Department of Sociology, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2020 Nov 9;15(11):e0241746. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0241746. eCollection 2020.
Existing studies in Tanzania, based mostly on rural samples, have primarily focused on individual behaviors responsible for the lower utilization of maternal health care. Relatively less attention had been paid to inequalities in structural circumstances that contribute to reduced utilization of maternal health care. More importantly, scholarship concerning the impact of the rural-urban divide on socioeconomic disparities in the utilization of maternal health care is virtually nonexistent in Tanzania.
Drawing from the Demographic Health Survey (2015-2016) conducted in Tanzania, our study includes a total of 3,595 women aged between 15-49 years old, who had given birth in five years before the month of the interview and living in both rural and urban Tanzania. The maternal health care utilization was assessed by four variables (i.e., antenatal care, skilled delivery assistance, the before and after discharging postnatal care). The independent variables were wealth, education, residence, parity, occupation, age, and the head of the household's sex. We used bivariate statistics and logistic regression to examine the rural-urban differences in the influence of education and wealth on maternal health care utilization.
Significantly lower use of maternal health care in rural than urban areas demonstrated a stark rural-urban divide in Tanzania. We documented socioeconomic inequalities in maternal health care utilization in the form of lower odds of the utilization of such services among women with lower levels of education and household wealth. The educational inequalities in the utilization of skilled delivery assistance (or = 0.37, 95% CI: 0.16, 0.86; p = 0.021) and (before discharge) postnatal care (or = 0.60, 95% CI: 0.38, 0.95; p = 0.030) were significantly wider in rural than urban areas. The differences in the odds of the utilization of skilled delivery assistance between women in poorer wealth quintile and women in richer household wealth quintile were also significantly wider in rural areas than in urban areas. However, the statistically significant rural-urban divides in the impacts of socioeconomic status on antenatal care and (after discharge) postnatal care were not observed.
This study establishes the need for consideration of the rural-urban context in the formulation of policies to reduce disparities in maternal health care utilization in Tanzania.
坦桑尼亚现有的研究主要基于农村样本,主要关注导致孕产妇保健利用率较低的个人行为。相对较少关注导致孕产妇保健利用率降低的结构性环境不平等。更重要的是,关于城乡差距对孕产妇保健利用的社会经济差异的影响的学术研究在坦桑尼亚几乎不存在。
本研究基于坦桑尼亚的人口健康调查(2015-2016 年),共纳入了 3595 名年龄在 15-49 岁之间的女性,她们在接受访谈前的五年内分娩过,并居住在坦桑尼亚的农村和城市地区。孕产妇保健利用率通过四个变量(即产前护理、熟练分娩援助、产后出院前后的护理)进行评估。自变量是财富、教育、居住地、生育次数、职业、年龄和家庭户主的性别。我们使用双变量统计和逻辑回归来检查教育和财富对孕产妇保健利用的城乡差异的影响。
坦桑尼亚农村地区的孕产妇保健利用率明显低于城市地区,这表明存在明显的城乡差距。我们记录了孕产妇保健利用方面的社会经济不平等,表现为教育程度和家庭财富较低的妇女获得此类服务的机会较低。农村地区熟练分娩援助(或=0.37,95%CI:0.16,0.86;p=0.021)和(产后出院前)产后护理(或=0.60,95%CI:0.38,0.95;p=0.030)的利用方面存在更大的教育不平等。在较贫穷的财富五分位数的妇女和较富裕的家庭财富五分位数的妇女之间,熟练分娩援助的利用几率的差异在农村地区也明显大于城市地区。然而,在产前护理和(产后出院后)产后护理方面,社会经济地位对其利用的影响没有观察到统计学上显著的城乡差异。
本研究表明,在制定政策以减少坦桑尼亚孕产妇保健利用方面的差异时,需要考虑城乡背景。