Assessing delivery practices of mothers over time and over space in Uganda, 2003-2012.

IF 3.6 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Emerging Themes in Epidemiology Pub Date : 2016-06-14 eCollection Date: 2016-01-01 DOI:10.1186/s12982-016-0049-8
Daniel A Sprague, Caroline Jeffery, Nadine Crossland, Thomas House, Gareth O Roberts, William Vargas, Joseph Ouma, Stephen K Lwanga, Joseph J Valadez
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引用次数: 14

Abstract

Background: It is well known that safe delivery in a health facility reduces the risks of maternal and infant mortality resulting from perinatal complications. What is less understood are the factors associated with safe delivery practices. We investigate factors influencing health facility delivery practices while adjusting for multiple other factors simultaneously, spatial heterogeneity, and trends over time.

Methods: We fitted a logistic regression model to Lot Quality Assurance Sampling (LQAS) data from Uganda in a framework that considered individual-level covariates, geographical features, and variations over five time points. We accounted for all two-covariate interactions and all three-covariate interactions for which two of the covariates already had a significant interaction, were able to quantify uncertainty in outputs using computationally intensive cluster bootstrap methods, and displayed outputs using a geographical information system. Finally, we investigated what information could be predicted about districts at future time-points, before the next LQAS survey is carried out. To do this, we applied the model to project a confidence interval for the district level coverage of health facility delivery at future time points, by using the lower and upper end values of known demographics to construct a confidence range for the prediction and define priority groups.

Results: We show that ease of access, maternal age and education are strongly associated with delivery in a health facility; after accounting for this, there remains a significant trend towards greater uptake over time. We use this model together with known demographics to formulate a nascent early warning system that identifies candidate districts expected to have low prevalence of facility-based delivery in the immediate future.

Conclusions: Our results support the hypothesis that increased development, particularly related to education and access to health facilities, will act to increase facility-based deliveries, a factor associated with reducing perinatal associated mortality. We provide a statistical method for using inexpensive and routinely collected monitoring and evaluation data to answer complex epidemiology and public health questions in a resource-poor setting. We produced a model based on this data that explained the spatial distribution of facility-based delivery in Uganda. Finally, we used this model to make a prediction about the future priority of districts that was validated by monitoring and evaluation data collected in the next year.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

评估2003-2012年乌干达母亲分娩实践的时间和空间。
背景:众所周知,在卫生机构安全分娩可以降低围产期并发症导致的母婴死亡风险。人们不太了解的是与安全分娩做法有关的因素。我们调查了影响卫生设施交付实践的因素,同时调整了多个其他因素、空间异质性和随时间的趋势。方法:我们在考虑个人水平协变量、地理特征和五个时间点的变化的框架中,对来自乌干达的批次质量保证抽样(LQAS)数据拟合了一个逻辑回归模型。我们考虑了所有的双协变量相互作用和所有的三协变量相互作用,其中两个协变量已经有一个重要的相互作用,能够使用计算密集型集群bootstrap方法量化输出中的不确定性,并使用地理信息系统显示输出。最后,我们调查了在下一次LQAS调查进行之前,在未来的时间点可以预测哪些关于地区的信息。为此,我们应用该模型,通过使用已知人口统计数据的下限和上限值来构建预测的置信范围,并定义优先群体,从而预测未来时间点地区一级卫生设施提供覆盖率的置信区间。结果:我们表明,是否容易获得、产妇年龄和教育程度与在卫生机构分娩密切相关;在考虑到这一点之后,随着时间的推移,仍有显著的趋势趋向于更大的吸收。我们将此模型与已知的人口统计数据结合起来,制定了一个新兴的预警系统,该系统可以识别出在不久的将来,预计基于设施的分娩普及率较低的候选地区。结论:我们的研究结果支持这样一种假设,即发展的增加,特别是与教育和获得卫生设施有关的发展,将有助于增加在设施分娩,这是降低围产期相关死亡率的一个因素。我们提供了一种统计方法,使用廉价和常规收集的监测和评估数据来回答资源贫乏环境中复杂的流行病学和公共卫生问题。我们根据这些数据制作了一个模型,解释了乌干达基于设施的配送的空间分布。最后,我们利用该模型对地区未来的优先级进行预测,并通过次年收集的监测和评估数据进行验证。
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来源期刊
Emerging Themes in Epidemiology
Emerging Themes in Epidemiology Medicine-Epidemiology
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
4.30%
发文量
9
审稿时长
28 weeks
期刊介绍: Emerging Themes in Epidemiology is an open access, peer-reviewed, online journal that aims to promote debate and discussion on practical and theoretical aspects of epidemiology. Combining statistical approaches with an understanding of the biology of disease, epidemiologists seek to elucidate the social, environmental and host factors related to adverse health outcomes. Although research findings from epidemiologic studies abound in traditional public health journals, little publication space is devoted to discussion of the practical and theoretical concepts that underpin them. Because of its immediate impact on public health, an openly accessible forum is needed in the field of epidemiology to foster such discussion.
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