| Literature DB >> 25927416 |
Sheetal Prakash Silal1, Loveday Penn-Kekana2, Till Bärnighausen3,4, Helen Schneider5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is global concern with geographical and socio-economic inequalities in access to and use of maternal delivery services. Little is known, however, on how local-level socio-economic inequalities are related to the uptake of needed maternal health care. We conducted a study of relative socio-economic inequalities in use of hospital-based maternal delivery services within two rural sub-districts of South Africa.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25927416 PMCID: PMC4110704 DOI: 10.1186/s12992-014-0060-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Socio-demographic, maternal health and service profile of study sub-districts
| Population (2007) | 509,970 | 150,557 | [[ | |
| Household access to piped water (2008/9) | 90.0% | 58.0% | [[ | |
| Percentage of births with skilled attendant (Whole district) (2008/9) | 90.4% | 79.4% | [[ | |
| Percentage of skilled attendant births occurring in hospitals (2008/9)1 | 94.6% | 91.0% | | |
| Maternal mortality ratio (period) | 335/100,000 (2000–5) | 769/100,000 (2000–7) | [[ | |
| Antenatal HIV prevalence | 34.9% | 39.9% | [[ | |
| Emergency Obstetric Care Signal Functions2 | | |||
| | Regional | District | District | |
| Caesarian section rate (%) | 12.0% | 14.0% | 19.0% | |
| Forceps or vacuum equipment (for assisted vaginal delivery) | Available | Available | Available | |
| Oxytocic drugs | Available | Available | Available | |
| Anticonvulsants | Available | Available | Available | |
| Blood transfusion | Available | Available | Available | |
1Personal Communication. Candice Day. Using 2008/2009 DHIS data.
2Data collected in a quality of care inventory done during the research project, and routine data for three months collected at the time that the quality of care inventory was carried out.
Figure 1Utilisation of maternal delivery services analysis results – Bushbuckridge (Partitions of Pearson’s χ2 Test for for ordered columns: χ2 = 31.78 (p<0.001), Location: χ2 = 29.93 (p<0.001), Dispersion: χ2 = 0.7498 (p = 0.3866)).
Figure 2Utilisation of maternal delivery services analysis analysis results – Hlabisa (Partitions of Pearson’s χ2 Test for ordered columns: χ2 = 105.4 (p<0.001), Location: χ2 = 0.09764 (p = 0.7564), Dispersion: χ2 = 30.6 (p<0.001)).
Experiences of access amongst women delivering in hospital
| Availability | |||
| Transport to facility: | | | χ2 = 143.600 |
| Foot | 12 (4.0%) | 17 (5.8%) | p <0.000 |
| Bicycle | 1 (0.3%) | 1 (0.3%) | |
| Taxi | 109 (36.5%) | 95 (32.5%) | |
| Bus | 1 (0.3%) | 7 (2.4%) | |
| Car | 157 (52.5%) | 47 (16.1%) | |
| Ambulance | 19 (6.4%) | 125 (42.8%) | |
| Mean time to hospital (minutes) (95% CI) | 48.4 ( 43.8, 53.0) | 109.6 (98.4, 120.9) | z = 10.997 |
| p < 0.000 | |||
| Affordability | |||
| Total costs of delivery as a percentage of household spending | 51.4% | 49.7% | z = −0.095 |
| p = 0.9244 | |||
| Number of households borrowing or selling assets to pay for health care | 40 (13.4%) | 44 (14.7%) | χ2 = 0.211 |
| p = 0.6501 | |||
| Acceptability | |||
| Health worker too busy to listen to my problems | 65 (25.6%) | 137 (45.7%) | χ2 = 23.931 |
| p <0.000 | |||
| Health worker respects me | 188 (62.9%) | 197 (65.9%) | χ2 = 0.593 |
| p = 0.4421 | |||