Abstract

Understanding the barriers that women in Haiti face to giving birth at a health facility is important for improving coverage of facility delivery and reducing persistently high maternal mortality. We linked health facility survey data and population survey data to assess the role of the obstetric service environment in affecting women's use of facility delivery care. Data came from the 2012 Haiti Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) and the 2013 Haiti Service Provision Assessment (SPA) survey. DHS clusters and SPA facilities were linked with their geographic coordinate information. The final analysis sample from the DHS comprised 4,921 women who had a live birth in the 5 years preceding the survey. Service availability was measured with the number of facilities providing delivery services within a specified distance from the cluster (within 5 kilometers for urban areas and 10 kilometers for rural areas). We measured facility readiness to provide obstetric care using 37 indicators defined by the World Health Organization. Random-intercept logistic regressions were used to model the variation in individual use of facility-based delivery care and cluster-level service availability and readiness, adjusting for other factors. Overall, 39% of women delivered their most recent birth at a health facility and 61% delivered at home, with disparities by residence (about 60% delivered at a health facility in urban areas vs. 24% in rural areas). About one-fifth (18%) of women in rural areas and one-tenth (12%) of women in nonmetropolitan urban areas lived in clusters where no facility offered delivery care within the specified distances, while nearly all women (99%) in the metropolitan area lived in clusters that had at least 2 such facilities. Urban clusters had better service readiness compared with rural clusters, with a wide range of variation in both areas. Regression models indicated that in both rural and nonmetropolitan urban areas availability of delivery services was significantly associated with women's greater likelihood of using facility-based delivery care after controlling for other covariates, while facilities' readiness to provide delivery services was also important in nonmetropolitan urban areas. Increasing physical access to delivery care should become a high priority in rural Haiti. In urban areas, where delivery services are more available than in rural areas, improving quality of care at facilities could potentially lead to increased coverage of facility delivery.

Highlights

  • Global Health: Science and Practice 2017 | Volume 5 | Number 2 thousands of women in Haiti die from causes that could be prevented by access to comprehensive and skilled obstetric care during pregnancy, childbirth, and the postpartum period.[2,3] Use of maternal health services, especially facility delivery, remains low in Haiti

  • Overall, 39% of women delivered their most recent birth at a health facility and 61% delivered at home, with disparities by residence

  • Facility distri- care during pregnancy for their most recent birth, bution varied across regions in rural and other more than three-quarters of women in the metrourban areas

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Summary

Introduction

Global Health: Science and Practice 2017 | Volume 5 | Number 2 thousands of women in Haiti die from causes that could be prevented by access to comprehensive and skilled obstetric care during pregnancy, childbirth, and the postpartum period.[2,3] Use of maternal health services, especially facility delivery, remains low in Haiti. A few studies have looked at social contextual factors such as community norms, media access, and the level of local development.[12,13,14,15] In Haiti, a few studies have found that facility delivery was associated with maternal and birth characteristics, household poverty, use of antenatal care services, and community exposure to mass media.[16,17]. Understanding the barriers that women in Haiti face to giving birth at a health facility is important for improving coverage of facility delivery and reducing persistently high maternal mortality. We linked health facility survey data and population survey data to assess the role of the obstetric service environment in affecting women’s use of facility delivery care

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