| Literature DB >> 35136594 |
Josephine Exley1, Prateek Anand Gupta2, Joanna Schellenberg1, Kathleen L Strong3, Jennifer Harris Requejo4, Ann-Beth Moller5, Allisyn C Moran3, Tanya Marchant1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Effective coverage measures aim to estimate the proportion of a population in need of a service that received a positive health outcome. In 2020, the Effective Coverage Think Tank Group recommended using a 'coverage cascade' for maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health and nutrition (MNCAHN), which organises components of effective coverage in a stepwise fashion, with each step accounting for different aspects of quality of care (QoC), applied at the population level. The cascade outlines six steps that increase the likelihood that the population in need experience the intended health benefit: 1) the population in need (target population) who contact a health service; 2) that has the inputs available to deliver the service; 3) who receive the health service; 4) according to quality standards; 5) and adhere to prescribed medication(s) or health workers instructions; and 6) experience the expected health outcome. We examined how effective coverage of life-saving interventions from childbirth to children aged nine has been defined and assessed which steps of the cascade are captured by existing measures.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35136594 PMCID: PMC8801924 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.12.04001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Figure 1Health service coverage cascade for measuring effective coverage. Adapted from Marsh et al. 2020 [22].
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion | Exclusion | |
|---|---|---|
| Population/setting | • Studies conducted in any low- or middle-income setting. | • Studies conducted in high income settings. |
| • Studies that defined the target population in need of a health service or intervention. | • Studies that did not define and quantify the target population in need. | |
| • Studies conducted among women during childbirth, newborns and children up to 9 y of age. |
| |
| • Studies conducted in health facilities, communities or home. |
| |
| Interventions | Studies that examined essential life-saving interventions provided during childbirth through childhood up to 9 years of age [ |
|
| • Childbirth and postnatal care eg, social support, prevention of postpartum haemorrhage, induction of labour, management of postpartum haemorrhage, HIV therapy. | ||
| • Immediate essential newborn care eg, thermal protection, immediate drying and additional stimulation, neonatal resuscitation, clean cord care. | ||
| • Small and sick babies eg, kangaroo mother care, extra support for feeding small and preterm baby, prophylactic and therapeutic use of surfactant, management of jaundice. | ||
| • Infancy and childhood eg, exclusive breastfeeding for first 6 mo, complementary feeding, prevention and management of malaria, care for HIV, management of acute malnutrition, management of pneumonia, management of diarrhoea, management of meningitis, routine immunization, Vitamin A supplementation from 6 mo. | ||
| Outcome measures | • Any study that presented the methods used to measure a population-level adjusted contact coverage measure. | • Studies that do not provide sufficient detail on the items used to construct the effective coverage measure in the paper, appendices, or other supporting information. |
| • Studies needed to define the following three components: | • Studies that do not measure all three components of effective coverage (need, use, quality of care). | |
| Need: population in need of the intervention or service. |
| |
| Use: population that comes into contact with a service or received a specific intervention; AND. |
| |
| Quality of care: at least one dimension of QoC as defined by the study authors, can include inputs or process measures of quality as well as health outcomes. | • | |
| Comparisons | n/a | |
| Study design | • Studies using any study design or data source to estimate effective coverage. | • Commentaries and editorials |
| • Abstracts and conference presentations, if enough data presented to determine how effective coverage measure constructed. | • Reviews | |
|
| • Technical reports | |
| Language | • Studies published in English | • Studies not published in English |
Figure 2PRISMA diagram.
Number of studies that constructed an effective coverage measure for each health service or intervention by population group
| Women and newborns | Children under 5 | Children aged 5 to 9 |
|---|---|---|
| Facility based childbirth and/or immediate newborn care, n = 17 | Sick child care, n = 10 | No studies identified |
| Postnatal care for women and/or newborn, n = 8 | Complementary feeding, n = 5 | |
| Care of sick newborns, n = 1 | Growth monitoring, n = 1 | |
| Exclusive breastfeeding, n = 1 | Insecticide treated bednets (ITN), n = 1 | |
| Vaccines, n = 4 |
Figure 3Number of studies conducted by country and region. n indicates the total number of studies that included countries from the region. Six studies included multiple countries in the analysis; four included countries across multiple regions [32-35] and two included countries from a single region [36,37].
