Abstract

BackgroundDelivery in unsafe and unsupervised conditions is common in developing countries including Ghana. Over the years, the Government of Ghana has attempted to improve maternal and child healthcare services including the reduction of home deliveries through programs such as fee waiver for delivery in 2003, abolishment of delivery care cost in 2005, and the introduction of the National Health Insurance Scheme in 2005. Though these efforts have yielded some results, home delivery is still an issue of great concern in Ghana. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to identify the risk factors that are consistently associated with home deliveries in Ghana between 2006 and 2017–18.MethodsThe study relied on datasets from three waves (2006, 2011, and 2017–18) of the Ghana Multiple Indicator Cluster surveys (GMICS). Summary statistics were used to describe the sample. The survey design of the GMICS was accounted for using the ‘svyset’ command in STATA-14 before the association tests. Robust Poisson regression was used to estimate the relationship between sociodemographic factors and home deliveries in Ghana in both bivariate and multivariable models.ResultsThe proportion of women who give birth at home during the period under consideration has decreased. The proportion of home deliveries has reduced from 50.56% in 2006 to 21.37% in 2017–18. In the multivariable model, women who had less than eight antenatal care visits, as well as those who dwelt in households with decreasing wealth, rural areas of residence, were consistently at risk of delivering in the home throughout the three data waves. Residing in the Upper East region was associated with a lower likelihood of delivering at home.ConclusionPolicies should target the at-risk-women to achieve complete reduction in home deliveries. Access to facility-based deliveries should be expanded to ensure that the expansion measures are pro-poor, pro-rural, and pro-uneducated. Innovative measures such as mobile antenatal care programs should be organized in every community in the population segments that were consistently choosing home deliveries over facility-based deliveries.

Highlights

  • Improving the maternal health of women is essential to their overall health and wellbeing

  • The proportion of home deliveries has reduced from 50.56% in 2006 to 21.37% in 2017–18 (Table 1)

  • The following sociodemographic factors were consistently associated with home deliveries in Ghana at a significant threshold of P ≤ 0.001: education, polygyny, parity, antenatal care (ANC) attendance, previous child loss experience, health insurance, household wealth, urban–rural residence, and region of residence (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Improving the maternal health of women is essential to their overall health and wellbeing. Several efforts have been coordinated by international organizations and individual governments to significantly reduce maternal mortality to under 70 deaths per 100,000 live births by 2030, as a global target set by the Sustainable Development Goal three (SDG 3.1) [2, 4] One of such efforts has been the global campaign to reduce home deliveries and increase institutional birth deliveries (IBD) towards skilled birth attendance (SBA), a critical benchmark indicator for monitoring the progress of the Millennium Development Goal five (MDG 5) as well as the new SDG 3 and with a 90% global target [4]. The Government of Ghana has attempted to improve maternal and child healthcare services including the reduction of home deliveries through programs such as fee waiver for delivery in 2003, abolishment of delivery care cost in 2005, and the introduction of the National Health Insurance Scheme in 2005 Though these efforts have yielded some results, home delivery is still an issue of great concern in Ghana. The aim of the present study was to identify the risk factors that are consistently associated with home deliveries in Ghana between 2006 and 2017–18

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