| Literature DB >> 32174254 |
Mallory C Sheff1, Ayaga A Bawah2, Patrick O Asuming3, Pearl Kyei2, Mawuli Kushitor2, James F Phillips1, S Patrick Kachur1.
Abstract
Background: The United Nations 2030 Sustainable Development Goals have reaffirmed the international community's commitment to maternal, newborn, and child health, with further investments in achieving quality essential service coverage and financial protection for all.Objective: Using a modified version of the 1978 Tanahashi model as an analytical framework for measuring and assessing health service coverage, this paper aims to examine the system of care at the community level in Ghana's Volta Region to highlight the continued reforms needed to achieve Universal Health Coverage.Entities:
Keywords: Health systems; health policy; primary health care; systems evaluation; universal health coverage
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32174254 PMCID: PMC7144185 DOI: 10.1080/16549716.2020.1732664
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Health Action ISSN: 1654-9880 Impact factor: 2.640
Tanahashi model coverage determinants
| Coverage determinants | Definition |
|---|---|
| 1 a. Availability of health commodities | Refers to the availability of health system inputs. These include, for example, medicines and other necessary supplies. |
| 1 b. Availability of human resources | Refers to the availability of trained professionals at CHPS facilities that can provided needed care. |
| 2 a. Geographic accessibility | Physical access to service delivery points. |
| 2 b. Financial accessibility | Financial support or health insurance coverage to pay for medical care. |
| 3. Initial contact | Refers to the first contact or use of the health services or interventions. |
| 4. Continued utilization | Refers to the repeated contact with the health system to receive necessary care |
| 5. Quality coverage | Represents the quality of a health intervention defined by the full course of contact with the health system to receive effective care and the minimum inputs and processes to achieve defined health effects. |
Adapted from Henriksson et al. [22].
Figure 1.Modified Tanahashi model
Characteristics of women and their children of 12–23 months
| Variable (mothers) | Volta region | |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 15–24 | 416 (27.46%) |
| 25–34 | 703 (46.40%) | |
| 35–44 | 361 (23.83%) | |
| 45–49 | 35 (2.31%) | |
| Education | No Education | 595 (39.27%) |
| Primary | 357 (23.56%) | |
| Middle School/JHS/JSS | 473 (31.22%) | |
| Secondary + | 90 (5.94%) | |
| Wealth index/SES status | Poorest | 245 (16.17%) |
| Poorer | 293 (19.34%) | |
| Middle | 290 (19.14%) | |
| Richer | 326 (21.52%) | |
| Richest | 361 (23.83%) | |
| Religion parity | Other | 111 (7.33%) |
| Christian | 1169 (77.16%) | |
| Muslim | 69 (4.55%) | |
| Traditional | 166 (10.96%) | |
| 1–3 | 872 (57.56%) | |
| 4–6 | 461 (30.43%) | |
| 7+ | 182 (12.01%) | |
| Marital status | Single | 147 (9.70%) |
| Married | 1076 (71.02%) | |
| Widowed | 16 (1.06%) | |
| Divorced | 9 (0.59%) | |
| Separated | 70 (4.62%) | |
| Living together | 197 (13.00%) | |
| Occupation | No occupation | 221 (14.59%) |
| Student | 13 (0.86%) | |
| Farming | 795 (52.48%) | |
| Trading/Selling | 328 (21.65%) | |
| Hairdressing/Dressmaking | 107 (7.06%) | |
| Housewife | 10 (0.66%) | |
| Other | 41 (2.71%) | |
| | ||
| | Variable (children) | Volta region |
| Child gender | Male | 813 (52.76%) |
| Female | 728 (47.24%) | |
| Place of delivery | Home | 810 (52.56%) |
| Govt Hospital | 362 (23.49%) | |
| Govt Health Center | 277 (17.98%) | |
| CHPS Compound | 35 (2.27%) | |
| Other | 57 (3.70%) | |
| Post-natal care at the facility | 686 (44.52%) | |
| Post-natal care at home | 567 (36.79%) | |
*Our data set included information on 1541 children 12–23 months of age (including 28 pairs of twins) belonging to 1515 individual women.
Number and facility type in the Volta Region
| 7 CHPS+ Districts in VR | |
|---|---|
| CHPS zone without compound | 42 |
| CHPS zone with compound | 72 |
| Health Center | 31 |
Measures for immunization and ANC as indicators of health system strength
| Stage/Process component | Indicator Definition | Source |
|---|---|---|
| 1a. Availability (commodities & equipment) | Proportion of CHPS zones and health centers (HC) with the necessary immunization services and supplies at the time of survey Proportion of CHPS facilities and HC with the necessary supplies to provide ANC, including manual BP apparatus, Sulfadoxine/pyrimethamine, iron, tetanus-toxoid vaccine, and folic acid | Health facility survey |
| 1b. Availability (human resources) | Proportion of CHPS zones and HC with trained health personnel (CHO/CHN/EN) at the time of survey | Health facility survey |
| 2a. Accessibility (geographic) | Proportion of the population within 5 km of a CHPS zone or HC | Household survey |
| 2b. Accessibility | Proportion of the population with a valid National Health Insurance card | Household survey |
| 3. Initial Contact | Proportion of children who received the BCG vaccine Proportion of women who have gone to a CHPS zone or HC for their first ANC visit | Household survey |
| 4. Continued Utilization | Proportion of children who received all three doses of the DPT vaccine Proportion of women who have been to 4+ of their ANC visits at a CHPS zone or HC | Household survey |
| 5. Quality/Effective coverage | Proportion of children who have received all vaccines mandated by Ghana’s Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI) by 24 months Proportion of women who have received the minimum package of ANC services | Household Survey |
Figure 2.Tanahashi model results for immunization and ANC coverage