| Literature DB >> 23522087 |
Elizabeth Echoka1, Yeri Kombe, Dominique Dubourg, Anselimo Makokha, Bjørg Evjen-Olsen, Moses Mwangi, Jens Byskov, Øystein Evjen Olsen, Richard Mutisya.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The knowledge on emergency obstetric care (EmOC) is limited in Kenya, where only partial data from sub-national studies exist. The EmOC process indicators have also not been integrated into routine health management information system to monitor progress in safe motherhood interventions both at national and lower levels of the health system. In a country with a high maternal mortality burden, the implication is that decision makers are unaware of the extent of need for life-saving care and, therefore, where to intervene. The objective of the study was to assess the actual existence and functionality of EmOC services at district level.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23522087 PMCID: PMC3616893 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Emergency obstetric care indicators, questions and acceptable levels
| 1. Availability of EmOC: basic and comprehensive facilities | At least five EmOC facilities (including at least one comprehensive) per 500,000 population |
| 2. Geographical distribution of EmOC facilities | Equitably distributed in an area |
| 3. Proportion of all births in EmOC facilities | Recommended level set locally |
| 4. Met need for EmOC services | 100% |
| 5. Caesarean section as a proportion of all births | 5-15% |
| 6. Direct obstetric case fatality rate | <1% |
| 7. Intrapartum and very early neonatal death rate | To be set |
| 8. Proportion of maternal deaths due to indirect causes | None set |
Source: [10,11].
Distribution of institutional deliveries by facility ownership and level in 2009 in Malindi District, Kenya
| Hospital | 2893 | 249 | - | 3142 |
| Health center | 779 | 141 | - | 920 |
| Dispensary | 1472 | 200 | 167 | 1839 |
Ratio of emergency obstetric care facilities to population size in 2010, Malindi District, Kenya
| 2.5/500 000 | 4/500 000 | |
| 3.7/500 000 | 1/500 000 | |
Figure 1Contribution to health care of non emergency obstetric care facilities in providing basic signal functions in 2010, Malindi District, Kenya.
Figure 2Distribution of delivery services by emergency obstetric care status in 2010 in Malindi District, Kenya.
Caesarean section rates by divisions in Malindi District
| | ||||
| | | | | |
| Malindi | 7534 | 436 (80.9%) | 5 | |
| Magarini | 3578 | 84 (15.6%) | 10 | |
| Langobaya | 1272 | 13 (2.4%) | 20 | |
| Marafa | 2302 | 6 (1.1%) | 30 | |
| | ||||
| | | | | |
| Malindi | 8272 | 541 (78.7%) | 5 | |
| Magarini | 3691 | 105 (15.3%) | 10 | |
| Langobaya | 1228 | 12 (1.7%) | 20 | |
| Marafa | 2068 | 20 (2.9%) | 30 | |
Caesarean section rates by rural and urban area of Malindi District
| Urban | 4875 | 332 | 3.39 | |
| Rural | 9811 | 207 | Reference | |
| | ||||
| Urban | 5470 | 426 | 3.17 | |
| Rural | 9789 | 261 | Reference | |
*A pregnant woman with a complication requiring caesarean section in the urban area was up to 3 times more likely to access the intervention compared to a rural counterpart.