Posthumus Anke G, Borsboom Gerard J, Poeran Jashvant, Steegers Eric A P, Bonsel Gouke J
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Division of Obstetrics and Prenatal Medicine, Erasmus University Medical Centre, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
Department of Public Health, Erasmus University Medical Centre, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
PLoS One. 2016 Jun 23;11(6):e0156621. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0156621. eCollection 2016.
All women in the Netherlands should have equal access to obstetric care. However, utilization of care is shaped by demand and supply factors. Demand is increased in high risk groups (non-Western women, low socio-economic status (SES)), and supply is influenced by availability of hospital facilities (hospital density). To explore the dynamics of obstetric care utilization we investigated the joint association of hospital density and individual characteristics with prototype obstetric interventions.
A logistic multi-level model was fitted on retrospective data from the Netherlands Perinatal Registry (years 2000-2008, 1.532.441 singleton pregnancies). In this analysis, the first level comprised individual maternal characteristics, the second of neighbourhood SES and hospital density. The four outcome variables were: referral during pregnancy, elective caesarean section (term and post-term breech pregnancies), induction of labour (term and post-term pregnancies), and birth setting in assumed low-risk pregnancies.
Higher hospital density is not associated with more obstetric interventions. Adjusted for maternal characteristics and hospital density, living in low SES neighbourhoods, and non-Western ethnicity were generally associated with a lower probability of interventions. For example, non-Western women had considerably lower odds for induction of labour in all geographical areas, with strongest effects in the more rural areas (non-Western women: OR 0.78, 95% CI 0.77-0.80, p<0.001).
Our results suggest inequalities in obstetric care utilization in the Netherlands, and more specifically a relative underservice to the deprived, independent of level of supply.
荷兰所有女性都应能平等获得产科护理。然而,护理的利用受到需求和供应因素的影响。高风险群体(非西方女性、社会经济地位低的群体)的需求增加,而供应则受医院设施可用性(医院密度)的影响。为了探究产科护理利用的动态情况,我们调查了医院密度和个体特征与典型产科干预措施之间的联合关联。
对来自荷兰围产期登记处的回顾性数据(2000 - 2008年,1532441例单胎妊娠)拟合逻辑多水平模型。在此分析中,第一层次包括个体母亲特征,第二层次包括邻里社会经济地位和医院密度。四个结局变量为:孕期转诊、择期剖宫产(足月和过期臀位妊娠)、引产(足月和过期妊娠)以及假定低风险妊娠的分娩地点。
较高的医院密度与更多的产科干预措施并无关联。在对母亲特征和医院密度进行调整后,生活在社会经济地位低的社区以及非西方种族的人群通常与较低的干预概率相关。例如,非西方女性在所有地理区域引产的几率都显著较低,在农村地区影响最为明显(非西方女性:比值比0.78,95%置信区间0.77 - 0.80,p<0.001)。
我们的结果表明荷兰在产科护理利用方面存在不平等现象,更具体地说,是对弱势群体的相对服务不足,且与供应水平无关。