Implementation fidelity of a multisite maternity waiting homes programme in rural Zambia: application of the conceptual framework for implementation fidelity to a complex, hybrid-design study
Thandiwe Ngoma, Jeanette L Kaiser, Allison J Morgan, Taryn Vian, Davidson H Hamer, Peter C Rockers, Viviane Sakanga, Godfrey Biemba, Misheck Bwalya, Nancy A Scott

TL;DR
This study evaluates how well maternity waiting homes in rural Zambia followed their intended design, finding that most sites adhered well but some areas like lighting and governance visibility needed improvement.
Contribution
The study applies a conceptual framework to assess implementation fidelity of maternity waiting homes in rural Zambia, bridging an evidence-practice gap in global health.
Findings
70% of sites showed high adherence to the Core MWH Model components.
MWH occupancy rate was lower than the target, and some user experience elements were suboptimal.
Users reported high satisfaction despite some implementation gaps.
Abstract
Implementation fidelity measures are critical for understanding complex interventions. Though maternity waiting homes (MWHs) are recommended by the WHO and have been used to help pregnant women access health facilities for decades, a gap exists regarding fidelity studies on MWHs. To better understand intervention outcomes results, we assessed the fidelity of implementation of an improved Core MWH Model in 10 facilities in rural Zambia. We analysed indicators for fidelity employing a widely used conceptual framework. We compared performance from October 2016 to July 2018 to goals set out during intervention design. The Core MWH Model consists of three pillars—infrastructure, policies and linkages to care—each designed to be culturally appropriate and responsive to community standards for safety and comfort. 70% of sites exhibited high adherence to the Core MWH Model components. User…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Maternal and Child Health · Poverty, Education, and Child Welfare · Child Nutrition and Water Access
