Abstract

Background:Rural Indigenous Maya communities in Guatemala have some of the worst obstetrical health outcomes in Latin America, due to widespread discrimination in healthcare and an underfunded public sector. Multiple systems-level efforts to improve facility birth outcomes have been implemented, primarily focusing on early community-based detection of obstetrical complications and on reducing discrimination and improving the quality of facility-level care. However, another important feature of public facility-level care are the out-of-pocket payments that patients are often required to make for care.Objective:To estimate the burden of out-of-pocket costs for public obstetrical care in Indigenous Maya communities in Guatemala.Methods:We conducted a retrospective review of electronic medical record data on obstetrical referrals collected as part of an obstetrical care navigation intervention, which included documentation of out-of-pocket costs by care navigators accompanying patients within public facilities. We compared the median costs for both emergency and routine obstetrical facility care.Findings:Cost data on 709 obstetric referrals from 479 patients were analyzed (65% emergency and 35% routine referrals). The median OOP costs were Q100 (IQR 75–150) [$13 USD] and Q50 (IQR 16–120) [$6.50 USD] for emergency and routine referrals. Costs for transport were most common (95% and 55%, respectively). Costs for medication, supply, laboratory, and imaging costs occurred less frequently. Food and lodging costs were minimal.Conclusion:Out-of-pocket payments for theoretically free public care are a common and important barrier to care for this rural Guatemalan setting. These data add to the literature in Latin American on the barriers to obstetrical care faced by Indigenous and rural women.

Highlights

  • One factor contributing to these poor health outcomes is that many Indigenous women have a strong preference for home birth with the assistance of a traditional midwife, with only 50.3% giving birth in a healthcare facility compared to 82.1% of the non-Indigenous population [6]

  • Given that rural—and especially Indigenous Maya—communities in Guatemala have some of the worst obstetrical outcomes in Latin America, significant attention has been paid to factors contributing to these poor outcomes, including cultural and language barriers, low-quality health services, and disrespectful or discriminatory practices

  • We used a unique data set on public sector obstetrical care to estimate the out of pocket (OOP) costs for theoretically free public care in a rural Guatemalan setting

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Summary

Introduction

One factor contributing to these poor health outcomes is that many Indigenous women have a strong preference for home birth with the assistance of a traditional midwife, with only 50.3% giving birth in a healthcare facility compared to 82.1% of the non-Indigenous population [6] Reasons for this include the central cultural and spiritual role of traditional midwives in Maya healthcare, and language barriers for speakers of Mayan languages accessing biomedical healthcare facilities and widespread experiences of discrimination and disrespectful or abusive biomedical care [7, 8]. Rural Indigenous Maya communities in Guatemala have some of the worst obstetrical health outcomes in Latin America, due to widespread discrimination in healthcare and an underfunded public sector. Another important feature of public facility-level care are the out-of-pocket payments that patients are often required to make for care

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