Figure 4Number of studies by data source used to construct effective coverage measure and level of data collection. Primary HH survey and primary HF indicate primary data collection undertaken by the study authors. Two studies conducted observations of care as part of the HF survey [38,39] and four studies included observations collected as part of SPA [33,40-42]. *One study examining childbirth, immediate newborn care and sick child care, used the Mexican National Health and Nutrition Survey (ENSANUT) and routine data: the Mexican Institute of Social Security (IMSS) performance indicators from health management information systems [43]. †Surveillance data refers to demographic surveillance data collected as part of the Newhints trial [44]. ‡One study of sick newborns did not include a household survey, instead authors estimated the population in need by applying the rate of live births requiring inpatient services to the total number of live births extrapolated from the DHS [45]. DHS – Demographic Health Survey, HF – health facility survey, HH – household survey, IMSS – Mexican Institute of Social Security performance indicators from health management information systems, MICS – Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys, SARA – Service Availability and Readiness Assessment, SPA – Service Provision Assessment.
Mapping effective coverage measures for women and newborns against the steps of the coverage cascade: by health service or intervention type and the data source and the number of items to measure each step
| Reference | Author reported measure | Health service or intervention | Target population | Service contact coverage | Input-adjusted coverage | Intervention coverage | Process quality-adjusted coverage | User-adherence adjusted coverage | Outcome-adjusted coverage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||
| Nesbitt et al. 2013 [ | Effective coverage | Intrapartum & immediate newborn care | Surveillance* | Surveillance* | HF, n = 20* | HF (HCW), n = 24* | HF (HCW), n = 3* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Larson et al. 2017 [ | Effective coverage | Obstetric care | HH* | HH* | HF, n = 37* | HF records, n = 4* | HF records, n = 2* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Baker et al. 2015 [ | Effective coverage | Active management of third stage of labour | HH* | HH* | HF, n = 2* | HF (HCW), n = 1* | † | ‡ | ‡ |
| Effective coverage | Use of partograph to monitor labour | HH* | HH* | HF, n = 1* | † | HF (HCW), n = 1* | ‡ | ‡ | |
| Munos et al. 2018 [ | Process-adjusted coverage | Labour & delivery | MICS* | MICS* | HF, n = 9* | † | HF (HCW), n = 10* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Kanyangarara et al. 2018 [ | Coverage of obstetric services: readiness | Obstetric service | DHS/MICS* | DHS/MICS, n = 1* | SPA/SARA, n = 23* | † | † | ‡ | ‡ |
| Coverage of obstetric services: service availability | Obstetric service | DHS/MICS* | DHS/MICS* | SPA/SARA, n = 9* | † | † | ‡ | ‡ | |
| Kemp et al. 2018 [ | Facility readiness | Facility delivery | DHS* | DHS* | SARA, n = 70* | † | † | ‡ | ‡ |
| Wang et al. 2019 [ | Effective coverage | Facility delivery | DHS* | DHS* | SPA, n = 53* | † | † | ‡ | ‡ |
| Munos et al. 2018 [ | Structure-adjusted coverage | Labour & delivery | MICS* | MICS* | HF, n = 33* | † | † | ‡ | ‡ |
| Sharma et al. 2017 [ | Population access to quality infrastructure | Delivery care | DHS* | DHS* | SPA, n = 20* | † | † | ‡ | ‡ |
| Willey et al. 2018 [ | Effective coverage | Basic emergency obstetric care | HH* | HH* | HF, n = 18* | † | † | ‡ | ‡ |
| Nguhiu et al. 2017 [ | Effective coverage | Skilled delivery & perinatal care | DHS* | DHS* | SPA, n = 9* | † | † | ‡ | ‡ |
| Munos et al. 2018 [ | Structure-adjusted coverage | Immediate newborn care | MICS* | MICS* | HF, n = 9* | † | † | ‡ | ‡ |
| Nguyen et al. 2021 [ | Input-adjusted coverage | Birth care | DHS* | DHS* | SPA, n = 5* | † | † | ‡ | ‡ |
