The Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) Program, Division of International Health and Development, ICF, Rockville, Maryland, United States of America.
Avenir Health, Glastonbury, Connecticut, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Jun 11;14(6):e0217853. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0217853. eCollection 2019.
The persistence of preventable maternal and newborn deaths highlights the importance of quality of care as an essential element in coverage interventions. Moving beyond the conventional measurement of crude coverage, we estimated effective coverage of facility delivery by adjusting for facility preparedness to provide delivery services in Bangladesh, Haiti, Malawi, Nepal, Senegal, and Tanzania.
The study uses data from Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) and Service Provision Assessments (SPA) in Bangladesh (2014 DHS and 2014 SPA), Haiti (2012 DHS and 2013 SPA), Malawi (2015-16 DHS and 2013-14 SPA), Nepal (2016 DHS and 2015 SPA), Senegal (2016 DHS and 2015 SPA), and Tanzania (2015-16 DHS and 2014-15 SPA). We defined effective coverage as the mathematical product of crude coverage and quality of care. The coverage of facility delivery was measured with DHS data and quality of care was measured with facility data from SPA. We estimated effective coverage at both the regional and the national level and accounted for type of facility where delivery care was sought.
The findings from the six countries indicate the effective coverage ranges from 24% in Haiti to 66% in Malawi, representing substantial reductions (20% to 39%) from crude coverage rates. Although Malawi has achieved almost universal coverage of facility delivery (93%), effective coverage was only 66%.vSuch gaps between the crude coverage and the effective coverage suggest that women delivered in health facility but did not necessarily receive an adequate quality of care. In all countries except Malawi, effective coverage differed substantially among the country's regions of the country, primarily due to regional variability in coverage.
Our findings reinforce the importance of quality of obstetric and newborn care to achieve further reduction of maternal and newborn mortality. Continued efforts are needed to increase the use of facility delivery service in countries or regions where coverage remains low.
可预防的母婴死亡持续存在,突显了医疗质量作为覆盖范围干预措施基本要素的重要性。除了对常规粗覆盖率的衡量之外,我们还通过调整孟加拉国、海地、马拉维、尼泊尔、塞内加尔和坦桑尼亚等国医疗机构提供分娩服务的准备情况,对机构分娩的有效覆盖率进行了估算。
本研究使用了来自孟加拉国(2014 年人口与健康调查和 2014 年服务提供情况评估)、海地(2012 年人口与健康调查和 2013 年服务提供情况评估)、马拉维(2015-16 年人口与健康调查和 2013-14 年服务提供情况评估)、尼泊尔(2016 年人口与健康调查和 2015 年服务提供情况评估)、塞内加尔(2016 年人口与健康调查和 2015 年服务提供情况评估)和坦桑尼亚(2015-16 年人口与健康调查和 2014-15 年服务提供情况评估)的人口与健康调查和服务提供情况评估的数据。我们将有效覆盖率定义为粗覆盖率和医疗质量的乘积。机构分娩覆盖率是通过人口与健康调查数据进行衡量的,而医疗质量是通过服务提供情况评估中的机构数据进行衡量的。我们在区域和国家两个层面上估算了有效覆盖率,并考虑了寻求分娩护理的机构类型。
来自六个国家的调查结果表明,有效覆盖率从海地的 24%到马拉维的 66%不等,这表明与粗覆盖率相比,覆盖率有了显著降低(20%至 39%)。尽管马拉维已经实现了机构分娩的几乎普及(93%),但有效覆盖率仅为 66%。这种粗覆盖率和有效覆盖率之间的差距表明,尽管妇女在医疗机构分娩,但她们不一定得到了充分的医疗质量。除了马拉维之外,在所有国家中,有效覆盖率在该国的不同地区之间存在显著差异,这主要是由于覆盖范围的区域差异。
我们的研究结果强调了产科和新生儿护理质量对进一步降低母婴死亡率的重要性。在覆盖率仍然较低的国家或地区,需要继续努力增加对机构分娩服务的利用。