Abstract

BackgroundPast studies have identified that inconvenient access to health clinics is one of the important barriers to health service utilization and health outcomes. However, establishing the link between the lack of access to health clinics and the high maternal and child morbidity and mortality in Nigeria has been a challenge due to the lack of data. This paper overcomes this problem by using the country’s health clinic census data.MethodsUsing the Nigerian health clinic census, we evaluate the intercorrelation between the quantity and the quality of health clinics available across the country. We also examine the correlation between the access to health clinics and health behaviors/outcomes for residents by merging the health clinic census data with data from the demographic and health survey (DHS). The health clinic census data makes it possible to capture the overall geographical allocation of health services across the country as well as their comprehensive relationship with health outcomes.ResultsWe find a strong positive correlation between the quality of a health clinic and the quantity and quality of neighboring clinics. The high quality clinics are concentrated in areas where the density of clinics is high, and where more of the clinics around them are also of high quality. We also find that an increase in access to health clinics of high quality that are in close proximity is significantly and positively correlated with an improvement in health behaviors as well as health outcomes. Women who are more disadvantaged benefit more from the access to high quality clinics than others.ConclusionsHealth clinics of good quality are unevenly distributed geographically in Nigeria. The quality of health clinics should be of a level that can support the promotion of recommended health behaviors and achieve improved health outcomes throughout the country. Further studies are necessary to evaluate the optimal distribution of clinics of good quality, given that residents in less populated areas gain a higher marginal benefit from improved access to health service, despite the higher costs of supplying the service in those areas.

Highlights

  • Past studies have identified that inconvenient access to health clinics is one of the important barriers to health service utilization and health outcomes

  • Because our results reveal that access to high quality health clinics benefits women who are more disadvantaged than others, the marginal benefit of high quality clinics is higher in a place where many underprivileged women reside

  • Using the unique census data on health clinics available in Nigeria, this paper evaluates the intercorrelation between the quantity and quality of health clinics available

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Summary

Introduction

Past studies have identified that inconvenient access to health clinics is one of the important barriers to health service utilization and health outcomes. Establishing the link between the lack of access to health clinics and the high maternal and child morbidity and mortality in Nigeria has been a challenge due to the lack of data. The world has observed substantial progress in reducing child mortality in the past decades; child mortality dropped from 93 deaths per 1000 live births in 1990 to 41 in 2016 [1]. Despite this global progress, the burden of deaths is unevenly distributed geographically; one in 36 infants die within the first month in Africa, while the ratio is 1 to 333 in high-income countries. The percentage of births assisted by a skilled birth attendant is merely 35.2% in Nigeria, while it is 70.8% in Ghana [8], and the immunization rate for the third dose of the Diphtheria-Tetanus-Pertussis (DTP) vaccine (DTP3) in Nigeria is 33% while Ghana has achieved 99% [9]

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