Does living in major towns favor institutional delivery in Somalia?

IF 2.3 Q2 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
Frontiers in global women's health Pub Date : 2024-07-25 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fgwh.2024.1216290
Naima Said Sheikh, Ahmed M Hussein, Shukri Said Mohamed, Abdi Gele
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Abstract

Background: In developing countries, institutional delivery is a key proven intervention that reduces maternal mortality and can reduce maternal deaths by approximately 16%-33%. In Somalia, only 32% of births are delivered in a health facility with the assistance of a skilled healthcare provider. We aimed to investigate the factors hindering women from giving birth at healthcare facilities in major towns in Somalia, where most of the health facilities in the country are concentrated.

Methods: A community-based health survey was carried out in 11 major towns in Somalia between October and December 2021. A structured and pretested questionnaire was used to collect data from 430 women who gave birth in the last five years. Women were recruited through convenient sampling. Descriptive statistics were used to summarize the data, and binary and multivariable logistic regression analysis was performed. Adjusted odds ratios (AOR) with 95% CI were estimated to assess the associations.

Results: The overall prevalence of institutional delivery was 57%. Approximately 38% of women living in Mogadishu and 53% living in another ten towns give birth at home. Women who had poor knowledge of the importance of health facility delivery had nearly four times higher odds of delivering at home (AOR 3.64 CI: 1.49-8.93). Similarly, those who did not receive antenatal care (AOR 2.5, CI: 1.02-6.39) and those who did not receive a consultation on the place of delivery (AOR 2.15, CI: 1.17-3.94) were more likely to give birth at home. The reasons for home delivery included financial reasons, the long distance to the health facility, and the fact that it was easier to give birth at home.

Conclusion: The study found that home delivery is high in major towns in Somalia and is associated with a lack of understanding of the importance of health facility delivery, not using ANC, and not receiving consultancy about where to give birth. Primary health care should strengthen information, education, and communication activities. Since the health care system in Somalia is overwhelmingly private, the government may consider access to free and within-reach ANC and health facility delivery for women and girls from families who cannot pay the ANC and childbirth delivery cost.

居住在主要城镇是否有利于索马里的机构交付?
背景:在发展中国家,住院分娩是一项行之有效的降低孕产妇死亡率的关键干预措施,可将孕产妇死亡率降低约 16%-33%。在索马里,只有 32% 的产妇是在医疗机构中由熟练的医护人员协助分娩的。我们旨在调查阻碍妇女在索马里主要城镇医疗机构分娩的因素,该国大部分医疗机构都集中在这些城镇:方法:2021 年 10 月至 12 月期间,我们在索马里 11 个主要城镇开展了一项基于社区的健康调查。调查采用结构化的预试问卷,向 430 名在过去五年中分娩的妇女收集数据。妇女是通过方便抽样的方式招募的。采用描述性统计对数据进行总结,并进行二元和多变量逻辑回归分析。对调整后的几率比(AOR)和 95% CI 进行了估算,以评估相关性:住院分娩的总体比例为 57%。约 38% 的摩加迪沙妇女和 53% 的其他 10 个城镇妇女在家中分娩。对医疗机构分娩的重要性知之甚少的妇女在家中分娩的几率要高出近四倍(AOR 3.64 CI:1.49-8.93)。同样,未接受产前护理(AOR 2.5,CI:1.02-6.39)和未接受分娩地点咨询(AOR 2.15,CI:1.17-3.94)的妇女更有可能在家分娩。在家分娩的原因包括经济原因、距离医疗机构较远以及在家分娩更容易:研究发现,在索马里的主要城镇,在家分娩的比例很高,这与不了解医疗机构分娩的重要性、不使用产前保健服务以及没有接受关于在何处分娩的咨询有关。初级保健应加强信息、教育和宣传活动。由于索马里的医疗保健系统绝大多数是私营的,政府可以考虑为那些无力支付产前护理和分娩费用的家庭的妇女和女孩提供免费的、在可及范围内的产前护理和医疗机构分娩服务。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
13 weeks
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