United Nations Relief and Works Agency for the Palestine Refugees in the Near East Department of Health, Headquarters, Amman, Jordan.
Center for Human Nutrition, Department of International Health and Sight and Life Global Research Institute, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 Feb 2;19(2):e0297956. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0297956. eCollection 2024.
Antenatal care is an essential component of primary healthcare, providing opportunities to screen, prevent, and treat morbidity to preserve the health of mothers and offspring. The World Health Organization now recommends a minimum of eight antenatal care contacts, instead of four, which is challenging in countries exposed to political violence and structural disparities in access to social, economic and healthcare resources as exist in Palestine. This study examines the compliance of the recommend standard of antenatal care in Palestine.
We analyzed data from the UNICEF's Palestinian Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) 2019-2020. The eligible sample consisted of 2,028 women, 15-49 years of age, living in Palestine, on whom data were available on reported antenatal care services received during the most recent pregnancy within the last two years. Outcome variables of interest were the reported frequencies of antenatal care visits, gestational timing of 1st visit, and services received. Potential risk factors were assessed in women attending less than eight versus eight or more antenatal contacts, as recommended by WHO, by estimating prevalence ratios with 95% Confidence Intervals.
Overall, 28% of women did not meet the WHO's recommendation of eight or more antenatal contacts, varying from 18% in Central West Bank to 33% in South West Bank across the four areas of Palestine (North, Central, and South West Bank and Gaza Strip). Twelve percent of women reported having had no antenatal contacts in the 1st trimester, and these women were two- to three-folds more unlikely to meet WHO recommendation of antenatal contacts than mothers who initiated the antenatal contact in the 1st trimester. Women who had less than eight antenatal contacts were generally poorer, higher in parity, lived in North and South West Bank, sought ANC from either doctor or nurse/midwife only, and initiated antenatal contact in 2nd-to-3rd trimesters.
There were considerable socioeconomic and geographic inequalities in the prevalence of not meeting WHO recommended number of antenatal contacts in Palestine, offering the opportunity to inform, improve and continuously reassess coverage of antenatal care.
产前护理是初级医疗保健的重要组成部分,提供了筛查、预防和治疗发病率的机会,以维护母婴健康。世界卫生组织现在建议至少进行 8 次产前护理接触,而不是 4 次,这在巴勒斯坦这样面临政治暴力和在获得社会、经济和医疗资源方面存在结构性差异的国家是具有挑战性的。本研究检查了巴勒斯坦遵守推荐的产前护理标准的情况。
我们分析了 2019-2020 年联合国儿童基金会巴勒斯坦多指标类集调查(MICS)的数据。合格样本包括 2028 名年龄在 15-49 岁之间的妇女,她们居住在巴勒斯坦,在过去两年内最近一次怀孕期间接受了报告的产前护理服务。感兴趣的结果变量是报告的产前护理就诊次数、首次就诊的孕龄和接受的服务。在接受少于 8 次和 8 次或更多次产前护理接触的妇女中评估了潜在的风险因素,按照世界卫生组织的建议,通过估计 95%置信区间的患病率比来评估。
总体而言,28%的妇女没有达到世界卫生组织建议的 8 次或更多次产前护理接触,从西岸中部的 18%到西岸南部的 33%不等,巴勒斯坦的四个地区(北部、中部、西岸南部和加沙地带)都有不同程度的差异。12%的妇女报告在第 1 孕期没有进行产前护理接触,与在第 1 孕期开始产前护理接触的母亲相比,这些母亲不符合世界卫生组织产前护理接触建议的可能性要高出两到三倍。接受少于 8 次产前护理接触的妇女通常更贫困、更高的产次、居住在北部和西岸南部、只从医生或护士/助产士那里寻求 ANC,并在第 2-3 孕期开始产前护理接触。
在巴勒斯坦,不符合世界卫生组织推荐的产前护理接触次数的情况存在相当大的社会经济和地理不平等,这为提供信息、改善和不断重新评估产前护理覆盖范围提供了机会。