| Literature DB >> 30161201 |
Teketo Kassaw Tegegne1,2, Catherine Chojenta2, Deborah Loxton2, Roger Smith3, Kelemu Tilahun Kibret2,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Geographic access to obstetric care facilities has a significant influence on women's uptake of institutional delivery care. However, this effect was not consistent across studies. Some studies reported that geographic access to obstetric care facilities had no influence on the use of facility delivery. Therefore, this systematic review and meta-analysis synthesized and pooled the influence of geographic access on institutional delivery service uptake in low and middle-income countries.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30161201 PMCID: PMC6117044 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0203130
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Summary table for studies included in the systematic review and meta-analysis.
| Study and country | Study design and setting | Study population and sample size | Results | Geographic access on delivery care use | Remark (quality) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kawakatsu et al, 2014; Kenya[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 2026 women who had children aged from 12–24 months | 48% were institutional delivery | ≤20 minute travel time was associated with increased institutional delivery; AOR = 2.48: 1.74–3.55 | |
| Hailu & Berhe, 2014; Ethiopia[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 485 reproductive age women who had birth two years preceding the survey | 31.5% gave birth at health facilities | An increased institutional delivery for <60 minute of travel to nearest health facility; AOR = 3.3: 1.15–9.52 | |
| Habte & Demissie, 2015; Ethiopia[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 816 women who had birth two years preceding the survey | 31% of births were in health facility | Decreased institutional delivery for >60 minute travel time; | |
| Joshi et al, 2016; Nepal[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 275 women who had birth five years preceding the survey | 35% had delivered at health facility | Increased institutional delivery for ≤60 minutes of travel time to nearest delivery health facility; AOR = 7.7: 4.1, 14.4 | |
| Wagle et al, 2004; Nepal[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 308 women who had birth within 45 days of the survey | 50.6% of deliveries were in health facility | A traveling time of >60 minutes to a maternity hospital led to an increased odds of home delivery; AOR = 7.9; 3.7, 16.6 | |
| Jain et al, 2015; Pakistan[ | Cross-sectional study, Linked health facility & household survey | 763 obstetric care facilities and 4435 women who had birth three years before the survey | 21.0% of women had no access to delivery care facility within 10 kilometre | Odds of institutional delivery decreased by 3% with one kilometre increase in distance; AOR = 0.97 | |
| De Allegri et al, 2011; Burkina Faso[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 435 women reported pregnant 12 months prior to the survey | 72% were health facility delivery | Having access to obstetric care facility within 5km was associated with increased institutional delivery; AOR = 28.42, Robust Standard Error = 11.90 | |
| Lohela et al, 2012; Malawi & Zambia[ | Cross-sectional study, Linked health facility & household survey | Firstborn for multiple births: | 52.1% in Malawi & 32.5% in Zambia were health facility delivery | Health facility delivery decreased by 65% for every 10 km increase in distance; AOR = 0.35 ( | |
| Gabrysch et al, 2011; Zambia[ | Cross-sectional study, linked analysis (HHS & SPA) | 3682 births (firstborn were included in case of multiple births) 1131 health facilities | 32.5% births were health facility | Every doubling in travel distance was associated with a 29% decrease in institutional delivery | |
| Anyait et al, 2012; Uganda[ | Community based cross-section study | 500 women who had birth two years preceding the survey | 45.4% delivered in health facility | Having access to obstetric care facility within 3km | |
| Joharifard et al, 2012; Rwanda[ | Community based cross-sectional study–Trend analysis | 3106 lifetime deliveries from 895 women (18–50 years of age and gave birth within three years) | 89.8% of them delivered in health facility | Facility delivery decreased per a single kilometre increase in distance to the closest health facility; AOR = 0.909 (0.846, 0.976) | |
| Zegeye et al, 2014; Ethiopia[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 528 women who gave birth preceding the survey | 8% of mothers gave birth in health facility | A 22% decrease in institutional delivery per one kilometre increase in walking distance to the nearest health centre; AOR = 0.78 (0.64, 0.96) | |
