Knowledge and Practice of Respectful Maternity Care among Labour Ward Staff: A Closed-Loop Clinical Audit at a District-Level Hospital in Sri Lanka

M. M. Mazahima

Base Hospital Eravur, Sri Lanka.

A. Annesley *

Base Hospital Mutur, Sri Lanka.

S. Mathurahan

Ministry of Health, Colombo, Sri Lanka.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Aims: To assess baseline knowledge, attitudes, and self-reported practices related to Respectful Maternity Care (RMC) among maternity ward staff at Base Hospital, Eravur, Sri Lanka, and to evaluate improvement following targeted quality improvement interventions, thereby completing a closed-loop clinical audit cycle.

Study Design: Closed-loop clinical audit comprising a baseline audit and a re-audit using identical instruments.

Place and Duration of Study: Maternity ward and labour room, Base Hospital, Eravur, Sri Lanka. Baseline audit conducted in June 2025; re-audit conducted in September 2025.

Methodology: A structured, self-administered, anonymous questionnaire was administered to all doctors, nurses, and midwives working in the maternity unit (n = 20 per cycle). The questionnaire assessed demographic details, knowledge of RMC principles, and attitudes and self-reported practices. Responses were scored quantitatively (maximum 30 marks per participant). Performance was categorised as adequate (≥80%), partially adequate (60–79%), or inadequate (<60%). Audit standards were benchmarked at ≥90% compliance, aligned with the WHO Respectful Maternity Care framework.

Results: At baseline, individual scores ranged from 43.3% to 70%; no participant achieved the adequate category (≥80%), 65% were partially adequate, and 35% scored below 60%, indicating significant gaps. Following targeted interventions including structured teaching sessions, display of RMC posters, supportive supervision, and introduction of physical privacy measures, re-audit data demonstrated marked improvement: mean score increased to 75.4%, 50% of participants achieved the adequate category (≥80%), 35% were partially adequate, and only 15% remained in the inadequate category. Increased compliance was demonstrated across all RMC domains.

Conclusion: Targeted quality improvement measures resulted in measurable improvement in knowledge, attitudes, and self-reported practices related to Respectful Maternity Care, demonstrating successful completion of a closed-loop clinical audit cycle. Continued reinforcement and periodic re-assessment are recommended to sustain and further consolidate these gains.

Keywords: Respectful maternity care, clinical audit, labour ward, knowledge assessment, quality improvement


How to Cite

Mazahima, M. M., A. Annesley, and S. Mathurahan. 2026. “Knowledge and Practice of Respectful Maternity Care Among Labour Ward Staff: A Closed-Loop Clinical Audit at a District-Level Hospital in Sri Lanka”. Asian Journal of Medical Principles and Clinical Practice 9 (1):421-30. https://doi.org/10.9734/ajmpcp/2026/v9i1412.

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