Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Department of Global Health and Population, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Household Economics and Health System Research Unit, Basel, Switzerland.
PLoS Med. 2021 Dec 1;18(12):e1003843. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1003843. eCollection 2021 Dec.
Widespread increases in facility delivery have not substantially reduced neonatal mortality in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia over the past 2 decades. This may be due to poor quality care available in widely used primary care clinics. In this study, we examine the association between hospital delivery and neonatal mortality.
We used an ecological study design to assess cross-sectional associations between the share of hospital delivery and neonatal mortality across country regions. Data were from the Demographic and Health Surveys from 2009 to 2018, covering 682,239 births across all regions. We assess the association between the share of facility births in a region that occurred in hospitals (versus lower-level clinics) and early (0 to 7 days) neonatal mortality per 1,000 births, controlling for potential confounders including the share of facility births, small at birth, maternal age, maternal education, urbanicity, antenatal care visits, income, region, and survey year. We examined changes in this association in different contexts of country income, global region, and urbanicity using interaction models. Across the 1,143 regions from 37 countries in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, 42%, 29%, and 28% of births took place in a hospital, clinic, and at home, respectively. A 10-percentage point higher share of facility deliveries occurring in hospitals was associated with 1.2 per 1,000 fewer deaths (p-value < 0.01; 95% CI: 0.82 to 1.60), relative to mean mortality of 22. Associations were strongest in South Asian countries, middle-income countries, and urban regions. The study's limitations include the inability to control for all confounding factors given the ecological and cross-sectional design and potential misclassification of facility levels in our data.
Regions with more hospital deliveries than clinic deliveries have reduced neonatal mortality. Increasing delivery in hospitals while improving quality across the health system may help to reduce high neonatal mortality.
在过去的 20 年中,撒哈拉以南非洲和南亚的医疗机构分娩率普遍提高,但新生儿死亡率并没有大幅降低。这可能是由于广泛使用的初级保健诊所提供的护理质量较差所致。在这项研究中,我们研究了医院分娩与新生儿死亡率之间的关系。
我们使用生态研究设计来评估国家/地区之间医院分娩比例与新生儿死亡率之间的横断面关联。数据来自 2009 年至 2018 年的人口与健康调查,涵盖了所有地区的 682239 例分娩。我们评估了一个地区医院分娩比例(与较低级别的诊所相比)与每千例活产中早期(0 至 7 天)新生儿死亡率之间的关联,控制了潜在的混杂因素,包括设施分娩比例、出生体重不足、产妇年龄、产妇教育、城市人口、产前护理就诊次数、收入、地区和调查年份。我们使用交互模型检查了在不同的国家收入、全球区域和城市背景下,这种关联的变化情况。在撒哈拉以南非洲和南亚的 37 个国家的 1143 个地区中,分别有 42%、29%和 28%的分娩发生在医院、诊所和家中。与平均死亡率 22 相比,每千例活产中,医院分娩比例每增加 10 个百分点,死亡人数就会减少 1.2 人(p 值<0.01;95%CI:0.82 至 1.60)。关联在南亚国家、中等收入国家和城市地区最强。该研究的局限性包括由于生态和横断面设计以及我们数据中设施水平的潜在分类错误,无法控制所有混杂因素。
与诊所分娩相比,医院分娩比例更高的地区新生儿死亡率更低。增加医院分娩量,同时提高整个卫生系统的质量,可能有助于降低高新生儿死亡率。