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Non-Clinical Interventions to reduce overall cesarean sections

"last update: 8 February 2024"  

- Acknowledgements

The Egyptian Guideline Development Group gratefully acknowledge the contributions that many individuals and organizations have made to the development of this guideline.

The members of the Steering Group who managed the guideline development process were: Mohamed Hamed Salama, Hamdy Bakry Alqenawy, Asmaa Fahmy Kassem, Yasmeen Nashaat, Essam Eldin Abdelrehim, and Ashraf Fawzy Nabhan. Ashraf Nabhan coordinated the guideline development project and chaired the GDG.

We would also like to thank the following National advisers for their contributions: Mohamed Mourad Youssef.

We would also like to thank External Review Group members who provided valuable comments and suggestions to improve the guideline.

Funding for this guideline: None.

Acronyms and abbreviations

DECIDE

Developing and Evaluating Communication strategies to support Informed Decisions and practice based on Evidence

EtD

Evidence to Decision

GDG

Guideline Development Group

GRADE-ADOLPMENT

GRADE Evidence to Decision frameworks for adoption, adaptation, and de novo development of trustworthy recommendations

GRADE

Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation

GREAT

Guideline-driven, Research priorities, Evidence synthesis, Application of evidence and Transfer of knowledge

NTSV

Nulliparous women with a term, singleton baby in a vertex position

PICO

Population, Intervention, Comparator, Outcome

WHO

World Health Organization


General scope of the guideline

Title

Non-clinical interventions to reduce cesarean sections

Purpose

to reduce cesarean sections

Perspective

an individual patient, community

Target population

low-risk pregnancy

Key coexisting conditions

prior cesarean section should be considered when making recommendations

Setting

health care level providing labor and delivery services

Types of interventions

Preventive

Key stakeholders and users

obstetricians, nurses, general medical practitioners, managers of maternal and child health programs and public health policy-makers

Key resources to consider

need for adequate human resources, appropriate infrastructure, and supportive system changes (financial, legislative)

Key issues for implementation

Several barriers may hinder the effective implementation and scale-up of the recommendations in this guideline. These factors include behaviors of patients (women or families), the behavior of health-care professionals, to the organization of care, health service delivery or to financial arrangements.

Existing guideline that has been adapted

WHO recommendations non-clinical interventions to reduce unnecessary cesarean sections. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2018.