| Literature DB >> 32664936 |
Sanni Yaya1,2, Betregiorgis Zegeye3, Dina Idriss-Wheeler4, Gebretsadik Shibre5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite caesarean section (CS) being a lifesaving intervention, there is a noticeable gap in providing this service, when necessary, between different population groups within a country. In Burundi, there is little information about CS coverage inequality and the change in provision of this service over time. Using a high-quality equity analysis approach, we aimed to document both magnitude and change of inequality in CS coverage in Burundi over 7 years to investigate disparities.Entities:
Keywords: Burundi; Caesarean section; DHS; Global health; Inequality
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32664936 PMCID: PMC7359587 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-020-05516-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Coverage of birth by caesarean section across wealth quintiles, educational status, place of residence and subnational national region in Burundi from 2010 to 2016
| Dimension of Inequality | Subgroup | 2010 | 2016 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimate (95% UI) | Pop | Estimate (95% UI) | Pop | ||
| Economic status | Quintile 1 (poorest) | 3.01 (1.98, 4.54) | 1618 | 2.56 (1.91, 3.44) | 3064 |
| Quintile 2 | 3.30 (2.34, 4.65) | 1669 | 2.96 (2.09, 4.18) | 2920 | |
| Quintile 3 | 3.14 (2.15, 4.56) | 1676 | 3.84 (3.03, 4.86) | 2769 | |
| Quintile 4 | 2.61 (1.75, 3.87) | 1590 | 4.97 (3.91, 6.28) | 2582 | |
| Quintile 5 (richest) | 8.28 (6.70, 10.18) | 1426 | 12.53 (10.67, 14.66) | 2274 | |
| Education | No education | 2.83 (2.21, 3.62) | 4178 | 3.93 (3.27, 4.72) | 6396 |
| Primary school | 4.38 (3.46, 5.52) | 3312 | 3.99 (3.36, 4.73) | 5753 | |
| Secondary school or higher | 10.75 (8.18, 14.00) | 489 | 13.92 (11.91, 16.21) | 1461 | |
| Place of residence | Rural | 3.23 (2.66, 3.90) | 7322 | 3.91 (3.41, 4.47) | 12,367 |
| Urban | 12.13 (9.54, 15.29) | 657 | 16.23 (13.21, 19.77) | 1242 | |
| Sub - national Region | Bujumbura [Bubanzaa] | 12.92 (9.63, 17.11) | 400 | 7.72 (5.09, 11.56) | 753 |
| North [Bujumbura Rurala] | 3.57 (2.62, 4.83) | 2396 | 5.82 (3.96, 8.49) | 761 | |
| Centre-east [Bururia] | 4.01 (2.89, 5.52) | 1986 | 6.95 (4.52, 10.54) | 367 | |
| West [Cankuzoa] | 3.19 (2.04, 4.96) | 1576 | 3.18 (1.86, 5.40) | 442 | |
| South [Cibitokea] | 3.01 (2.15, 4.20) | 1620 | 6.30 (4.79, 8.25) | 842 | |
| Gitegaa | NA | NA | 5.02 (2.90, 8.57) | 1109 | |
| Karusia | NA | NA | 0.97 (0.54, 1.73) | 772 | |
| Kayanzaa | NA | NA | 3.85 (2.73, 5.41) | 814 | |
| Kirundoa | NA | NA | 3.01 (1.86, 4.81) | 1088 | |
| Makambaa | NA | NA | 6.21 (4.40, 8.69) | 778 | |
| Muramvyaa | NA | NA | 3.56 (1.71, 7.25) | 472 | |
| Muyingaa | NA | NA | 1.54 (0.65, 3.62) | 1188 | |
| Mwaroa | NA | NA | 4.22 (2.53, 6.94) | 400 | |
| Ngozia | NA | NA | 4.97 (3.41, 7.19) | 1067 | |
| Rutanaa | NA | NA | 5.08 (2.74, 9.23) | 562 | |
| Ruyigia | NA | NA | 3.81 (2.43, 5.93) | 763 | |
| Bujumbura Mairiea | NA | NA | 16.31 (11.46, 22.67) | 661 | |
| Rumongea | NA | NA | 5.66 (3.80, 8.36) | 764 | |
| National average | 3.964269 | 5.035336 | |||
a indicate regions in 2016 survey, NA Not Applicable for 2010 survey since there were only five regions
Time trends of CS inequalities by wealth, education, residence and region in Burundi, 2010 to 2016 DHSs
| Dimensions of inequalities | Summary measures | 2010 | 2016 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Estimate (95%UI) | Estimate (95%UI) | ||
| Economic status | D | 5.26 (3.14, 7.39) | 9.96 (7.84, 12.09) |
| PAR | 4.31 (3.54, 5.09) | 7.50 (6.97, 8.03) | |
| SII | 4.56 (2.93, 6.18) | 10.53 (8.97, 12.10) | |
| Educational status | D | 7.91 (4.95, 10.88) | 9.98 (7.72, 12.25) |
| PAR | 6.78 (6.39, 7.18) | 8.89 (8.51, 9.26) | |
| SII | 5.75 (3.92, 7.57) | 7.13 (5.60, 8.65) | |
| Place of residence | D | 8.90 (5.98, 11.82) | 12.32 (9.00, 15.63) |
| PAR | 8.16 (7.96, 8.37) | 11.19 (11.01, 11.37) | |
| Subnational region | D | 9.90 (6.06, 13.74) | 15.34 (9.74, 20.93) |
| PAR | 8.95 (8.18, 9.73) | 11.27 (10.52, 12.02) |
D Difference, PAR Population Attributable Risk, SII Slope Index of Inequality