Department of Sociology, Faculty of Social Sciences & Humanities, University of Fort Hare, East London, South Africa.
Faculty of Social Sciences & Humanities, University of Fort Hare, East London, South Africa.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2017 Sep 2;17(1):620. doi: 10.1186/s12913-017-2560-1.
The reasons for low utilisation of maternal health services in settings where the user-fee removal policy has been implemented continue to generate scholarly debates. Evidence of whether user-fee removal benefits the poor women in underserved settings is scanty and inconsistent. This article examines use of maternal health care services in the context of free maternal healthcare and profiles the beneficiaries of user-fee removal.
The study adopted a descriptive design. A three-stage cluster sampling method was used to select a representative sample of 1227 women who gave birth between 2011 and 2015. Questionnaires were administered using a face-to-face interview approach and data generated were analysed using descriptive and inferential statistics.
The analysis shows that the use of maternal healthcare services has improved considerably in North Central and Southwestern Nigeria. While socioeconomic and geographical inequality in the use of maternal healthcare services appear to be disappearing in Southwestern Nigeria, it appears to be widening in North Central Nigeria. The findings indicate that 33.6% of women reported to have benefitted from the free child-delivery programme; however, substantial variation exists across the two regions. The proportion of beneficiaries of user-fee removal policy was highest in urban areas (35.9%), among women belonging to the middle income category (38.3%), among women who gave birth in primary health centres (63.1%) and among women who resided in communities where there was availability of health facilities (37.2%).
The study concludes that low coverage of the free maternal health programme, especially among women of low socioeconomic status residing in underserved settings is among the reasons for persistent poor maternal health outcomes in the context of free maternal healthcare. A model towards improving maternal health in underserved settings, especially in North Central Nigeria, would entail provisioning of health facilities as well as focusing on implementing equitable maternal health policies.
在已经实施了医疗服务费用减免政策的环境中,产妇卫生服务利用率低的原因仍在引发学术争论。关于费用减免政策是否有利于服务不足地区的贫困妇女的证据很少且不一致。本文在免费产妇保健的背景下研究了产妇保健服务的使用情况,并介绍了费用减免政策的受益者。
本研究采用描述性设计。采用三阶段聚类抽样方法,选取了 2011 年至 2015 年间分娩的 1227 名妇女的代表性样本。采用面对面访谈的方式进行问卷调查,使用描述性和推断性统计方法分析生成的数据。
分析表明,尼日利亚中北部和西南部的产妇保健服务利用率有了显著提高。虽然西南部的产妇保健服务利用方面的社会经济和地理不平等似乎正在消失,但在尼日利亚中北部,这种不平等似乎正在扩大。调查结果显示,33.6%的妇女报告受益于免费分娩计划;然而,两个地区之间存在很大差异。费用减免政策的受益者比例在城市地区最高(35.9%),中等收入群体(38.3%),在初级保健中心分娩的妇女(63.1%)和所在社区有卫生设施的妇女(37.2%)中最高。
研究得出结论,免费产妇保健计划的覆盖范围较低,尤其是在服务不足地区中社会经济地位较低的妇女中,这是在免费产妇保健背景下产妇健康状况持续不佳的原因之一。改善服务不足地区,特别是尼日利亚中北部地区产妇健康的模式将需要提供卫生设施,并专注于实施公平的产妇保健政策。