| Literature DB >> 26379767 |
Özge Tunçalp1, Ibrahima Socé Fall2, Sharon J Phillips1, Inga Williams3, Massambou Sacko2, Ousmane Boubacar Touré2, Lisa J Thomas1, Lale Say1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Little is known specifically about the effects of conflict and displacement on provision of sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services. We aimed to understand the association between levels of conflict and displacement and the availability of SRH services in post-conflict Mali.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26379767 PMCID: PMC4568579 DOI: 10.1186/s13031-015-0051-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Confl Health ISSN: 1752-1505 Impact factor: 2.723
Fig. 1Timeline of events in Mali (January 2012–August 2013)
The specific health services under maternal, sexual and reproductive health domains as defined in HeRAMS Mali, 2013
| Maternal & Newborn Health |
|---|
| Family planning |
| Antenatal care: problems (assess pregnancy, birth and emergency plan, respond to problems (observed and/or reported), advise/counsel on nutrition & breastfeeding, self-care and family planning, preventive treatment(s) as appropriate. |
| Skilled care during childbirth: for clean and safe normal delivery |
| Essential newborn care: basic newborn resuscitation + warmth (recommended method: Kangaroo mother care) + eye prophylaxis + clean cord care + early and exclusive breastfeeding |
| Basic EmOC: parenteral antibiotics + oxytocic/anticonvulsant drugs + manual removal of placenta + removal of retained products with manual vacuum aspiration (MVA) + assisted vaginal delivery, 24 h 7 days a week |
| Comprehensive EmOC: Basic EmOC + ability to perform C-sections and blood transfusions |
| Postpartum care: examination of mother and newborn (up to 6 weeks), respond to observed signs, support breastfeeding, promote family planning |
| Comprehensive abortion care: safe induced abortion for all legal indications, uterine evacuation using MVA or medical methods, antibiotic prophylaxis, treatment of abortion complications, counselling for abortion and post-abortion contraception |
| Sexual Violence |
| Clinical management of rape survivors (including psychological support) |
| Emergency contraception |
| Post-exposure prophylaxis for STI & HIV infections |
| STI & HIV/AIDS |
| Syndromic management of STIs |
| Standard precautions: disposable needles & syringes, safety sharp disposal containers, personal protective equipment, sterilizer |
| Availability of free condoms |
| Prophylaxis and treatment of opportunistic infections (HIV/AIDS) |
| HIV counseling and testing |
| Prevention of maternal-to-child transmission of HIV (PMTCT) |
| Anti-retroviral treatment for HIV (ARV) |
Fig. 2Distribution of districts by levels of conflict, February 2013, reproduced based on [4, 18]
Characteristics of the primary care facilities in Mali (N = 1,581)
| Low concentration of displaced population | High concentration of displaced population | Under occupation | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
| |
