| Literature DB >> 27274597 |
Ileana Heredia-Pi1, Edson Servan-Mori1, Blair G Darney1, Hortensia Reyes-Morales2, Rafael Lozano1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To propose an antenatal care classification for measuring the continuum of health care based on the concept of adequacy: timeliness of entry into antenatal care, number of antenatal care visits and key processes of care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27274597 PMCID: PMC4890208 DOI: 10.2471/BLT.15.168302
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bull World Health Organ ISSN: 0042-9686 Impact factor: 9.408
Independent and conditional analyses of the coverage of the dimensions of antenatal care among pregnant women in a national retrospective study, Mexico, 2012
| Dimension of antenatal carea | % (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| Independent coverage | Conditional coverage | |
| Skilled | 98.4 (98.1 to 98.8) | 98.4 (98.1 to 98.8) |
| Timely | 83.2 (81.8 to 84.6) | 83.2 (81.8 to 84.6) |
| Sufficient | 91.4 (90.3 to 92.5) | 79.9 (78.4 to 81.4) |
| Appropriate | 84.7 (83.3 to 86.2) | 71.5 (69.7 to 73.2) |
CI: confidence interval.
a Skilled (antenatal care provided by a nurse or a physician); timely (initial antenatal care visit during first trimester of pregnancy); sufficient (≥ 4 antenatal care visits during pregnancy); appropriate (visits included at least 7/8 of recommended basic care procedures: measurement of height, weight, and blood pressure, urine analysis, blood examination, tetanus vaccine, and prescription of folic acid as well as vitamin/iron/food supplements.
Note: Sample n = 6494; sample weighted to population n = 9 052 044. Independent coverage was the percentage of the population receiving an intervention, measuring the coverage of each indicator separately. Conditional coverage refers to full compliance with antenatal care indicators, measuring the coverage of each indicator conditional on the coverage of the previous one.
Fig. 1Percentage of women by state with adequate antenatal care in a national retrospective study, Mexico, 2012
Individual and household characteristics of women by access to and adequacy of antenatal care in a national retrospective study, Mexico, 2012
| Characteristic | % (95% CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No antenatal care | Inadequate antenatal care | Adequate antenatal carea | ||
| No. of years in school | ||||
| 0 | 22.3 (13.6 to 34.3) | 6.4 (5.0 to 8.1) | 3.2 (2.4 to 4.4) | < 0.001 |
| 1–6 | 34.3 (24.4 to 45.8) | 25.1 (22.1 to 28.3) | 20.3 (18.5 to 22.3) | |
| 7–9 | 31.5 (22.3 to 42.6) | 41.6 (38.0 to 45.3) | 36.8 (34.4 to 39.2) | |
| 10–12 | 10.1 (3.8 to 24.2) | 20.2 (17.3 to 23.4) | 26.4 (24.2 to 28.8) | |
| ≥ 13 | 1.7 (0.4 to 7.8) | 6.7 (5.0 to 9.0) | 13.2 (11.6 to 15.1) | |
| Age at time of last delivery, years | ||||
| 12–19 | 22.6 (15.0 to 32.5) | 25.3 (22.2 to 28.7) | 18.0 (16.4 to 19.9) | < 0.001 |
| 20–29 | 48.6 (37.7 to 59.7) | 51.0 (47.5 to 54.6) | 54.5 (52.3 to 56.7) | |
| 30–49 | 28.8 (20.6 to 38.7) | 23.6 (20.9 to 26.7) | 27.4 (25.6 to 29.4) | |
| No. of children at the time of last delivery | ||||
| 0 | 35.1 (23.4 to 48.8) | 35.5 (31.8 to 39.5) | 31.3 (29.3 to 33.5) | 0.001 |
| 1 | 22.3 (14.9 to 32.1) | 27.3 (24.1 to 30.7) | 33.9 (31.8 to 36.0) | |
| ≥ 2 | 42.6 (31.5 to 54.5) | 37.2 (33.5 to 41.1) | 34.8 (32.7 to 36.9) | |
| Year of obstetric episode | ||||
| 2006–2007 | 23.6 (16.1 to 33.2) | 28.3 (25.0 to 31.8) | 26.8 (25.0 to 28.8) | < 0.05 |
| 2008–2009 | 41.8 (31.0 to 53.5) | 32.0 (28.5 to 35.6) | 38.6 (36.3 to 41.0) | |
| 2010–2012 | 34.6 (25.4 to 45.1) | 39.7 (36.2 to 43.3) | 34.6 (32.3 to 36.8) | |
| Infant death (stillbirth or death within the first year of life) | 13.8 (7.1 to 24.9) | 3.6 (2.7 to 4.8) | 3.9 (3.1 to 4.8) | < 0.001 |
| At least one miscarriage or abortion | 20.5 (12.9 to 31.0) | 13.1 (10.9 to 15.6) | 15.1 (13.7 to 16.6) | 0.138 |
| Health insurance | ||||
| Social security | 12.1 (6.0 to 23.1) | 19.9 (16.9 to 23.2) | 34.2 (31.9 to 36.6) | < 0.01 |
| | 57.7 (46.4 to 68.2) | 52.0 (48.0 to 55.9) | 44.5 (42.2 to 46.8) | |
| None | 30.2 (21.7 to 40.3) | 28.2 (24.6 to 32.0) | 21.3 (19.0 to 23.8) | |
| Frequent antenatal care provider | ||||
| Social security | NA | 21.1 (18.2 to 24.2) | 32.2 (29.9 to 34.6) | < 0.001 |
| Ministry of health | NA | 52.2 (48.5 to 56.0) | 42.7 (40.1 to 45.4) | |
| Private | NA | 23.5 (20.2 to 27.1) | 22.8 (20.7 to 25.1) | |
| Other | NA | 3.2 (2.3 to 4.4) | 2.2 (1.7 to 2.9) | |