| Masters et al, 2013; Ghana[ | Cross-sectional study; Linked population and health facility data | 1172 mothers, and 1646 births, and 1268 facilities | 39.0% were in facility deliveries | An increase in travel time of one hour decreased the odds of facility delivery by 20%; AOR = 0.80: 0.69, 0.93 | |
| De Allegri et al, 2015; Burkina Faso[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 420 women of recent history of childbirth | 11% of home delivery | A distance of ≥7 km was significantly associated with an increased in home delivery; AOR = 19.33; 3.37, 110.88 | |
| Worku & Alemay, 2016; Ethiopia[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 573 women who had birth one year preceding the survey | 16.9% were health facility births | Travel time to closest health facility: Ref; >2 hour | |
| Van et al, 2006; Kenya[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 635 women who had birth one year preceding the survey | 83% were outside health facility | Travel time: | |
| Lwelamira et al, 2012; Tanzania[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 984 women gave birth 2 years prior | 54% were in institutional deliveries | Access beyond 10 km; OR = 0.62: 0.47, 0.81 | |
| Yanagisawa et al, 2006; Cambodia[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 980 women aged 15–49 who gave birth within 3 months | 55.2% were health facility | Distance to Health Centre is for facility delivery; Ref: >5km | |
| Gage & Guirle, 2006; Haiti[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 4533 rural women aged 15–49 years | 9.6% were intuitional deliveries | Distance to hospital; Ref <5km | |
| Kesterton et al, 2012; India[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 98777 & 90303 reproductive age women who had births within 3 years of survey | Trend (1989 to 1998) is 15–25% | Distance to hospital: Ref: >30km | |
| Mageda & Mmbaga, 2015; Tanzania[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 598 women who had birth one year preceding the survey | 56% were health facility births | Distance to health facility: Ref; ≥10km | |
| Faye et al, 2011; Senegal[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 373 women who had childbirth in the last 12months | 22% were home delivery | Distance to health centre; Home births | |
| Kitui et a, 2013; Kenya[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 3967 reproductive age women who had births within 5 years preceding the survey | 46.8% were health facility births | Distance to health facility: AOR not significant | |
| Ogolla, 2015; Kenya[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 600 women aged 15–49 who had births within 6 months prior | 33.3% were health facility births | Distance to nearest health facility; Ref: ≤10km | |
| Kumar et al, 2014; India[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 158897 women aged 15–49 years | 36% were institutional births | A one kilometre increase in distance is associated with a 4.4% decrease in health facility delivery | |
| Hounton et al, 2008; Burkina Faso[ | Community & health facility based cross-sectional study | 43 Health Facilities & census of women aged 12–49 | 81536 births; 3145 (38.4%) were institutional births | Institutional birth decrease with… | |
| Teferra et al, 2012; Ethiopia[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 371 women who had birth one year preceding the survey | 12.1% were health facility births | Travel time to closest health facility: AOR not significant | |
| Amano et al, 2012; Ethiopia[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 855 women who had birth one year preceding the survey | 12.3% were health facility births | Travel time to closest health facility: AOR not significant | |
| Shimazaki et al, 2013; Philippines[ | Community based cross-sectional study | 354 women who had birth in the 3 years | 44.4% were HF delivery | Time taken to nearest HF; Ref: ≥31minutes | |
| Karkee et al, 2013; Nepal[ | Community based prospective cohort study | 644 pregnant women up to 45 days of postpartum period | 547 (85%) of them gave birth at health facility | ≤30 minute travel time was significantly associated with health facility delivery; AOR = 11.61: 5.77–24.04 | |
| Feyissa & Genemo, 2014; Ethiopia [ | Unmatched case control | 320 women aged 15–49 years | 80 cases (institutional) and 240 home deliveries | ≥10 km; OR = 0.665: 0.173, 0.954 |
Fig 1Systematic review and meta-analysis flow diagram adapted from the 2009 PRISMA statement (42).
Fig 2The effect of one hour and less travel time on delivery care use, effect sizes with 95% confidence interval.
Fig 3Funnel plot on having access to obstetric care facility within one hour’s travel time.
Fig 4The effect of geographic access within 5km on delivery care use, effect sizes with 95% confidence interval.
Fig 5Funnel plot on geographic access to obstetric care facility within 5km.