PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Avan, Bilal Iqbal AU - Hameed, Waqas AU - Khan, Bushra AU - Asim, Muhammad AU - Saleem, Sarah AU - Siddiqi, Sameen TI - Understanding the Mechanisms of Change in the Supportive and Respectful Maternity Care Intervention in Sindh, Pakistan: Provider Perspectives AID - 10.9745/GHSP-D-23-00216 DP - 2023 Dec 22 TA - Global Health: Science and Practice PG - e2300216 VI - 11 IP - 6 4099 - http://www.ghspjournal.org/content/11/6/e2300216.short 4100 - http://www.ghspjournal.org/content/11/6/e2300216.full SO - GLOB HEALTH SCI PRACT2023 Dec 22; 11 AB - Key FindingsWe identified several underlying mechanisms that were responsible for changes in providing supportive and respectful maternity care (S-RMC): Strengthening providers' capacity of RMC by replacing existing harmful practices with behaviors designed to provide respectful care and psychosocial support helped providers better understand women's needs and preferences and better engage with them.Revitalizing the notion of the maternity team to include all clinical and nonclinical staff as having a role in providing personalized care and support improved the continuity of care and staff communication.Soliciting women's feedback about their birthing experience and embedding S-RMC in the existing performance review mechanism helped providers understand gaps and enabled them to support each other in implementing corrective actions.Key ImplicationsBeyond assessing the effectiveness of an intervention that promotes respectful maternity care and a positive birthing experience, understanding the mechanisms of change is vital to inform the scale-up strategy for embedding S-RMC components within the health system.Such evidence should be complemented by large-scale research on S-RMC effectiveness and competencies to enable its responsiveness to needs in diverse settings.Introduction:We conducted this qualitative investigation to explore the mechanisms of change in providing respectful care resulting from the supportive and respectful maternity care intervention (S-RMC) in Sindh, Pakistan.Methods:We applied the principles of realist evaluation methodology with a descriptive explanatory research design. We conducted in-depth interviews with 36 maternity care providers at secondary-level public health facilities where S-RMC was implemented for 6 months. The S-RMC broad components included capacity-building of maternity teams and systemic changes for improvements in governance and accountability within public health facilities. Data were analyzed using a deductive content analysis approach.Results:We identified mechanisms of change, categorized by the S-RMC components: (1) S-RMC training: insight into women's feelings and rights, realization of the value that nonclinical staff can play, understanding of team coordination, orientation in psychosocial components of maternity care; (2) assessment of women's psychosocial vulnerabilities: identification of women's differential needs beyond routine care to provide woman-centered care; (3) psychosocial support: effective engagement with women and within maternity teams and the customization of woman- and companion-focused care; (4) care coordination: improved coordination among clinical and nonclinical staff to provide personalized care and psychosocial support and proper handover to ensure continuity of care; (5) assessment of quality of care: identification of service gaps from women's feedback; and (6) performance review and accountability: monthly performance review meetings to establish team member communication, systematic awareness of the maternity team's performance and challenges, and implementation of collective corrective actions.Conclusion:Our findings pointed to S-RMC working along multiple pathways—and concertedly with various health system components—to enable positive processes and behavioral change in maternity teams.