Department of Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Allied Sciences, Rajarata University of Sri Lanka, Saliyapura, Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka
Department of Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Allied Sciences, Rajarata University of Sri Lanka, Saliyapura, Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka.
BMJ Open. 2023 May 29;13(5):e070214. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-070214.
This study aims to describe how household economies and health service utilisation of pregnant and postpartum women were affected during the pandemic.
A cross-sectional study.
This study was conducted in the Anuradhapura district, Sri Lanka.
The study participants were 1460 pregnant and postpartum women recruited for the Rajarata Pregnancy Cohort during the initial stage of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Household economic (income, poverty, nutritional and health expenditures) and health service utilisation details during the COVID-19 pandemic were gathered through telephone interviews. Sociodemographic and economic data were obtained from the cohort baseline and analysed with descriptive and non-parametric analysis.
Out of the 1460 women in the sample, 55.3% (n=807) were pregnant and 44.7% (n=653) were postpartum women. Of the total sample, 1172 (80.3%) women participated in the economic component. The monthly household income (median (IQR)=212.39 (159.29-265.49)) reduced (median (IQR)=159.29 (106.20-212.39)) in 50.5% (n=592) families during the pandemic (Z=-8.555, p<0.001). Only 10.3% (n=61) of affected families had received financial assistance from the government, which was only 46.4% of the affected income. The nutritional expenditure of pregnant women was reduced (Z=-2.023, p=0.043) by 6.7%. During the pandemic, 103 (8.8%) families with pregnant or postpartum women were pushed into poverty, and families who were pushed into poverty did not receive any financial assistance. The majority of women (n=1096, 83.3%) were satisfied with the free public health services provided by the public health midwife during the pandemic.
During the early stages of the pandemic, healthcare utilisation of pregnant women was minimally affected. Even before the country's current economic crisis, the household economies of pregnant women in rural Sri Lanka were severely affected, pushing families into poverty due to the pandemic. The impact of COVID-19 and the aftermath on pregnant women will have many consequences if the policies and strategies are not revised to address this issue.
本研究旨在描述疫情期间孕妇和产后妇女的家庭经济状况和卫生服务利用情况的变化。
横断面研究。
斯里兰卡阿努拉德普勒区。
本研究纳入了在 COVID-19 大流行初期参加拉贾拉塔孕期队列的 1460 名孕妇和产后妇女。
通过电话访谈收集疫情期间家庭经济(收入、贫困、营养和卫生支出)和卫生服务利用情况的详细信息。队列基线时收集社会人口经济学数据,并进行描述性和非参数分析。
在 1460 名样本妇女中,55.3%(n=807)为孕妇,44.7%(n=653)为产后妇女。在总样本中,有 1172 名(80.3%)妇女参加了经济部分。家庭月收入(中位数(IQR)=212.39(159.29-265.49))减少(中位数(IQR)=159.29(106.20-212.39))的家庭占 50.5%(n=592)(Z=-8.555,p<0.001)。只有 10.3%(n=61)受影响的家庭从政府获得了经济援助,仅为受影响收入的 46.4%。孕妇的营养支出减少(Z=-2.023,p=0.043)6.7%。在疫情期间,有 103 个(8.8%)有孕妇或产后妇女的家庭陷入贫困,而陷入贫困的家庭没有得到任何经济援助。大多数妇女(n=1096,83.3%)对疫情期间公共卫生助产士提供的免费公共卫生服务感到满意。
在疫情早期,孕妇的卫生服务利用受影响较小。即使在该国当前经济危机之前,斯里兰卡农村孕妇的家庭经济就已受到严重影响,疫情导致许多家庭陷入贫困。如果不修改政策和战略来解决这个问题,COVID-19 及其后果对孕妇将产生许多影响。