Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Lancet Glob Health. 2014 Mar;2(3):e165-73. doi: 10.1016/S2214-109X(14)70008-7. Epub 2014 Feb 27.
Neonatal mortality rates (NMRs) in countries of low and middle income have been only slowly decreasing; coverage of essential maternal and newborn health services needs to increase, particularly for disadvantaged populations. Our aim was to produce comparable estimates of changes in socioeconomic inequalities in NMR in the past two decades across these countries.
We used data from Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) for countries in which a survey was done in 2008 or later and one about 10 years previously. We measured absolute inequalities with the slope index of inequality and relative inequalities with the relative index of inequality. We used an asset-based wealth index and maternal education as measures of socioeconomic position and summarised inequality estimates for all included countries with random-effects meta-analysis.
24 low-income and middle-income countries were eligible for inclusion. In most countries, absolute and relative wealth-related and educational inequalities in NMR decreased between survey 1 and survey 2. In five countries (Cameroon, Nigeria, Malawi, Mozambique, and Uganda), the difference in NMR between the top and bottom of the wealth distribution was reduced by more than two neonatal deaths per 1000 livebirths per year. By contrast, wealth-related inequality increased by more than 1·5 neonatal deaths per 1000 livebirths per year in Ethiopia and Cambodia. Patterns of change in absolute and relative educational inequalities in NMR were similar to those of wealth-related NMR inequalities, although the size of educational inequalities tended to be slightly larger.
Socioeconomic inequality in NMR seems to have decreased in the past two decades in most countries of low and middle income. However, a substantial survival advantage remains for babies born into wealthier households with a high educational level, which should be considered in global efforts to further reduce NMR.
Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
中低收入国家的新生儿死亡率(neonatal mortality rates,NMR)一直下降缓慢,基本母婴和新生儿健康服务的覆盖率需要提高,尤其是对弱势群体。我们的目的是在过去二十年中,为这些国家提供可比的关于 NMR 中社会经济不平等变化的估计。
我们使用了 2008 年或之后及之前 10 年进行过调查的国家的人口与健康调查(Demographic and Health Surveys,DHS)的数据。我们使用不平等斜率指数衡量绝对不平等,使用相对不平等指数衡量相对不平等。我们使用基于资产的财富指数和产妇教育作为社会经济地位的衡量指标,并使用随机效应荟萃分析对所有纳入国家的不平等估计值进行总结。
24 个低收入和中等收入国家符合纳入条件。在大多数国家,NMR 的绝对和相对财富相关以及教育不平等状况在第一次和第二次调查之间有所下降。在五个国家(喀麦隆、尼日利亚、马拉维、莫桑比克和乌干达),财富分布顶端和底端的 NMR 差异每年减少了超过两个新生儿死亡。相比之下,埃塞俄比亚和柬埔寨的 NMR 与财富相关的不平等状况每年增加了超过 1.5 个新生儿死亡。NMR 中绝对和相对教育不平等状况的变化模式与财富相关的 NMR 不平等状况相似,尽管教育不平等的规模略大。
在过去二十年中,大多数中低收入国家的 NMR 社会经济不平等状况似乎有所下降。然而,在拥有高教育水平的富裕家庭中出生的婴儿仍然存在着显著的生存优势,这应该在全球进一步降低 NMR 的努力中得到考虑。
加拿大卫生研究院。