Defragmenting the Health Care System in Mexico: Universal Access For Obstetric Emergencies
M. G. Ramírez-Rojas, María Graciela Freyermuth-Enciso, M. B. Duarte-Gómez
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background and Objectives: This article aims to analyze how the needs of Mexican women requiring emergency obstetric care (EmOC) can be fully met through initiatives such as the General Agreement on Inter-Institutional Collaboration for Emergency Obstetric Care (the Agreement). We compared EmOCaccredited facilities operating under the Agreement with facilities outside the Agreement which, although not accredited, provide their affiliates with EmOC services.
Methods: Based on an observational, descriptive, cross-sectional design, we analyzed the Agreement interinstitutional strategy within four different scenarios in order to verify whether Mexico was in compliance with United Nations (UN) recommendations on EmOC availability: five facilities, with at least one offering comprehensive services, per 500,000 inhabitants.
Results: Taking into account all facilities in the Mexican health care system, we found that Mexico offered 75% of the required facilities and was therefore 25% short of compliance. According to data on hospital discharges, 734 438 cases of obstetric emergencies (OEs) were registered in Mexico in 2013, the vast majority of which were assisted by facilities unaccredited for that function. Meanwhile, the 466 accredited facilities, all operating under the Agreement, served a negligible proportion (0.07%) of these patients.
Conclusion and Implications For Translation: The Agreement would undoubtedly reach its potential as a vehicle for universal EmOC coverage were its field of action not restricted to such a small number of services for women. The Mexican health care system is faced with the double challenge of increasing institutional coverage and upgrading installed EmOC infrastructure.
Key words: • Medical emergency services • Mexico, Medical assistance • Hospitalization • Health regulation • Agreements.
Copyright © 2020 Ramírez-Rojas et al. Published by Global Health and Education Projects, Inc. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work which is published in this journal is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial.
墨西哥医疗保健系统的碎片化:产科急诊的普及
背景和目的:本文旨在分析如何通过《紧急产科护理机构间合作总协定》(《协定》)等举措充分满足需要紧急产科护理的墨西哥妇女的需求。我们将根据协议运营的EmOC认证设施与协议外的设施进行了比较,这些设施虽然未经认证,但为其附属公司提供EmOC服务。方法:基于观察性、描述性、横断面设计,我们在四种不同的情景下分析了《协定》的机构间战略,以验证墨西哥是否符合联合国关于EmOC可用性的建议:每50万居民中有五个设施,至少一个提供综合服务。结果:考虑到墨西哥医疗保健系统中的所有设施,我们发现墨西哥提供了75%的所需设施,因此缺乏25%的合规性。根据出院数据,2013年,墨西哥登记了7343438例产科急诊病例,其中绝大多数由未经认可的机构提供协助。与此同时,466家经认可的机构都是根据该协议运营的,为这些患者提供的服务比例微不足道(0.07%)。结论和对翻译的影响:如果《协定》的行动领域不限于为妇女提供如此少量的服务,该协定无疑将发挥其作为全民紧急医疗保险覆盖工具的潜力。墨西哥医疗保健系统面临着增加机构覆盖率和升级已安装的EmOC基础设施的双重挑战。关键词:•医疗急救服务•墨西哥,医疗援助•住院•卫生监管•协议。版权所有©2020 Ramírez-Rojas等人,由Global Health and Education Projects,股份有限公司出版。这是一篇根据知识共享署名非商业(CC by-NC 4.0)许可证条款分发的开放获取文章,该许可证允许在任何媒体上不受限制地使用、分发和复制,前提是本期刊上发表的原创作品被适当引用,给予适当的信贷,所做的任何更改都表明,使用是非商业性的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。