Benova Lenka, Dennis Mardieh L, Lange Isabelle L, Campbell Oona M R, Waiswa Peter, Haemmerli Manon, Fernandez Yolanda, Kerber Kate, Lawn Joy E, Santos Andreia Costa, Matovu Fred, Macleod David, Goodman Catherine, Penn-Kekana Loveday, Ssengooba Freddie, Lynch Caroline A
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London, WC1E 7HT, UK.
Institute of Tropical Medicine, Nationalestraat 155, 2000, Antwerp, Belgium.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2018 Oct 4;18(1):758. doi: 10.1186/s12913-018-3546-3.
Uganda halved its maternal mortality to 343/100,000 live births between 1990 and 2015, but did not meet the Millennium Development Goal 5. Skilled, timely and good quality antenatal (ANC) and delivery care can prevent the majority of maternal/newborn deaths and stillbirths. We examine coverage, equity, sector of provision and content of ANC and delivery care between 1991 and 2011.
We conducted a repeated cross-sectional study using four Uganda Demographic and Health Surveys (1995, 2000, 2006 and 2011).Using the most recent live birth and adjusting for survey sampling, we estimated percentage and absolute number of births with ANC (any and 4+ visits), facility delivery, caesarean sections and complete maternal care. We assessed socio-economic differentials in these indicators by wealth, education, urban/rural residence, and geographic zone on the 1995 and 2011 surveys. We estimated the proportions of ANC and delivery care provided by the public and private (for-profit and not-for-profit) sectors, and compared content of ANC and delivery care between sectors. Statistical significance of differences were evaluated using chi-square tests.
Coverage with any ANC remained high over the study period (> 90% since 2001) but was of insufficient frequency; < 50% of women who received any ANC reported 4+ visits. Facility-based delivery care increased slowly, reaching 58% in 2011. While significant inequalities in coverage by wealth, education, residence and geographic zone remained, coverage improved for all indicators among the lowest socio-economic groups of women over time. The private sector market share declined over time to 14% of ANC and 25% of delivery care in 2011. Only 10% of women with 4+ ANC visits and 13% of women delivering in facilities received all measured care components.
The Ugandan health system had to cope with more than 30,000 additional births annually between 1991 and 2011. The majority of women in Uganda accessed ANC, but this contact did not result in care of sufficient frequency, content, and continuum of care (facility delivery). Providers in both sectors require quality improvements. Achieving universal health coverage and maternal/newborn SDGs in Uganda requires prioritising poor, less educated and rural women despite competing priorities for financial and human resources.
1990年至2015年间,乌干达的孕产妇死亡率减半,降至每10万例活产343例,但未实现千年发展目标5。熟练、及时且高质量的产前护理(ANC)和分娩护理可预防大多数孕产妇/新生儿死亡及死产。我们研究了1991年至2011年间ANC和分娩护理的覆盖率、公平性、提供部门及内容。
我们利用四次乌干达人口与健康调查(1995年、2000年、2006年和2011年)进行了重复横断面研究。根据最近的活产情况并对调查抽样进行调整,我们估计了接受ANC(任何次数及4次以上访视)、设施分娩、剖宫产及完整孕产妇护理的分娩百分比和绝对数量。我们通过1995年和2011年调查中的财富、教育程度、城乡居住情况及地理区域评估了这些指标中的社会经济差异。我们估计了公共部门和私营部门(营利性和非营利性)提供的ANC和分娩护理比例,并比较了各部门之间ANC和分娩护理的内容。使用卡方检验评估差异的统计学显著性。
在研究期间,任何形式的ANC覆盖率一直很高(自2001年以来>90%),但访视频率不足;接受任何形式ANC的妇女中,报告4次以上访视的不到50%。基于设施的分娩护理增长缓慢,2011年达到58%。虽然在财富、教育程度、居住情况和地理区域方面的覆盖率仍存在显著不平等,但随着时间推移,社会经济地位最低的女性群体在所有指标上的覆盖率都有所提高。私营部门的市场份额随时间下降,到2011年占ANC的14%和分娩护理的25%。在接受4次以上ANC访视的妇女中,只有10%以及在设施中分娩的妇女中只有13%接受了所有测量的护理内容。
1991年至2011年间,乌干达卫生系统每年要应对新增的3万多例分娩。乌干达的大多数妇女都能获得ANC,但这种接触并未带来足够的访视频率、护理内容及连续护理(设施分娩)。两个部门的提供者都需要提高质量。在乌干达实现全民健康覆盖和孕产妇/新生儿可持续发展目标,尽管在财政和人力资源方面存在相互竞争的优先事项,但仍需要优先考虑贫困、受教育程度较低的农村妇女。