| Literature DB >> 26566812 |
Taylor E Hurst1, Katherine Semrau2,3, Manasa Patna4,5, Atul Gawande6,7,8, Lisa R Hirschhorn9,10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Reducing maternal and neonatal mortality is essential to improving population health. Demand-side interventions are designed to increase uptake of critical maternal health services, but associated change in service uptake and outcomes is varied. We undertook a literature review to understand current evidence of demand-side intervention impact on improving utilization and outcomes for mothers and newborn children.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26566812 PMCID: PMC4644345 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-015-0727-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Description of studies included in the review
| Author | Publication Year | Country | Setting | Participants | Study Design | Eligibility Criteria | Intervention | Primary Outcomes |
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| Fottrell | 2013 | Bangladesh | Rural | 19,301 births | Cluster-RCT | Women permanently residing in the study area who had a recorded birth or pregnancy related death in the final 24 months of the intervention | Monthly peer-facilitated participatory action and learning groups where mothers discussed neonatal and maternal health problems and brainstormed ideas to address them | NMR |
| Hounton | 2009 | Burkina Faso | Rural | Intervention: 43,612 women | Quasi-experimental | Women aged 12–49 who had been pregnant during the survey reference period | Community leaders led structured meetings with health professionals, religious leaders, and administrative officials to identify barriers to care and plan solutions | Institutional births, NMR, MMR |
| Lewycka | 2013 | Malawi | Rural | 24 intervention and control clusters (Intervention: 27,361 women Control: 28,570 women) | Cluster-RCT | Women of childbearing age (10–49) that lived in the study area | Trained facilitators led community based groups to identify maternal and child health problems and solutions | MMR, PMR, NMR, IMR exclusive breastfeeding |
| Manandhar | 2004 | Nepal | Rural | Intervention clusters: 14,884 participants | Cluster-RCT | Closed cohort of married women of reproductive age (15–49) who could become pregnant | Trained, local facilitators led women’s groups to increase knowledge and implement action for change | NMR |
| More | 2012 | Mumbai (India) | Urban (slums) | 24 Intervention & control settlements 283,000 total population 18,197 births | Cluster-RCT | Women of child bearing age in intervention settlement | Series of 26 women's group sessions led by facilitator to increase knowledge develop an implement local strategies to address identified priority issues | Perinatal care, MMR, extended perinatal mortality |
| Mushi | 2010 | Tanzania | Rural | 512 deliveries | Pre-post | All deliveries that occurred during the study period | Safe motherhood promoters led community groups and conduct home visits with pregnant women | Skilled birth attendance |
| Persson | 2013 | Vietnam | Rural and urban | Intervention: 44 communes | Cluster-RCT | Mother-newborn pairs in districts with NMR ≥ 15/1000 | Local facilitators led monthly meetings with health workers, health center staff, and community members to prioritize perinatal health problems and solutions | NMR |
| Tripathy | 2010 | India | Rural | 18 intervention and control cluster (18,775 total births) | Cluster-RCT | Women 15–49 years old who had given birth during the study period and were residing in project area | Trained, local women facilitated monthly meetings using the participatory learning and action cycle to share information, identify maternal and newborn health problems, and collectively design, implement, and evaluate strategies to address these problems | NMR, maternal depression scores |
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| Bellows | 2013 | Kenya | Urban (informal settlements) | 4362 women | Pre-post | The 2005/06 data set included all females aged 12–54 years old who were registered in the longitudinal NUHDSS and had a live birth or stillbirth between January 2004 and December 2005. The second data set included all females aged 12–54 who had given birth in the last 6 months | Eligible women could purchase vouchers that covered antenatal care, facility-based delivery, and postnatal care | Delivery in a health facility |
| De Allegri | 2012 | Burkina Faso | Rural | 1934 women | Pre-post | Women residing in the 1050 households in Nouna Health District included in the representative sample | Women who presented for a normal facility-based delivery received an 80 % subsidy, women who presented for complicated deliveries or C-sections charged proportionally higher rates | Delivery in a health facility |
| Gupta | 2012 | India | Rural and urban | Pre: 3929 women | Pre-post | All women who delivered at the NSCB Medical College & Hospital of Jabalpur district between August 2003 and August 2007. All pregnant women were eligible to receive the JSY cash incentive if they chose to deliver in a facility | Provided antenatal and postnatal services as well as a cash incentive for mothers after they delivered in a government or accredited private health facility | Maternal mortality and maternal morbidity |
| Ir | 2010 | Cambodia | Rural | 2725 women | Quasi-experimental | Pregnant women who received vouchers and had a facility-based delivery in the three districts where the program was implemented | Women received vouchers for antenatal visits, facility-based deliveries, and postnatal care as well as funds for transportation costs. Health Equity Fund schemes were also in place to promote access to health services for the poor | Proportion of facility- based deliveries |
