Health Research Institute, Faculty of Health, University of Canberra, Canberra, Australia.
Public Health Foundation of India, and Indian Institute of Public Health-Gandhinagar (IIPH-G), New Delhi and Gandhinagar, India.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2021 Jan 23;21(1):79. doi: 10.1186/s12884-021-03563-5.
Maternal mortality can be prevented in low-income settings through early health care seeking during maternity complications. While health system reforms in India prioritised institutional deliveries, inadequate antenatal and postnatal services limit the knowledge of danger signs of obstetric complications to women, which delays the recognition of complications and seeking appropriate health care. Recently, a novel rapidly scalable community-based program combining maternal health literacy delivery through microfinance-based women-only self-help groups (SHG) was implemented in rural India. This study evaluates the impact of the integrated microfinance and health literacy (IMFHL) program on the knowledge of maternal danger signs in marginalised women from one of India's most populated and poorer states - Uttar Pradesh. Additionally, the study evaluates the presence of a diffusion effect of the knowledge of maternal danger signs from SHG members receiving health literacy to non-members in program villages.
Secondary data from the IMFHL program comprising 17,232 women from SHG and non-member households in rural Uttar Pradesh was included. Multivariate logistic regression models were used to identify the program's effects on the knowledge of maternal danger signs adjusting for a comprehensive range of confounders at the individual, household, and community level.
SHG member women receiving health literacy were 27% more likely to know all danger signs as compared with SHG members only. Moreover, the results showed that the SHG network facilitates diffusion of knowledge of maternal danger signs from SHG members receiving health literacy to non-members in program villages. The study found that the magnitude of the program impact on outcome remained stable even after controlling for other confounding effects suggesting that the health message delivered through the program reaches all women uniformly irrespective of their socioeconomic and health system characteristics.
The findings can guide community health programs and policy that seek to impact maternal health outcomes in low resource settings by demonstrating the differential impact of SHG alone and SHG plus health literacy on maternal danger sign knowledge.
在低收入环境中,可以通过在产妇并发症期间尽早寻求医疗保健来预防孕产妇死亡。虽然印度的卫生系统改革将重点放在机构分娩上,但产前和产后服务不足限制了妇女对产科并发症危险信号的了解,从而延误了对并发症的认识和寻求适当医疗保健的时间。最近,在印度农村实施了一项新的、可快速扩展的基于社区的项目,该项目通过基于小额信贷的仅限女性自助团体(SHG)提供产妇健康知识。本研究评估了综合小额信贷和健康知识(IMFHL)计划对印度人口最多和最贫穷的邦之一——北方邦边缘妇女对孕产妇危险信号的知识的影响。此外,该研究评估了从接受健康知识的 SHG 成员向计划村中 SHG 非成员传播孕产妇危险信号知识的扩散效应的存在。
纳入了来自印度北方邦农村地区 SHG 和非成员家庭的 17232 名妇女的 IMFHL 计划的二级数据。使用多变量逻辑回归模型,在个人、家庭和社区层面上调整了一系列混杂因素,以确定该计划对孕产妇危险信号知识的影响。
接受健康知识的 SHG 成员女性比仅接受 SHG 成员更有可能了解所有危险信号,可能性高 27%。此外,结果表明,SHG 网络有助于从接受健康知识的 SHG 成员向计划村中 SHG 非成员传播孕产妇危险信号知识。研究发现,即使控制了其他混杂效应,该计划对结果的影响程度仍然稳定,这表明通过该计划传递的健康信息均匀地覆盖了所有妇女,无论其社会经济和卫生系统特征如何。
这些发现可以为社区卫生计划和政策提供指导,这些计划和政策旨在通过展示 SHG 单独和 SHG 加健康知识对孕产妇危险信号知识的不同影响,来影响资源匮乏环境中的孕产妇健康结果。