Nikoloski Zlatko, Wannis Hrayr, Menchini Leonardo, Chatterjee Anirban
Department of Health Policy, London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom.
UNICEF Regional Office for the Middle East and North Africa, Jordan.
SSM Popul Health. 2021 Jan 12;13:100727. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2021.100727. eCollection 2021 Mar.
The objective of this paper is three-fold: (i) to analyse the coverage and equity of access to selected maternal and child healthcare interventions, particularly those delivered in Primary Healthcare (PHC) setting; (ii) to analyse the main drivers of inequitable access to selected interventions; and (iii) to synthesise and compare the results across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region as well as over time. We analysed data for five key maternal and child healthcare interventions from 29 national surveys (DHS and MICS) covering 13 MENA countries and spanning a period of almost 20 years (2000-2018). We calculated coverage indicators, concentration indices (CI) and decomposition of CIs according to standard definitions. We synthetized the results by country groups based on their human development index (HDI). Over time and among countries that started from a lower base, there has been an improvement in coverage and equity of selected interventions (four ante-natal care visits and skilled birth assistance). When considering the place of skilled delivery, there is a clear rich-poor divide, with women from richer wealth quintiles gravitating toward private healthcare facilities and those from poorer wealth quintiles toward public ones. While most of the care-seeking for common child illnesses occurs in PHC facilities, a fraction (20-30 percent) of care-seeking takes place in secondary healthcare facilities. PHC has played a role in improving coverage and equity of access in key maternal and child health interventions in the wider MENA region. Better integration of care, strengthening and improving the PHC network could increase the use of cost-effective interventions, which are key to improving maternal and child health.
(i)分析获得选定的孕产妇和儿童保健干预措施的覆盖范围和公平性,特别是那些在初级卫生保健(PHC)环境中提供的干预措施;(ii)分析获得选定干预措施的不公平现象的主要驱动因素;(iii)综合并比较中东和北非(MENA)地区以及不同时期的结果。我们分析了来自29项全国性调查(DHS和MICS)的数据,这些调查涵盖了13个中东和北非国家,时间跨度近20年(2000 - 2018年),涉及五项关键的孕产妇和儿童保健干预措施。我们根据标准定义计算了覆盖指标、集中指数(CI)以及CI的分解。我们根据人类发展指数(HDI)将国家分组,综合了结果。随着时间的推移,在那些起点较低的国家中,选定干预措施(四次产前检查和熟练接生协助)的覆盖范围和公平性有所改善。在考虑熟练接生的地点时,贫富差距明显,较富裕财富五分位数的妇女倾向于选择私立医疗设施,而较贫穷财富五分位数的妇女则倾向于公立医疗设施。虽然大多数常见儿童疾病的就医行为发生在初级卫生保健设施中,但仍有一部分(20% - 30%)的就医行为发生在二级医疗设施中。初级卫生保健在改善更广泛的中东和北非地区关键孕产妇和儿童健康干预措施的覆盖范围和公平性方面发挥了作用。更好地整合医疗服务、加强和改善初级卫生保健网络可以增加具有成本效益的干预措施的使用,这是改善孕产妇和儿童健康的关键。