| Lim | 2010 | India | Rural and urban | 182,869 women | Quasi-experimental | Women 15–44 years old included in the DLHS survey | Women received a financial incentive after delivering in a government or accredited private health facility | Perinatal death, neonatal death, MMR |
| Nguyen | 2012 | Bangladesh | Rural and urban |
| Quasi-experimental | Women who had delivered 6 months prior to the survey | Women received money for transport costs and vouchers for antenatal care, safe delivery care in a facility or at home, emergency care for obstetric complications, and postnatal care. After delivery with a qualified provider women also received a cash incentive and gift box | ANC visits, institutional delivery, delivery attended by a qualified provider (facility or at home), incidence of C-section, incidence of PNC check-ups with a qualified provider |
| Randive | 2013 | India | Rural and urban | 284 districts (population 1.7 million) | Pre-post | Population-based national level surveys containing maternal mortality and birth data | Women received a financial incentive after delivering in a government or accredited private health facility | MMR, institutional births |
| Barber | 2009 | Mexico | Rural | Intervention: 712 births | RCT | Women eligible for | Households received a cash transfer if a woman attended educational programming and completed a prescribed prenatal care plan (% ANC visits and nutritional supplements) | Overall quality of care score, quality scores within three domains (history taking and diagnostics, physical examination, and prevention) |
ANC antenatal care, PNC postnatal care, RCT randomized control trial, MMR maternal mortality ratio, PMR perinatal mortality rate, NMR neonatal mortality rate, IMR infant mortality rate
Fig. 1Study review for inclusion
Results by type of demand-side intervention
| Community mobilization | |||||||
| Maternal mortality ratio | Stillbirth rate | Perinatal mortality rate | Neonatal mortality rate | Antenatal care | Facility-based delivery | Skilled birth attendance | |
| Fottrell | NS | NS | NS | ARR: 0.62 (0.43, 0.89) | NS | NS | NS |
| Hounton | NS | -- | OR: 0.75 (0.70, 0.80) | -- | -- | 30 % increase | -- |
| Lewycka | AOR: 0 · 51 (0 · 26–0 · 99) | -- | NS | NS | Any ANC at health facility AOR: 1.50 (1.03 to 2.19) | NS | NS |
| Manandhar | AOR: 0.22 (0.05–0.90) | NS | -- | AOR: 0.70 (0.53–0.94) | Any ANC AOR: 2 · 82 (1.41–5.62) | AOR: 3 · 55 (1 · 56–8 · 05) | Doctor, nurse, or midwife AOR: 3 · 53 (1 · 54–8 · 10) |
| More | -- | NS | NS | AOR: 1.48 (1.06, 2.08) | NS | NS | -- |
| Mushi | -- | -- | -- | -- | Early ANC booking increase from 18.7 to 56.9 %, | -- | Increase in SBA from 34.1 to 51.4 %, |
| Persson | -- | -- | -- | NS | AOR: 2.27 (1.07–4.80) | NS | -- |
| Tripathy | NS | NS | AOR: 0.79 (0.69, 0.91) | AOR: 0 · 68 (0 · 59–0 · 78) | NS | NS | NS |
| Financial incentives | |||||||
| Maternal mortality ratio | Stillbirth rate | Perinatal mortality rate | Neonatal mortality rate | Antenatal care | Facility-based delivery | Skilled birth attendance | |
| Bellows | -- | -- | -- | -- | Any ANC visit: OR: 16.5 (4.0–68.1) | OR: 1.4 (1.2–1.6) | OR: 1.2 (1.1-1.4) |
| 4 + ANC visits: OR: 1.9 (1.6–2.4) | |||||||
| De Allegri | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | Increase from 49 to 84 % ( | -- |
| Gupta | Increased (1985 to 2444 per 100,000 live births) | -- | -- | -- | -- | 42.6 % increase in FBD | -- |
| Ir | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | Increase in FBD from 16.3 to 44.9 % of the expected number of births (2.4 to 7 % for voucher recipients, 58.1 to 69.8 % for Health Equity Fund recipients) | -- |
| Lim | NS | -- | −3.7 (−5.2, −2.2) | −2.3 (−3.7, −0.9) | 3 ANC visits: 10.7 % (9.1 to 12.3) | 43.5 % (42.5 to 44.6) increase in FBD | 36.6 % (35.6 to 37.7) increase in SBA |
| Nguyen | -- | -- | -- | -- | Cross sectional difference | 37.5 % in intervention vs. 18.7 % in comparison areas, | 63.7 % in intervention vs. 27.1 % in comparison areas, |
| Any ANC check-up: 91.6 % vs. 75.6 %, | |||||||
| ≥ 3 ANC check-ups 0.241 | |||||||
| 54.8 % vs. 33.6 %, | |||||||
| ≥1 ANC visit with qualified provider 79.2 % vs. 54.9 %, | |||||||
| Randive | NS | -- | -- | -- | -- | Increase from 20 to 49 %, | -- |
| Both | |||||||
| Maternal mortality ratio | Stillbirth rate | Perinatal mortality rate | Neonatal mortality rate | Antenatal care | Facility-based delivery | Skilled birth attendance | |
| Barber | -- | -- | -- | -- | 12.2 % increase in number of recommended ANC procedures received | -- | -- |
NS not significant (p-value > 0.05), ARR adjusted risk ratio, OR odds ratio, AOR adjusted odds ratio, MMR maternal mortality ratio, PMR perinatal mortality rate, NMR neonatal mortality rate, IMR infant mortality, ANC antenatal care, FBD facility-based delivery, SBA skilled birth attendance
Aggregation of results of community mobilization and financial incentive interventions for utilization and health outcome measures
| Utilization measures | Increase | No significant effect or decrease |
| Antenatal care | ||
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| Facility-based delivery | ||
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| Skilled birth attendant | ||
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| Health outcome measures | Decrease | No significant effect or increase |
| Maternal mortality ratio | ||
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| Stillbirth rate | ||
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| None |
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| Perinatal mortality rate | ||
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| Neonatal mortality rate | ||
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