| n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | |
| Facility type | ||||
| Basic primary level – community (CSCOM) | 593 (84.0) | 342 (54.5) | 202 (81.4) | 1137 (71.9) |
| Primary level - private | 42 (6.0) | 146 (23.3) | 3 (1.2) | 191 (12.1) |
| Primary level reference – public (CSREF) | 25 (3.5) | 19 (3.1) | 16 (6.5) | 60 (3.8) |
| Othera | 46 (6.5) | 120 (19.1) | 27 (10.9) | 193 (12.2) |
| Sector | ||||
| Public | 624 (88.4) | 380 (60.6) | 246 (99.2) | 1250 (79.1) |
| Private | 82 (11.6) | 247 (39.4) | 2 (0.8) | 331 (20.9) |
| External support to the facility | ||||
| No external support | 269 (38.1) | 343 (54.7) | 112 (45.2) | 724 (45.8) |
| Partial or complete external support | 436 (61.8) | 284 (45.3) | 108 (43.6) | 828 (52.4) |
| Missing | 1 (0.1) | 0 (0.0) | 28 (11.3) | 29 (1.8) |
| Evaluation of the facility | ||||
| Non-functioning and/or non-intact | 160 (22.7) | 100 (16.0) | 175 (70.6) | 435 (27.5) |
| Functional and intact | 543 (76.9) | 527 (84.0) | 72 (29.0) | 1142 (72.2) |
| Missing | 3 (0.4) | 0 (0.0) | 1 (0.4) | 4 (0.3) |
| Access to water | ||||
| No access | 179 (23.4) | 78 (12.4) | 82 (33.1) | 339 (21.5) |
| Access | 526 (74.5) | 549 (87.6) | 138 (55.6) | 1213 (76.7) |
| Missing | 1 (0.1) | 0 (0.0) | 28 (11.3) | 29 (1.8) |
| Free health care for displaced population | ||||
| No | 648 (91.8) | 522 (83.2) | 248 (100.0) | 1418 (89.7) |
| Yes | 58 (8.2) | 105 (16.8) | 0 (0.0) | 163 (10.3) |
aOther refers to individual health cabinets, clinics and polyclinics
Availability of sexual and reproductive health services in the primary care facilities (N = 1,551)
| Not available at the time of the survey | Available at the time of the survey | Not planned to be provided at the facility | % of facilities sufficiently providing services as planned | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | % (n/N) | |
| Maternal & Newborn Health | ||||
| Family planning | 111 (7.2) | 1329 (85.7) | 111 (7.2) | 92 (1329/1440) |
| Antenatal care | 97 (6.2) | 1330 (85.8) | 124 (8.0) | 93 (1330/1427) |
| Skilled care during childbirth | 148 (9.5) | 1273 (82.1) | 130 (8.4) | 89 (1273/1421) |
| Essential newborn care | 141 (9.1) | 1236 (79.7) | 174 (11.2) | 90 (1236/1377) |
| Basic EmOC | 341 (22.0) | 660 (42.6) | 550 (35.5) | 66 (660/1001) |
| Comprehensive EmOC | 103 (6.6) | 126 (8.1) | 1322 (85.2)a | 55 (126/229) |
| Postpartum care | 102 (6.6) | 1277 (82.3) | 172 (11.1) | 93 (1277/1379) |
| Comprehensive abortion care | 301 (19.4) | 676 (43.6) | 574 (37.0) | 69 (676/977) |
| Sexual Violence | ||||
| Clinical management of rape survivors | 325 (20.9) | 715 (46.1) | 511 (33.0) | 69 (715/1040) |
| Emergency contraception | 373 (24.1) | 682 (43.9) | 511 (33.0) | 65 (682/1055) |
| Post-exposure prophylaxis for STI & HIV infections | 314 (20.2) | 814 (52.5) | 423 (27.3) | 72 (814/1128) |
| STI & HIV/AIDS | ||||
| Syndromic management of STIs | 126 (8.1) | 1290 (83.2) | 135 (8.7) | 91 (1290/1416) |
| Standard precautions | 94 (6.1) | 1354 (87.3) | 103 (6.6) | 94 (1354/1448) |
| Availability of free condoms | 356 (22.9) | 321 (20.7) | 874 (56.4)a | 47 (321/677) |
