Regional inequity in complete antenatal services and public emergency obstetric care is associated with greater burden of maternal deaths: analysis from consecutive district level facility survey of Karnataka, India

Abstract Background This equity focused evaluation analyses change in inter-district inequity of maternal health services (MHS) in Karnataka state between 2006–07 & 2012–13, alongside association of MHS inequity with distribution of maternal deaths. Methods Repeated cross-sectional analysis of i...

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Main Authors: M. Himanshu, Carina Källestål
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-05-01
Series:International Journal for Equity in Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12939-017-0573-3
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spelling doaj-87042b387f9041009ba6a1e825ac4cc52020-11-24T21:05:42ZengBMCInternational Journal for Equity in Health1475-92762017-05-0116111110.1186/s12939-017-0573-3Regional inequity in complete antenatal services and public emergency obstetric care is associated with greater burden of maternal deaths: analysis from consecutive district level facility survey of Karnataka, IndiaM. Himanshu0Carina Källestål1Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Public Health and Centre for Disease Control, Rajiv Gandhi University of Health SciencesInternational Maternal and Child Health, Department of Woman and Child Health, Uppsala UniversityAbstract Background This equity focused evaluation analyses change in inter-district inequity of maternal health services (MHS) in Karnataka state between 2006–07 & 2012–13, alongside association of MHS inequity with distribution of maternal deaths. Methods Repeated cross-sectional analysis of inequity and decomposition was done on nine district level MHS indicators using Theil’s T index. Data was obtained from population linked district level facility surveys and health information systems. Results Inequity in births attended by skill birth attendants decreased the most (83.16%) among six other MHS indicators. Community provision of comprehensive emergency obstetric care strategy remained stagnant. Districts with higher complete antenatal care share and C-sections in public settings had lesser share of state’s maternal deaths (R2 = 0.29, p = 0.004). 5 districts suffered perpetual inequity of MHS with relatively greater burden of maternal deaths. Conclusion First 6 years of national rural health mission increased coverage of MHS and decreased regional inequity albeit non-uniformly. Distribution of system driven interventions of complete ANC and C-sections appear to determine decrease of maternal mortality in Karnataka.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12939-017-0573-3InequityMaternalAntenatalEmergencyObstetricMortality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. Himanshu
Carina Källestål
spellingShingle M. Himanshu
Carina Källestål
Regional inequity in complete antenatal services and public emergency obstetric care is associated with greater burden of maternal deaths: analysis from consecutive district level facility survey of Karnataka, India
International Journal for Equity in Health
Inequity
Maternal
Antenatal
Emergency
Obstetric
Mortality
author_facet M. Himanshu
Carina Källestål
author_sort M. Himanshu
title Regional inequity in complete antenatal services and public emergency obstetric care is associated with greater burden of maternal deaths: analysis from consecutive district level facility survey of Karnataka, India
title_short Regional inequity in complete antenatal services and public emergency obstetric care is associated with greater burden of maternal deaths: analysis from consecutive district level facility survey of Karnataka, India
title_full Regional inequity in complete antenatal services and public emergency obstetric care is associated with greater burden of maternal deaths: analysis from consecutive district level facility survey of Karnataka, India
title_fullStr Regional inequity in complete antenatal services and public emergency obstetric care is associated with greater burden of maternal deaths: analysis from consecutive district level facility survey of Karnataka, India
title_full_unstemmed Regional inequity in complete antenatal services and public emergency obstetric care is associated with greater burden of maternal deaths: analysis from consecutive district level facility survey of Karnataka, India
title_sort regional inequity in complete antenatal services and public emergency obstetric care is associated with greater burden of maternal deaths: analysis from consecutive district level facility survey of karnataka, india
publisher BMC
series International Journal for Equity in Health
issn 1475-9276
publishDate 2017-05-01
description Abstract Background This equity focused evaluation analyses change in inter-district inequity of maternal health services (MHS) in Karnataka state between 2006–07 & 2012–13, alongside association of MHS inequity with distribution of maternal deaths. Methods Repeated cross-sectional analysis of inequity and decomposition was done on nine district level MHS indicators using Theil’s T index. Data was obtained from population linked district level facility surveys and health information systems. Results Inequity in births attended by skill birth attendants decreased the most (83.16%) among six other MHS indicators. Community provision of comprehensive emergency obstetric care strategy remained stagnant. Districts with higher complete antenatal care share and C-sections in public settings had lesser share of state’s maternal deaths (R2 = 0.29, p = 0.004). 5 districts suffered perpetual inequity of MHS with relatively greater burden of maternal deaths. Conclusion First 6 years of national rural health mission increased coverage of MHS and decreased regional inequity albeit non-uniformly. Distribution of system driven interventions of complete ANC and C-sections appear to determine decrease of maternal mortality in Karnataka.
topic Inequity
Maternal
Antenatal
Emergency
Obstetric
Mortality
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12939-017-0573-3
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AT carinakallestal regionalinequityincompleteantenatalservicesandpublicemergencyobstetriccareisassociatedwithgreaterburdenofmaternaldeathsanalysisfromconsecutivedistrictlevelfacilitysurveyofkarnatakaindia
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