Department of Public Health, College of Health Sciences, Debre Markos University, Debre Markos, Ethiopia.
School of Public Health, Faculty of Health, University of Technology Sydney, Ultimo, NSW, Australia.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2023 Feb 3;23(1):114. doi: 10.1186/s12913-023-09070-x.
In Ethiopia, more than half of newborn babies do not have access to Emergency Obstetric and Neonatal Care (EmONC) services. Understanding the effect of distance to health facilities on service use and neonatal survival is crucial to recommend policymakers and improving resource distribution. We aimed to investigate the effect of distance to health services on maternal service use and neonatal mortality.
We implemented a data integration method based on geographic coordinates. We calculated straight-line (Euclidean) distances from the Ethiopian 2016 demographic and health survey (EDHS) clusters to the closest health facility. We computed the distance in ESRI ArcGIS Version 10.3 using the geographic coordinates of DHS clusters and health facilities. Generalised Structural Equation Modelling (GSEM) was used to estimate the effect of distance on neonatal mortality.
Poor geographic accessibility to health facilities affects maternal service usage and increases the risk of newborn mortality. For every ten kilometres (km) increase in distance to a health facility, the odds of neonatal mortality increased by 1.33% (95% CI: 1.06% to 1.67%). Distance also negatively affected antenatal care, facility delivery and postnatal counselling service use.
A lack of geographical access to health facilities decreases the likelihood of newborns surviving their first month of life and affects health services use during pregnancy and immediately after birth. The study also showed that antenatal care use was positively associated with facility delivery service use and that both positively influenced postnatal care use, demonstrating the interconnectedness of the components of continuum of care for maternal and neonatal care services. Policymakers can leverage the findings from this study to improve accessibility barriers to health services.
在埃塞俄比亚,超过一半的新生儿无法获得紧急产科和新生儿护理(EmONC)服务。了解距离医疗机构的远近对服务利用和新生儿存活率的影响,对于建议政策制定者和改善资源分配至关重要。我们旨在调查距离卫生服务对产妇服务利用和新生儿死亡率的影响。
我们实施了一种基于地理坐标的数据整合方法。我们从埃塞俄比亚 2016 年人口与健康调查(EDHS)的集群计算到最近的卫生设施的直线(欧几里得)距离。我们使用 DHS 集群和卫生设施的地理坐标在 ESRI ArcGIS 版本 10.3 中计算距离。广义结构方程模型(GSEM)用于估计距离对新生儿死亡率的影响。
地理上难以获得卫生设施会影响产妇服务的利用,并增加新生儿死亡的风险。每增加十公里(km)到卫生设施的距离,新生儿死亡率的几率就会增加 1.33%(95%置信区间:1.06%至 1.67%)。距离也对产前护理、医疗机构分娩和产后咨询服务的使用产生负面影响。
缺乏地理上接近卫生设施会降低新生儿在第一个月存活的可能性,并影响怀孕期间和出生后立即的卫生服务利用。该研究还表明,产前护理的使用与医疗机构分娩服务的使用呈正相关,而这两者都对产后护理的使用产生积极影响,这表明母婴保健服务连续护理的各个组成部分之间存在相互关联。政策制定者可以利用这项研究的结果来改善卫生服务的可及性障碍。