| Sharma et al. 2017 [ | Population access to quality care | Delivery care | DHS* | DHS* | † | SPA, n = 12* | SPA, n = 6* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Munos et al. 2018 [ | Process-adjusted coverage | Immediate newborn care | MICS* | MICS* | † | HF (HCW), n = 17* | HF (HCW), n = 2* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Okawa et al. 2019a [ | Quality-adjusted contact | Peripartum care | HH* | HH* | † | HH, n = 6* | HH, n = 1* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Joseph et al. 2020 [ | Quality-adjusted coverage | Post-delivery care | MICS* | MICS* | † | SPA, n = 2* | SPA, n = 1* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Okawa et al. 2019b [ | Adequate contacts with high quality care | Peripartum care | HH* | HH* | † | HH, n = 3* |
| ‡ | ‡ |
| Marchant et al. 2015 [ | High quality contact | Prevention of haemorrhage | HH* | HH* | † | HF (HCW), n = 2* |
| ‡ | ‡ |
| Shibanuma et al. 2018 [ | Continuum of Care achievement | Facility delivery | HH* | HH* | † | HH, n = 2* |
| ‡ | ‡ |
| Leslie et al. 2019 [ | Effective coverage | Delivery care | ENSANUT* | HMIS* | † | † |
| ‡ | HMIS, n = 1* |
| Immediate newborn care | ENSANUT* | HMIS* | † | † | † | ‡ | HMIS, n = 1* | ||
|
| |||||||||
| Murphy et al. 2018 [ | Effective coverage | Inpatient neonatal care | Estimate*§ | Medical records* | HF, n = 127* | Medical records, n = 3* | Medical records, n = 28* | † | † |
|
| |||||||||
| Nguhiu et al. 2017 [ | Effective coverage | Exclusive Breastfeeding | DHS* | DHS* | † | † | † | DHS, n = 1* | ‡ |
|
| |||||||||
| Baker et al. 2015 [ | Effective coverage | PPC for women within 48hrs of delivery | HH* | HH* | HF, n = 1* | † | HH, n = 1* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Munos et al. 2018 [ | Structure-adjusted coverage | Post-discharge PNC for women and baby within 2 d of birth | HH* | HH* | HF, n = 24* | † | † | ‡ | ‡ |
| Okawa et al. 2019a [ | Quality-adjusted contact | PNC for women and newborn | HH* | HH* | † | HH, n = 6* | HH, n = 11* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Okawa et al. 2019b [ | Adequate contacts with high quality care | PNC for women and newborn | HH* | HH* | † | HH, n = 4* | HH, n = 10* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Carvajal Aguirre et al 2017 [ | Content coverage | PNC for women and baby | DHS* | DHS* | † | DHS, n = 3* | DHS, n = 2* | DHS, n = 2* | ‡ |
| Shibanuma et al. 2018 [ | Continuum of Care achievement | PNC for women and child within 48hrs, 2 & 6 wks post-delivery | HH* | HH* | † | HH, n = 1* | HH, n = 2* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Munos et al. 2018 [ | Process-adjusted coverage | PNC for women and baby within 2 d of birth | HH* | HH* | † | O, n = 3* | O, n = 8* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Marchant et al. 2015 [ | High quality contact | PPC for women within 48hrs of birth | HH* | HH* | † | † | HH, n = 3* | ‡ | ‡ |
| PNC for newborn within 48 h of birth | HH* | HH* | † | HH, n = 1* | HH, n = 2* | ‡ | ‡ | ||
| Hategeka et al. 2020 [ | Effective coverage | PPC for women before discharge | DHS* | DHS* | † | † | DHS, n = 2* | ‡ | ‡ |
DHS – Demographic Health Survey, ENSANUT – Mexican National Health and Nutrition Survey, HCW – health care worker interview (conducted as part of a health facility assessment), HF – health facility assessment, HH – household survey, HMIS – Health Management Information System, MICS – Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys, n – number of items used to measure indicator, O – observations, PPC – post-partum care, PNC – post-natal care, SPA – Service Provision Assessment
*Indicates items measured that map to steps of Marsh et al.’s coverage cascade.
†Indicates no items measured.
‡Indicates steps of the cascade that Marsh et al. consider are not amenable to measurement for a particular service.
§Murphy et al. estimated the target population by extrapolating rate of newborns requiring inpatient services to the total number of live births in the study population [45].
