Babiarz Kimberly S, Mahadevan Swaminatha V, Divi Nomita, Miller Grant
Kimberly S. Babiarz is a research associate at the Center for Primary Care and Outcomes Research at Stanford University, in California.
Swaminatha V. Mahadevan is an associate professor of surgery in the Department of Emergency Medicine at Stanford University.
Health Aff (Millwood). 2016 Oct 1;35(10):1774-1782. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2016.0564.
India had no large-scale, centralized emergency medical system or ambulance service until 2005. Since then, the GVK Emergency Management and Research Institute (GVK EMRI) has emerged as India's largest ambulance service provider, covering more than 630 million people. This study provides the first quantitative evidence of GVK EMRI's early impact on population-level infant and maternal health outcomes in Andhra Pradesh and Gujarat, two Indian states with a combined population of about 145 million people. We found that GVK EMRI coverage is associated with reductions in the probability of neonatal and infant mortality as well as delivery complications (statewide in Andhra Pradesh and in high-mortality districts in Gujarat). However, we found little change in the probability of institutional delivery or skilled birth attendance. Taken together, our findings suggest that population-level health gains were achieved through improvements in the quality (rather than quantity) of maternal and neonatal health services-an interpretation consistent with qualitative reports. More research on this topic is needed.
直到2005年,印度都没有大规模的、集中的紧急医疗系统或救护车服务。从那时起,GVK紧急管理与研究机构(GVK EMRI)已成为印度最大的救护车服务提供商,覆盖超过6.3亿人口。本研究首次提供了定量证据,证明GVK EMRI对印度安得拉邦和古吉拉特邦(两邦总人口约1.45亿)的人口层面的母婴健康结果产生了早期影响。我们发现,GVK EMRI的覆盖与新生儿和婴儿死亡率以及分娩并发症的概率降低相关(在安得拉邦全境以及古吉拉特邦的高死亡率地区)。然而,我们发现机构分娩或熟练接生的概率几乎没有变化。综合来看,我们的研究结果表明,通过改善孕产妇和新生儿健康服务的质量(而非数量)实现了人口层面的健康改善——这一解释与定性报告一致。对此主题还需要更多研究。