| Literature DB >> 20574515 |
Ingrid K Friberg1, Mary V Kinney, Joy E Lawn, Kate J Kerber, M Oladoyin Odubanjo, Anne-Marie Bergh, Neff Walker, Eva Weissman, Mickey Chopra, Robert E Black, Henrik Axelson, Barney Cohen, Hoosen Coovadia, Roseanne Diab, Francis Nkrumah.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20574515 PMCID: PMC2888572 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1000295
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Summary of the nine example countries split by level of health system context, around the year 2008.
| Low Context (Skilled Attendance <30%) | Middle Context (Skilled Attendance 30–60%) | High Context (Skilled Attendance >60%) | Total | |
| Ethiopia, Northern Nigeria | Ghana, Kenya, Senegal, Uganda, Tanzania | Cameroon, South Africa, Southern Nigeria | All Nine Countries | |
|
| 6,286,000 | 5,970,000 | 4,561,000 | 16,817,000 |
|
| 1,079,000 | 700,000 | 530,000 | 2,310,000 |
|
| 760 | 720 | 833 | 771 |
|
| 49 | 35 | 30 | 38 |
|
| 170 | 110 | 110 | 130 |
|
| 16% | 47% | 74% | 46% |
|
| 23% | 49% | 73% | 48% |
|
| 0.3 | 0.7 | 3 | 1 |
Data from Bryce and Requejo, Countdown to 2015, 2008 [12] and State of the World's Children 2010 [13].
Figure 1Achievable coverage increases of 20% for outreach/community interventions in Uganda.
The figure shows current coverage for some key outreach packages in Uganda with arrows indicating the modeled increase of 20% points within two years. Data from Uganda Demographic Heath Survey, 2006. Some coverages estimated using standard LiST formulas [25].
Selected interventions, by health system context and delivery level.
| Time | Inteventions | Low Health System | Middle Health System | High Health System |
| Periconceptional | Contraceptive prevalence rate | O | ||
| Antenatal | Case management during pregnancy | F | ||
| Tetanus toxoid vaccination | O | |||
| Birth | Antenatal corticosteroids for preterm labour | F | F | |
| Active management of the 3rd stage of labor | F | |||
| Newborn resuscitation (facility based) | F | F | ||
| Comprehensive emergency obstetric care | F | F | ||
| Preventive after birth | Preventive postnatal care | O | F | |
| Breastfeeding improvements | O | O | O | |
| Complementary feeding - education only | O | O | ||
| Complementary feeding - supplementation and education | O | O | ||
| Use of improved water source within 30 minutes | O | O | ||
| Use of water connection in the home | O | O | ||
| Improved excreta disposal | O | O | ||
| Hand washing with soap | O | O | ||
| Hygienic disposal of children's stools | O | O | ||
| Insecticide treated materials or indoor residual spraying | O | O | O | |
| Vitamin A for prevention | O | O | O | |
| Zinc for prevention | O | O | ||
| Measles vaccine | O | O | O | |
| Hib vaccine | O | O | O | |
| Pneumococcal vaccine | O | O | ||
| DPT3 vaccination | O | O | O | |
| Curative after birth | Kangaroo mother care | F | F | |
| Oral antibiotics for severe infection in neonates | O | |||
| Injectable antibiotics for severe infection in neonates | O | |||
| Full supportive care for severe infection in neonates | F | |||
| Oral rehydration salt solution | O | O | O | |
| Antibiotics for dysentery | O | O | O | |
| Zinc for treatment | O | O | O | |
| Case management of pneumonia with oral antibiotics | O | O | O | |
| Vitamin A for measles treatment | O | O | O | |
| Antimalarials | O | O | O |
F, facility, or increase to total institutional births; O, outreach, or increase by 20%.
Facility for antenatal coverage is the level of ANC one visit and not the level of facility births like other interventions scaled up to facility level. Facility births are the total of essential care for all women and immediate essential newborn care, basic emergency obstetric care, and comprehensive emergency obstetric care. When scaling up facility births, essential care for all women and immediate essential newborn care and basic emergency obstetric care are scaled down to zero coverage while comprehensive emergency obstetric care is the total of all three, which assumes that all facilities have access to this level of care.
Figure 2Achievable coverage increases by addressing the quality gap for facility births in Uganda.
The figure shows current coverage for some key facility-based MNCH interventions in Uganda with arrows indicating the modeled increase to the current coverage of institutional births within two years. Data from Uganda Demographic Heath Survey, 2006. Some coverages estimated using standard LiST formulas [25].
Lives saved and costing results for MNCH in the nine countries.
| Step | Scale-Up |
| Additional cost |
| Step 1 | Achievable scale-up of selected MNCH outreach interventions by increasing coverage by 20% |
| US$ 1.21 per capita |
| Step 2 | Achievable scale-up of selected maternal and newborn facility-based interventions by ensuring all facility births received the interventions |
| US$ 0.54 per capita |
| Step 3 | Address specific disease problems, for example HIV/AIDS | Situation dependent | Situation dependent |
| Step 4 | Targeted health system strengthening to reach high coverage of all essential MNCH interventions |
| Not calculated |
*Specific interventions included in the analysis are available in Table 2 and Table S1. Additional costing results are available in Table S2.
†: The nine selected countries are Cameroon, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, Tanzania, and Uganda.
‡: Step 2 percent based only on maternal and neonatal deaths averted in the middle and high impact countries; Ethiopia and Northern Nigeria are excluded.