Inequities in the continuum of maternal care in Mexico: trends before and after COVID-19.

IF 4.5 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Edson Serván-Mori, Rocio Garcia-Diaz, Sergio Meneses-Navarro, Octavio Gómez-Dantés, Diego Cerecero-García, Arachu Castro, Rafael Lozano
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Despite progress in maternal health coverage in Mexico, inequities persist, particularly in postnatal care. The COVID-19 pandemic further widened these gaps, disproportionately affecting women with similar health needs but different socioeconomic conditions. This study assesses trends in maternal healthcare coverage and inequity across nine stages of antenatal, delivery, and postnatal care, comparing pre- and post-pandemic periods. By examining horizontal inequity, we identify critical gaps and policy implications to enhance equitable maternal healthcare access.

Methods: We conducted a population-based, pooled cross-sectional and retrospective analysis for the last three decades, using data from the five waves (1997, 2009, 2014, 2018, and 2023) of the Mexican National Survey of Demographic Dynamics (ENADID). Our study included 123,197 Mexican women aged 12-54 with recent live births, representing a population of 38.5 million. We estimated coverage for antenatal and postnatal care stages. We used multiple regression models to assess factors influencing the likelihood of receiving comprehensive antenatal care, skilled delivery care and postpartum care interventions, both pre-and post-COVID-19. We estimated horizontal inequity using concentration index and decomposition analysis to highlight disparities among women with similar needs and examine how these disparities have changed due to COVID-19 across nine antenatal, delivery, and postnatal care stages.

Findings: Full antenatal and postnatal health care in Mexico was inadequate and inequitable. Only 73% of pregnant women received timely antenatal care and 88.3% received frequent care, despite 97.9% claiming to have received some care. Inadequate care was linked to lower education, labour market participation, low socioeconomic status, higher parity, and rural residency. The most inequitable aspects are access to skilled and institutional health care and timely post-partum care. The dismantling of a public health insurance system and focused strategies that incentivized the use of maternal health services during the pre-COVID period (January 2019 to March 2020) led to significant health coverage losses, exacerbating horizontal inequity in these areas. Although high equity was achieved in comprehensive antenatal healthcare from 2009 to 2023, since COVID, inequity has increased, particularly in antenatal indicators such as receiving four or more antenatal check-ups and check-ups in the first trimester. The pandemic intensified these inequities, and the values of these indicators have not returned to pre-pandemic levels, underscoring the seriousness of the situation.

Conclusions: Despite efforts to improve maternal care, comprehensive antenatal services reach only 61.8% of women in Mexico. This stresses not only the need for targeted policies to enhance antenatal, delivery, and postnatal coverage at critical stages of care, but also the need to continue strengthening strategies that have rendered good results, and not to eliminate them simply for political-ideological reasons. It is imperative to prioritize reducing existing inequalities within the population, as horizontal inequity reveals significant barriers preventing equitable access to maternal health services among women with similar needs. The most pronounced disparities exist in timely healthcare access, skilled deliveries, and institutional postnatal care, where systemic issues and financial constraints are particularly impactful. Addressing these inequities is essential not only to improve overall maternal health outcomes but also to ensure that all women can benefit from the full spectrum of maternal care, particularly in situations of health crisis, such as pandemics.

墨西哥孕产妇保健连续性中的不公平现象:2019冠状病毒病前后的趋势
背景:尽管墨西哥在孕产妇保健覆盖方面取得了进展,但不平等现象仍然存在,特别是在产后护理方面。2019冠状病毒病大流行进一步扩大了这些差距,对卫生需求相似但社会经济条件不同的妇女造成了不成比例的影响。本研究评估了孕产妇保健覆盖和产前、分娩和产后九个阶段的不平等趋势,比较了大流行前和大流行后的时期。通过检查横向不平等,我们确定了关键差距和政策影响,以加强公平的孕产妇保健服务。方法:我们使用墨西哥国家人口动态调查(ENADID)的五次浪潮(1997年、2009年、2014年、2018年和2023年)的数据,对过去三十年进行了基于人群的汇总横断面和回顾性分析。我们的研究包括123,197名年龄在12-54岁之间的墨西哥妇女,她们最近活产,代表3850万人口。我们估计了产前和产后护理阶段的覆盖率。我们使用多元回归模型来评估影响在covid -19之前和之后接受全面产前护理、熟练分娩护理和产后护理干预的可能性的因素。我们使用浓度指数和分解分析来估计横向不平等,以突出具有类似需求的妇女之间的差异,并研究由于COVID-19,这些差异在九个产前、分娩和产后护理阶段是如何变化的。调查结果:墨西哥全面的产前和产后保健是不充分和不公平的。只有73%的孕妇得到了及时的产前护理,88.3%的孕妇得到了频繁的护理,尽管97.9%的孕妇声称得到了一些护理。护理不足与教育程度低、劳动力市场参与度低、社会经济地位低、平等程度高和居住在农村有关。最不公平的方面是获得熟练的机构保健和及时的产后护理。在2019年1月至2020年3月的疫情前时期,公共医疗保险制度和鼓励使用孕产妇保健服务的重点战略的瓦解导致了重大的健康覆盖损失,加剧了这些地区的横向不平等。尽管2009年至2023年在全面产前保健方面实现了高度公平,但自2019冠状病毒病以来,不平等现象有所增加,特别是在产前指标方面,如接受四次或更多产前检查和妊娠头三个月检查。大流行病加剧了这些不平等现象,这些指标的价值没有恢复到大流行病前的水平,凸显了局势的严重性。结论:尽管努力改善孕产妇保健,但墨西哥只有61.8%的妇女获得了全面的产前服务。这不仅强调需要有针对性的政策来加强产前、分娩和产后关键护理阶段的覆盖面,而且还需要继续加强取得良好结果的战略,而不是仅仅出于政治-意识形态原因而取消这些战略。必须优先考虑减少人口中现有的不平等现象,因为横向不平等表明存在重大障碍,阻碍具有类似需求的妇女公平获得孕产妇保健服务。最明显的差距存在于及时获得医疗保健、熟练分娩和机构产后护理方面,其中系统性问题和财政限制的影响尤为严重。解决这些不平等现象不仅对于改善总体孕产妇保健结果至关重要,而且对于确保所有妇女都能受益于全方位的孕产妇保健,特别是在出现流行病等健康危机的情况下。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
4.20%
发文量
162
审稿时长
28 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal for Equity in Health is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, online journal presenting evidence relevant to the search for, and attainment of, equity in health across and within countries. International Journal for Equity in Health aims to improve the understanding of issues that influence the health of populations. This includes the discussion of political, policy-related, economic, social and health services-related influences, particularly with regard to systematic differences in distributions of one or more aspects of health in population groups defined demographically, geographically, or socially.
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