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Effective coverage of essential antenatal care interventions: A cross-sectional study of public primary healthcare clinics in the West Bank

BACKGROUND: The proportion of women attending four or more antenatal care (ANC) visits is widely used for monitoring, but provides limited information on quality of care. Effective coverage metrics, assessing if ANC interventions are completely delivered, can identify critical gaps in healthcare ser...

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Autores principales: Venkateswaran, Mahima, Bogale, Binyam, Abu Khader, Khadija, Awwad, Tamara, Friberg, Ingrid K., Ghanem, Buthaina, Hijaz, Taghreed, Mørkrid, Kjersti, Frøen, J. Frederik
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6386267/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30794645
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212635
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author Venkateswaran, Mahima
Bogale, Binyam
Abu Khader, Khadija
Awwad, Tamara
Friberg, Ingrid K.
Ghanem, Buthaina
Hijaz, Taghreed
Mørkrid, Kjersti
Frøen, J. Frederik
author_facet Venkateswaran, Mahima
Bogale, Binyam
Abu Khader, Khadija
Awwad, Tamara
Friberg, Ingrid K.
Ghanem, Buthaina
Hijaz, Taghreed
Mørkrid, Kjersti
Frøen, J. Frederik
author_sort Venkateswaran, Mahima
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The proportion of women attending four or more antenatal care (ANC) visits is widely used for monitoring, but provides limited information on quality of care. Effective coverage metrics, assessing if ANC interventions are completely delivered, can identify critical gaps in healthcare service delivery. We aimed to measure coverage of at least one screening and effective coverage of ANC interventions in the public health system in the West Bank, Palestine, and to explore associations between infrastructure-related and maternal sociodemographic variables and effective coverage. METHODS: We used data from paper-based clinical records of 1369 pregnant women attending ANC in 17 primary healthcare clinics. Infrastructure-related variables were derived from a 2014 national inventory assessment of clinics. Sample size calculations were made to detect effective coverage ranging 40–60% with a 2–3% margin of error, clinics were selected by probability sampling. We calculated inverse probability weighted percentages of: effective coverage of appropriate number and timing of screenings of ANC interventions; and coverage of at least one screening. RESULTS: Coverage of one screening and effective coverage of ANC interventions were notably different for screening for: hypertension (98% vs. 10%); fetal growth abnormalities (66% vs. 6%); anemia (93% vs. 14%); gestational diabetes (93% vs. 34%), and antenatal ultrasound (74% vs. 24%). Clinics with a laboratory and ultrasound generally performed better in terms of effective coverage, and maternal sociodemographic factors had no associations with effective coverage estimates. Only 13% of the women attended ANC visits according to the recommended national schedule, driving effective coverage down. CONCLUSION: Indicators for ANC monitoring and their definitions can have important consequences for quantifying health system performance and identifying issues with care provision. To achieve more effective coverage in public primary care clinics in the West Bank, efforts should be made to improve care provision according to prescribed guidelines.
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spelling pubmed-63862672019-03-09 Effective coverage of essential antenatal care interventions: A cross-sectional study of public primary healthcare clinics in the West Bank Venkateswaran, Mahima Bogale, Binyam Abu Khader, Khadija Awwad, Tamara Friberg, Ingrid K. Ghanem, Buthaina Hijaz, Taghreed Mørkrid, Kjersti Frøen, J. Frederik PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The proportion of women attending four or more antenatal care (ANC) visits is widely used for monitoring, but provides limited information on quality of care. Effective coverage metrics, assessing if ANC interventions are completely delivered, can identify critical gaps in healthcare service delivery. We aimed to measure coverage of at least one screening and effective coverage of ANC interventions in the public health system in the West Bank, Palestine, and to explore associations between infrastructure-related and maternal sociodemographic variables and effective coverage. METHODS: We used data from paper-based clinical records of 1369 pregnant women attending ANC in 17 primary healthcare clinics. Infrastructure-related variables were derived from a 2014 national inventory assessment of clinics. Sample size calculations were made to detect effective coverage ranging 40–60% with a 2–3% margin of error, clinics were selected by probability sampling. We calculated inverse probability weighted percentages of: effective coverage of appropriate number and timing of screenings of ANC interventions; and coverage of at least one screening. RESULTS: Coverage of one screening and effective coverage of ANC interventions were notably different for screening for: hypertension (98% vs. 10%); fetal growth abnormalities (66% vs. 6%); anemia (93% vs. 14%); gestational diabetes (93% vs. 34%), and antenatal ultrasound (74% vs. 24%). Clinics with a laboratory and ultrasound generally performed better in terms of effective coverage, and maternal sociodemographic factors had no associations with effective coverage estimates. Only 13% of the women attended ANC visits according to the recommended national schedule, driving effective coverage down. CONCLUSION: Indicators for ANC monitoring and their definitions can have important consequences for quantifying health system performance and identifying issues with care provision. To achieve more effective coverage in public primary care clinics in the West Bank, efforts should be made to improve care provision according to prescribed guidelines. Public Library of Science 2019-02-22 /pmc/articles/PMC6386267/ /pubmed/30794645 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212635 Text en © 2019 Venkateswaran et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Venkateswaran, Mahima
Bogale, Binyam
Abu Khader, Khadija
Awwad, Tamara
Friberg, Ingrid K.
Ghanem, Buthaina
Hijaz, Taghreed
Mørkrid, Kjersti
Frøen, J. Frederik
Effective coverage of essential antenatal care interventions: A cross-sectional study of public primary healthcare clinics in the West Bank
title Effective coverage of essential antenatal care interventions: A cross-sectional study of public primary healthcare clinics in the West Bank
title_full Effective coverage of essential antenatal care interventions: A cross-sectional study of public primary healthcare clinics in the West Bank
title_fullStr Effective coverage of essential antenatal care interventions: A cross-sectional study of public primary healthcare clinics in the West Bank
title_full_unstemmed Effective coverage of essential antenatal care interventions: A cross-sectional study of public primary healthcare clinics in the West Bank
title_short Effective coverage of essential antenatal care interventions: A cross-sectional study of public primary healthcare clinics in the West Bank
title_sort effective coverage of essential antenatal care interventions: a cross-sectional study of public primary healthcare clinics in the west bank
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6386267/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30794645
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212635
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