Mapping effective coverage measures for children under five against the steps of the coverage cascade: by health service or intervention type and the data source and the number of items to measure each step
| Reference | Author reported measure | Health service or intervention | Target population | Service contact coverage | Input-adjusted coverage | Intervention coverage | Process quality-adjusted coverage | User-adherence adjusted coverage | Outcome-adjusted coverage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||
| Koulidiati et al. 2018 [ | Effective coverage | Treatment of illness | HH* | HH* | HF, n = 16 | † | O, n = 8* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Nguhiu et al. 2017 [ | Effective coverage | Quality primary care for children: treatment of ARI and/or fever | DHS* | DHS* | SPA, n = 2 | † | SPA, n = 5* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Munos et al. 2018 [ | Structure-adjusted coverage | Care seeking fever, cough, or diarrhoea | MICS* | MICS* | HF, n = 25 | † | † | ‡ | ‡ |
| Carter et al. 2018 [ | Input based effective coverage | Treatment of diarrhoea, fever, ARI or a combination | HH* | HH* | HF, n = 20 | † | † | ‡ | ‡ |
| Nguyen et al. 2021 [ | Input-adjusted coverage | Treatment of diarrhoea or ARI | DHS* | DHS* | SPA, n = 9 | † | † | ‡ | ‡ |
| Leslie et al. 2017 [ | Effective coverage | Treatment for diarrhoea, fever or ARI | DHS/MICS* | DHS/MICS* | † | SPA, n = 2* | SPA, n = 20* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Smith et al. 2010 [ | Treatment pathway | Treatment for malaria | HH* | HH* | † | HH, n = 2* | HH, n = 1* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Millar et al. 2014 [ | Treatment pathway | Treatment for malaria | HH* | HH* | † | HH, n = 2* | HH, n = 1* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Hategeka et al. 2020 [ | Effective coverage | Treatment for diarrhoea | DHS* | DHS* | † | DHS, n = 1* | † | ‡ | ‡ |
| Treatment for pneumonia | DHS* | DHS* | † | DHS, n = 1* | † | ‡ | ‡ | ||
| Treatment for malaria | DHS* | DHS* | † | DHS, n = 1* | † | ‡ | ‡ | ||
| Munos et al. 2018 [ | Process-adjusted coverage | Care seeking fever, cough, or diarrhoea | MICS* | MICS* | † | † | O, n = 6* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Leslie et al. 2019 [ | Effective coverage | Treatment for ARI | ENSANUT* | HMIS* | † | † | † | ‡ | HMIS, n = 1* |
| Treatment for diarrhoea | ENSANUT* | HMIS* | † | † | † | ‡ | HMIS, n = 1* | ||
|
| |||||||||
| Aaron et al. 2016 [ | Effective coverage | Complementary feeding supplement | HH* | HH* | † | HH, n = 1* | † | HH, n = 1* | ‡ |
| Leyvraz et al. 2016a [ | Effective coverage | Fortified complementary food | HH* | HH* | † | HH, n = 1* | † | HH, n = 2* | ‡ |
| Leyvraz et al. 2016b [ | Effective coverage | Fortified complementary food | HH* | HH* | † | HH, n = 1* | † | HH, n = 2* | ‡ |
| Leyvraz et al. 2018 [ | Effective coverage | Micronutrient powder | HH* | HH* | † | HH, n = 1* | † | HH, n = 2* | ‡ |
| Nguyen et al. 2016 [ | Effective coverage | Micronutrient powder | HH* | HH* | † | HH, n = 1* | † | HH, n = 2* | ‡ |
|
| |||||||||
| Nguyen et al. 2021 [ | Input-adjusted coverage | Growth Monitoring | DHS* | DHS* | SPA, n = 6* | † | † | † | † |
|
| |||||||||
| Nguhiu et al. 2017 [ | Effective coverage | Use of ITN | DHS* | DHS* | † | DHS, n = 1* | † | ‡ | ‡ |
|
| |||||||||
| Nguhiu et al. 2017 [ | Effective coverage | Quality primary care for children: complete set of basic vaccines | DHS* | DHS* | SPA, n = 2* | † | SPA, n = 5* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Mokdad et al. 2015 [ | Missed opportunities | MMR vaccine: facilities with MMR in stock | HH* | VC or HH* | HF, n = 1* | † | VC or HH, n = 1* | ‡ | ‡ |
| MMR vaccine: facilities with MMR stock-out in last 3 mo | HH* | VC or HH* | HF, n = 1* | † | VC or HH, n = 1* | ‡ | ‡ | ||
| MMR vaccine: facilities with ORS in stock | HH* | VC or HH* | HF, n = 1* | † | VC or HH, n = 1* | ‡ | ‡ | ||
| Mmanga et al. 2021 [ | Effective immunisation coverage | Complete set of basic vaccines | DHS* | DHS* | † | DHS, n = 2* | DHS, n = 1* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Sheff et al. 2020 [ | Quality coverage | Complete set of basic vaccines | HH* | VC* | † | VC, n = 1* | VC, n = 1* | ‡ | ‡ |
| Mokdad et al. 2015 [ | Missed opportunities | Timely MMR vaccine | HH* | VC or HH* | † | † | VC or HH, n = 1* | ‡ | ‡ |
DTP – diphtheria, pertussis, and tetanus, DHS – Demographic Health Survey, ENSANUT – Mexican National Health and Nutrition Survey, HCW – health care worker interview (conducted as part of a health facility assessment), HF – health facility assessment, HH – household survey, HMIS – Health Management Information System, ITN – insecticide treated bednet, MICS – Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys, MMR – measles, mumps and rubella, n – number of items used to measure indicator, O – observations, ORS – oral rehydration solution, SPA – Service Provision Assessment, VC – vaccination card
*Indicates items measured that map to steps of Marsh et al.’s coverage cascade.
†Indicates no items measured.
‡Indicates steps of the cascade that Marsh et al. consider are not amenable to measurement for a particular service.