Abstract

Reproductive health services are crucial for maternal and child health, but universal health coverage is still not within reach in most societies. Ethiopia’s goal of universal health coverage promises access to all necessary services for everyone while providing protection against financial risk. When moving towards universal health coverage, health plans and policies require contextualized knowledge about baseline indicators and their distributions. To understand more about the factors that explain coverage, we study the relationship between socioeconomic and geographic factors and the use of reproductive health services in Ethiopia, and further explore inequalities in reproductive health coverage. Based on these findings, we discuss the normative implications of these findings for health policy. Using population-level data from the Ethiopian Demographic and Health Survey (2011) in a multivariate logistic model, we find that family planning and use of antenatal care are associated with higher wealth, higher education and being employed. Skilled attendance at birth is associated with higher wealth, higher education, and urban location. There is large variation between Addis Ababa (the capital) and other administrative regions. Concentration indices show substantial inequalities in the use of reproductive health services. Decomposition of the concentration indices indicates that difference in wealth is the most important explanatory factor for inequality in reproductive health coverage, but other factors, such as urban setting and previous health care use, are also associated with inequalities. When aiming for universal health coverage, this study shows that different socioeconomic factors as well as health-sector factors should be addressed. Our study re-confirms the importance of a broader approach to reproductive health, and in particular the importance of inequality in wealth and geography. Poor, non-educated, non-employed women in rural areas are multidimensionally worse off. The needs of these women should be addressed through elimination of out-of-pocket costs and revision of the formula for resource allocation between regions as Ethiopia moves towards universal health coverage.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12939-015-0218-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Ethical, economic and democratic arguments highlight the importance of health and health investment, not everyone has access to the health services they need [1,2,3]

  • As the overall reproductive health coverage is low in Ethiopia [21], we studied individual-level indicators proposed by the World Health Organization (WHO) to monitor reproductive health [28]

  • Education, being employed, being Protestant or Orthodox, and previous use of antenatal care (ANC) and skilled birth attendance (SBA) is associated with higher coverage of family planning (P < 0.05)

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Summary

Introduction

Economic and democratic arguments highlight the importance of health and health investment, not everyone has access to the health services they need [1,2,3]. The World Health Organization (WHO) member states. Full list of author information is available at the end of the article endorsed UHC in 2005, a call which gained further support in the World Health Reports in 2010 and 2013. The defined goal of UHC is “to ensure that all people obtain the health services they need without suffering financial hardship when paying for them” [4, 5]. Given resource constraints, this does not entail all possible services, but a comprehensive range of key services that is well aligned with other social goals [6]

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