations and upgrading of functional maternity wards and operational theatres to provide Comprehensive Emergency Obstetric Care (CEmONIC) while providing mentorship and supervision for lower-level facilities. It is from this structure that national efforts to operationalize the global campaign strategy of improving access to quality maternal health services are being delivered.
Health in Uganda particularly the poor state of maternal and child health services has been a sensitive political issue attracting attention during political sentiments which have previously led to the scrapping of user fees and salary enhancement for health workers[53]. The national commitment to improving maternal health services stems from being a signatory to global agreements about improving maternal health such as the MDGs and Sustainable development Goals [54, 55]. Reproductive health services are highlighted as part of the tracer indicator for monitoring the country’s progress towards Universal Health Coverage (UHC) targets[56]. The country’s engagement of the private sector improved coverage of MCH service delivery through the private sector and was operationalized when Uganda rolled out the health financing strategy (2016/2025) which introduced reforms in pursuit of health sector progress towards UHC. It laid the foundation for Results-Based Financing the main financing mechanism for the GFF with a strong component of reimbursing facilities for outputs attained including perinatal death reviews[40]. This project has a strong component of interventions responding to stillbirth.
As a result, maternal health services face a web of interlocking accountability mechanisms comprising of the political, administrative, and technical. Within the district league table, SB was included as a performance indicator from 2016/17 meaning that leaders charged with accountability at that level have to monitor to ensure stillbirths don’t happen to improve district performance. Civil society organizations all exert accountability to ensure the delivery of quality maternal health services in the country. Previously Civil Society Organizations (CSO’s) have successfully lobbied Parliament to block the health budget if it didn’t address systemic health systems challenges leading to a reallocation of approximately $15 million to address health worker shortage. They have also used strategic litigation as a political tool to influence norms and steer processes towards social change aimed at pushing the government to be more accountable to maternal deaths[57].
Competing health priorities
Maternal and child health enjoys political attention due to the sensitivity of the indicators associated with it and the momentum built during the MDG era. Neonatal survival received global attention that trickled into national interventions. Grants supporting projects with neonatal components increased and this further catapulted neonatal survival within the donor community. The health sector’s pursuit of health systems strengthening strategy to build capacity has seen HCIVs equipped with functional theatres, recruitment of anesthesiologists, and laboratory technicians to support the delivery of CEmONIC. Elsewhere midwifery skills have been strengthened to deliver PMTCT and maternal health services and health facility data improvement through Continuous Quality Improvement. The outcome of which has seen innovative strategies such as integration of services within the Reproductive Maternal Newborn and Child Health (RMNCAH) continuum of care making maternal health one of the highly prioritized RMNCAH indicators. The district scorecard has stillbirth as one of the outcome indicators (Sharpened plan) while district performance in health is assessed based on selected indicators including stillbirth[17].