| Prophylaxis and treatment of opportunistic infections (HIV/AIDS) | 289 (18.6) | 651 (42.0) | 612 (39.4) | 69 (651/940) |
| HIV counseling and testing | 386 (24.9) | 708 (45.6) | 457 (29.5) | 65 (708/1094) |
| Prevention of maternal-to-child transmission of HIV (PMTCT) | 501 (32.3) | 455 (29.3) | 595 (38.4) | 48 (455/956) |
| Anti-retroviral treatment for HIV (ARV) | 363 (23.4) | 199 (12.8) | 989 (63.8)a | 35 (199/562) |
aThe services where more than 50 % of the primary level facilities reported as outside of their mandate have been excluded from further analyses
Unadjusted and adjusteda multivariable logistic regression analyses assessing the association between availability of reproductive health services and level of conflict and displacement (Reference group: Under occupation)
| High concentration of displaced population | Low concentration of displaced population | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | Crude OR (95 % CI) | Adjusted OR (95 % CI) | Crude OR (95 % CI) | Adjusted OR (95 % CI) | |
| Maternal & Newborn Health | |||||
| Family Planning | 1440 | 11.6 (7.2–18.9)*** | 12.9 (5.8–28.9)*** | 41.7 (20.4–85.3)*** | 30.7 (13.5–69.6)*** |
| Antenatal care | 1424 | 14.5 (8.5–24.9)*** | 22.7 (8.2–62.8)*** | 56.9 (24.2–133.5)*** | 38.6 (14.9–99.9)*** |
| Skilled care during childbirth | 1418 | 5.1 (3.4–7.7)*** | 1.8 (1.1–3.0)* | 10.9 (6.8–17.5)*** | 4.9 (3.0–8.2)*** |
| Essential newborn care | 1374 | 8.7 (5.7–13.3)*** | 10.3 (5.6–18.9)*** | 32.4 (18.1–58.2)*** | 24.7 (13.2–46.4)*** |
| Basic EmOC | 999 | 5.6 (3.7–8.4)*** | 2.9 (1.8–4.6)*** | 2.9 (2.0–4.4)*** | 2.1 (1.4–3.2)** |
| Postpartum care | 1376 | 15.3 (8.7–26.9)*** | 15.8 (6.8–36.3)*** | 16.7 (9.7–28.8)*** | 10.1 (5.5–18.6)*** |
| Comprehensive abortion care | 975 | 12.7 (8.0–20.2)*** | 6.3 (3.8–10.4)*** | 5.1 (3.3–7.9)*** | 3.6 (2.2–5.7)*** |
| Sexual Violence | |||||
| Clinical management of rape survivors | 1039 | 6.0 (3.8–9.6)*** | 4.6 (2.7–7.7)*** | 4.8 (3.0–7.6)*** | 4.4 (2.7–7.3)*** |
| Emergency contraception | 1053 | 7.0 (4.5–11.1)*** | 2.9 (1.8–4.9)*** | 4.3 (2.7–6.8)*** | 2.6 (1.6–4.3)*** |
| Post-exposure prophylaxis for STI & HIV infections | 1125 | 6.5 (4.3–9.6)*** | 3.7 (2.3-5.9)*** | 4.0 (2.8–5.8)*** | 2.4 (1.6–3.7)*** |
| STI & HIV/AIDS | |||||
| Syndromic Management of STIs | 1413 | 10.0 (6.3–15.8)*** | 11.3 (5.6–22.5)*** | 16.6 (9.9–27.8)*** | 10.7 (5.9–19.1)*** |
| Standard precautions | 1445 | 8.3 (4.9–14.1)*** | 5.1 (2.5–10.5)*** | 12.8 (7.3–22.5)*** | 7.1 (3.8–13.0)*** |
| Prophylaxis and treatment of opportunistic infections (HIV/AIDS) | 937 | 4.3 (2.8–6.5)*** | 3.3 (2.0–5.3)*** | 5.3 (3.5–7.9)*** | 3.3 (2.0–5.3)*** |
| HIV counseling and testing | 1092 | 7.7 (5.1–11.6)*** | 3.1 (1.9–5.0)*** | 7.5 (5.0–11.4)*** | 4.3 (2.7–6.7)*** |
| PMTCT | 954 | 7.0 (4.5–11.1)*** | 3.7 (2.2–6.1)*** | 4.0 (2.6–6.3)*** | 2.5 (1.5–4.1)*** |
* p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01;*** p < 0.001
a Models were adjusted for sector (public/private), external support to the facility, evaluation of the facility (function/intact) and access to water