| Health problem diagnosed during pregnancyc | NA | 55.2 (51.3 to 59.1) | 60.4 (58.0 to 62.7) | 0.027 |
| Indigenous | 43.8 (31.9 to 56.5) | 12.1 (10.1 to 14.4) | 7.9 (6.7 to 9.4) | < 0.001 |
| 41.4 (30.1 to 53.6) | 26.8 (23.7 to 30.1) | 20.9 (19.2 to 22.7) | < 0.001 | |
| Asset and housing index (tercile) | ||||
| Low | 72.4 (60.5 to 81.8) | 42.5 (38.6 to 46.4) | 29.9 (27.9 to 32.1) | < 0.001 |
| Middle | 17.8 (11.5 to 26.7) | 33.4 (29.6 to 37.4) | 32.8 (30.7 to 35.0) | |
| High | 9.7 (3.7 to 23.4) | 24.1 (20.9 to 27.8) | 37.2 (34.7 to 39.8) | |
| Area of residence | ||||
| Rural | 47.9 (36.2 to 59.8) | 25.5 (22.6 to 28.6) | 21.6 (20.0 to 23.2) | < 0.001 |
| Urban | 15.4 (9.6 to 23.8) | 23.3 (20.3 to 26.6) | 19.2 (17.8 to 20.6) | |
| Metropolitan | 36.7 (25.2 to 49.9) | 51.2 (47.3 to 55.2) | 59.3 (57.2 to 61.4) | |
| Marginalization index | ||||
| Low | 56.5 (44.6 to 67.6) | 72.7 (69.4 to 75.7) | 77.6 (76.0 to 79.1) | < 0.001 |
| High | 43.5 (32.4 to 55.4) | 27.3 (24.3 to 30.6) | 22.4 (20.9 to 24.0) | |
CI: confidence interval; NA: data not applicable.
a Adequate: antenatal care that was skilled (provided by a nurse or a physician); timely (initial visit during first trimester of pregnancy); sufficient (≥ 4 visits during pregnancy); and appropriate (visits included at least 7/8 of recommended basic care procedures).
b P-values refer to the test of equality or similar distributions across the three groups; values below 0.05 signify that distributions were statistically different with 95% confidence. Estimates included the effect of the survey design.
c Problems included high blood pressure, vaginal bleeding, threat of miscarriage, pre-eclampsia or eclampsia, gestational diabetes or infections.
Notes: No antenatal care: sample n = 146; weighted sample n = 142 117. Inadequate antenatal care: sample n = 1718; weighted sample n = 2 439 526. Adequate antenatal care: sample n = 4630; weighted sample n = 6 470 401.
Ordered logit model of access to and adequacy of antenatal care among women in a national retrospective study, Mexico, 2012
| Characteristic | Marginal effects % (95% CI)a | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| No antenatal care | Inadequate antenatal care | Adequate antenatal careb | |
| No. of years in school | |||
| 0 | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| 1–6 | −2.7 (–5.0 to –0.4) | −13.0 (–20.8 to –5.2) | 15.6 (5.9 to 25.4) |
| 7–9 | −2.7 (–5.1 to –0.3) | −12.9 (–20.8 to –5.0) | 15.6 (5.6 to 25.6) |
| 10–12 | −3.5 (–6.0 to –1.0) | −19.9 (–28.5 to –11.2) | 23.4 (12.7 to 34.0) |
| ≥ 13 | −3.9 (–6.6 to –1.2) | −24.2 (–35.0 to –13.4) | 28.2 (15.3 to 41.0) |
| No. of children at time of last delivery | |||
| 0 | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| 1 | −1.5 (–2.9 to –0.2) | −6.1 (–10.8 to –1.4) | 7.6 (1.9 to 13.3) |
| ≥ 2 | −0.8 (–2.2 to 0.7) | −2.7 (–7.9 to 2.4) | 3.5 (–3.0 to 10.0) |
| Health insurance | |||
| None | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| Social security | −2.7 (–4.3 to –1.1) | −13.0 (–18.9 to –7.2) | 15.7 (9.2 to 22.3) |
| | −1.4 (–2.7 to –0.1) | −5.5 (–10.1 to –0.8) | 6.9 (1.3 to 12.5) |
| Indigenous | |||
| No | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| Yes | 2.5 (0.1 to 4.9) | 5.8 (1.4 to 10.2) | −8.3 (–14.2 to –2.4) |
| Asset and housing index (tercile) | |||
| Low | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| Middle | −1.1 (–2.3 to 0.03) | −4.3 (–8.7 to 0.1) | 5.4 (0.1 to 10.7) |
| High | −2.3 (–3.9 to –0.8) | −10.7 (–16.5 to –4.9) | 13.1 (6.5 to 19.7) |
CI: confidence interval; Ref: reference group.
a Values are marginal effects expressed as percentage points. Estimates included the effect of the survey design. Models were also adjusted by age at the time of last delivery (years), children dead at childbirth or during the first year, at least one miscarriage or abortion, Oportunidades beneficiary, the year of obstetric episode, and characteristics of place of residence (shown in Table 2). Covariates were not statistically significant.
b Adequate: antenatal care that was skilled (provided by a nurse or a physician); timely (initial visit during first trimester of pregnancy); sufficient (≥ 4 visits during pregnancy); and appropriate (visits included at least 7/8 of recommended basic care procedures).
Notes: Sample n = 6494; weighted sample n = 9 052 044. Post-estimation test showed that the regression model was correctly specified: _hat P < 0.001, _hatsq P = –0.63.