Abstract

BackgroundAdverse pregnancy outcomes jointly account for a high proportion of mortality and morbidity among pregnant women and their infants. Furthermore, the burden attributed to adverse pregnancy outcomes remains high and inadequately characterised due to the intricate interplay of its etiology and shared set of important risk factors. This study sought to quantify and map the underlying risk of multiple adverse pregnancy outcomes in Kenya at sub-county level using a shared component space-time modelling framework.MethodsReported sub-county level adverse pregnancy outcomes count from January 2016 – December 2019 were obtained from the Kenyan District Health Information System. A Bayesian hierarchical spatio-temporal model was used to estimate the joint burden of adverse pregnancy outcomes in space (sub-county) and time (year). To improve the precision of our estimates over time and space, information across the outcomes were combined via the shared and the outcome-specific components using a shared component model with spatio-temporal interactions.ResultsOverall, the total number of adverse outcomes in pregnancy increased by 14.2% (95% UI: 14.0–14.5) from 88,816 cases in 2016 to 101,455 cases in 2019. Between 2016 and 2019, the estimated low birth weight rate and the pre-term birth rate were 4.5 (95% UI: 4.4–4.7) and 2.3 (95% UI: 2.2–2.5) per 100 live births. The stillbirth and neonatal death rates were estimated to be 18.7 (95% UI: 18.0–19.4) and 6.9 (95% UI: 6.4–7.4) per 1000 live births. The magnitude of the spatio-temporal variation attributed to shared risk was high for pre-term births, low birth weight, neonatal deaths, stillbirths and neonatal deaths, respectively. The shared risk patterns were dominant in sub-counties located along the Indian ocean coastline, central and western Kenya.ConclusionsThis study demonstrates the usefulness of a Bayesian joint spatio-temporal shared component model in exploiting specific and shared risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes sub-nationally. By identifying sub-counties with elevated risks and data gaps, our estimates not only assert the need for bolstering maternal health programs in the identified high-risk sub-counties but also provides a baseline against which to assess the progress towards the attainment of Sustainable Development Goals.

Highlights

  • Adverse pregnancy outcomes jointly account for a high proportion of mortality and morbidity among pregnant women and their infants

  • Temporal trends in the burden of adverse pregnancy outcomes in Kenya from 2016 to 2019 A total of 2,896,659 (95% Uncertainty Interval: 2,811,500 – 2,981,817) live births were reported in Kenya from January 2016 to December 2019

  • The total number of Adverse pregnancy outcomes (APOs) increased by 14.2% (95% UI: 14.0–14.5) from 88,816 cases in 2016 to 101,455 cases in 2019

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Adverse pregnancy outcomes jointly account for a high proportion of mortality and morbidity among pregnant women and their infants. These sobering trends are mirrored in Kenya, which risks missing out on the 2030 neonatal mortality target of 12 deaths per 1000 live births given its high neonatal mortality rate of approximately 19.6 deaths per 1000 live births and 11.5 low birth weight babies per 100 live births reported in 2018 [9] To address this growing burden, national initiatives such as free maternity services, elimination of user fees for public primary health care and the beyond zero campaign have been established to improve pregnancy outcomes and increase institutional delivery rates [10]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call