Brolin Ribacke Kim J, van Duinen Alex J, Nordenstedt Helena, Höijer Jonas, Molnes Ragnhild, Froseth Torunn Wigum, Koroma A P, Darj Elisabeth, Bolkan Håkon Angel, Ekström AnnaMia
Department of Public Health Sciences, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Department of Surgery, St Olav Hospital, Trondheim, Norway.
PLoS One. 2016 Feb 24;11(2):e0150080. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0150080. eCollection 2016.
As Sierra Leone celebrates the end of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) outbreak, we can begin to fully grasp its impact on already weak health systems. The EVD outbreak in West Africa forced many hospitals to close down or reduce their activity, either to prevent nosocomial transmission or because of staff shortages. The aim of this study is to assess the potential impact of EVD on nationwide access to obstetric care in Sierra Leone.
Community health officers collected weekly data between January 2014-May 2015 on in-hospital deliveries and caesarean sections (C-sections) from all open facilities (public, private for-profit and private non-profit sectors) offering emergency obstetrics in Sierra Leone. This was compared to official data of EVD cases per district. Logistic and Poisson regression analyses were used to compute risk and rate estimates. Nationwide, the number of in-hospital deliveries and C-sections decreased by over 20% during the EVD outbreak. The decline occurred early on in the EVD outbreak and was mainly attributable to the closing of private not-for-profit hospitals rather than government facilities. Due to difficulties in collecting data in the midst of an epidemic, limitations of this study include some missing data points.
Both the number of in-hospital deliveries and C-sections substantially declined shortly after the onset of the EVD outbreak. Since access to emergency obstetric care, like C-sections, is associated with decreased maternal mortality, many women are likely to have died due to the reduced access to appropriate care during childbirth. Future research on indirect health effects of health system breakdown should ideally be nationwide and continue also into the recovery phase. It is also important to understand the mechanisms behind the deterioration so that important health services can be reestablished.
随着塞拉利昂庆祝埃博拉病毒病(EVD)疫情结束,我们能够开始全面了解其对本就薄弱的卫生系统的影响。西非的埃博拉病毒病疫情迫使许多医院关闭或减少业务,要么是为了防止医院内传播,要么是由于人员短缺。本研究的目的是评估埃博拉病毒病对塞拉利昂全国范围内产科护理可及性的潜在影响。
社区卫生官员于2014年1月至2015年5月期间,每周收集塞拉利昂所有提供急诊产科服务的开放机构(公立、营利性私立和非营利性私立部门)的住院分娩和剖宫产数据。将这些数据与每个地区的埃博拉病毒病病例官方数据进行比较。使用逻辑回归和泊松回归分析来计算风险和率估计值。在全国范围内,埃博拉病毒病疫情期间住院分娩和剖宫产的数量减少了20%以上。这种下降在埃博拉病毒病疫情早期就已出现,主要归因于非营利性私立医院的关闭,而非政府设施。由于在疫情期间收集数据存在困难,本研究的局限性包括一些数据点缺失。
埃博拉病毒病疫情爆发后不久,住院分娩和剖宫产的数量均大幅下降。由于获得急诊产科护理(如剖宫产)与降低孕产妇死亡率相关,许多妇女可能因分娩期间获得适当护理的机会减少而死亡。关于卫生系统崩溃的间接健康影响的未来研究理想情况下应在全国范围内进行,并持续到恢复阶段。了解恶化背后的机制也很重要,以便能够重新建立重要的卫生服务。