Beyond utilization: Measuring effective coverage of obstetric care along the quality Cascade

  • Elysia Larson
  • , Daniel Vail
  • , Godfrey M. Mbaruku
  • , Redempta Mbatia
  • , Margaret E. Kruk

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

37 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: To determine the effective coverage of obstetric care in a rural Tanzanian region and to assess differences in effective coverage by wealth. Design: Cross-sectional structured interviews. Setting: Pwani Region, Tanzania. Participants: The study includes 24 rural, government-managed, primary healthcare clinics and their catchment populations. From January-April 2016, we conducted a household survey of a census of women with recent deliveries, health worker knowledge surveys and facility audits. Main Outcome Measures: We explored the proportion of women receiving quality care through the cascade and conducted an equity analysis by wealth. Results: In total, 2,910 of 3,564 women (81.6%) reported delivering their most recent child in a health facility, 1,096 of whom delivered in a study facility. Using a minimum threshold of quality, the effective coverage of obstetric care was 25%. Quality was lowest in the emergency care dimensions, with the average score on the provider knowledge tests at 47% and the average provision of basic emergency obstetric services below 50%. The wealthiest 20% of women were 4.1 times as likely to deliver in facilities offering at least the minimum threshold of quality care through the cascade compared to the poorest 80% of women (95% confidence interval: 1.5-11.3). Conclusions: Effective coverage of delivery care is very low, particularly among poorer women. Health worker knowledge caused the sharpest decline in effective coverage. Measures of effective coverage are a better performance measure of under-resourced health systems than utilization. Equity analyses can further identify important discrepancies in quality across socio-economic levels.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbermzw142
Pages (from-to)104-110
Number of pages7
JournalInternational Journal for Quality in Health Care
Volume29
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 1 2017

Keywords

  • Effective coverage
  • Health services research
  • Maternal and newborn health
  • Measurement of quality

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