Inequalities in adherence to the continuum of maternal and child health service utilization in Ethiopia: multilevel analysis

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Study Justification:
This study aims to assess the inequalities in maternal and child health service utilization in Ethiopia and examine the role of antenatal care (ANC) in subsequent service use. The justification for this study is based on the need to understand the factors that contribute to disparities in accessing and utilizing key child health services. By identifying these factors, policymakers can develop targeted interventions to improve service utilization and ultimately improve maternal and child health outcomes.
Highlights:
1. The study found that certain factors, such as non-first birth order, older age, high parity, living in polygamous families, and lack of access to radio, were associated with lower health service utilization scores.
2. On the other hand, factors such as better education, previous experience of terminated pregnancy, residing in more affluent households, and experiences of mild to high intimate partner violence were associated with higher health service utilization scores.
3. The study also found that ANC had a positive impact on the utilization of delivery and postnatal care services. ANC had the strongest effects on both institutional delivery and postnatal care service utilization.
4. The findings suggest that promoting proper ANC services is crucial in increasing the likelihood of mothers utilizing subsequent services such as delivery and postnatal care services.
Recommendations:
1. Strengthen efforts to improve access to and utilization of ANC services, as they play a critical role in promoting the utilization of other maternal and child health services.
2. Address the identified factors associated with lower health service utilization scores, such as non-first birth order, older age, high parity, living in polygamous families, and lack of access to radio.
3. Implement interventions to improve education levels, economic status, and address intimate partner violence, as these factors were associated with higher health service utilization scores.
Key Role Players:
1. Ministry of Health: Responsible for developing and implementing policies and programs to improve maternal and child health service utilization.
2. Health Extension Workers: Provide antenatal care, administer vaccines, conduct safe deliveries, provide nutrition counseling, and offer family planning services.
3. Community Health Workers: Play a crucial role in raising awareness and promoting the utilization of maternal and child health services at the community level.
4. Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs): Collaborate with the government to implement interventions and programs aimed at improving maternal and child health service utilization.
Cost Items:
1. Training and capacity building for health workers: Budget for training health extension workers and community health workers to provide quality maternal and child health services.
2. Infrastructure and equipment: Allocate funds for the construction and maintenance of health facilities, as well as the procurement of necessary equipment and supplies.
3. Health education and awareness campaigns: Allocate funds for community-based health education programs to raise awareness about the importance of maternal and child health services.
4. Monitoring and evaluation: Budget for the establishment of a monitoring and evaluation system to track the progress and impact of interventions aimed at improving maternal and child health service utilization.
Please note that the provided cost items are general suggestions and may vary based on the specific context and needs of the implementation.

The strength of evidence for this abstract is 8 out of 10.
The evidence in the abstract is strong, but there are some areas for improvement. The study is based on a nationally representative sample and uses a mixed effect Poisson regression model to analyze the data. The findings show significant associations between various factors and health service utilization. The study also highlights the positive impact of antenatal care (ANC) on the continuum of utilizing delivery and postnatal care services. However, the abstract could be improved by providing more specific details about the methodology, such as the specific variables included in the regression models and the statistical significance of the associations. Additionally, it would be helpful to include information about any limitations of the study and suggestions for future research.

Background: Despite progress made to improve access to child health services, mothers’ consistent utilization of these services has been constrained by several factors. This study is aimed at assessing the inequalities in key child health service utilization and assess the role of antenatal care (ANC) on subsequent service use. Method: The analysis of the present study was based on the Ethiopian Demographic and Health Surveys, a nationally representative sample of 10,641 children. A health service utilization score was constructed from the affirmative responses of six key child health interventions associated with the most recent birth: ANC service, delivery of the last child at health facilities, postnatal care services, vitamin A intake, iron supplementation and intake of deworming pills by the index child. A mixed effect Poisson regression model was used to examine the predictors of health service utilization and three separate mixed effect logistic regression models for assessing the role of ANC for continued use of delivery and postnatal care services. Results: The results of mixed effect Poisson regression indicate that the expected mean score of health service utilization was lower among non-first birth order children, older and high parity women, those living in polygamous families and women living in households with no access to radio. The score was higher for respondents with better education, women who had previous experience of terminated pregnancy, residing in more affluent households, and women with experiences of mild to high intimate partner violence. Further analysis of the three key health services (ANC, delivery, and postnatal care), using three models of mixed effect logistic regression, indicates consistent positive impacts of ANC on the continuum of utilizing delivery and postnatal care services. ANC had the strongest effects on both institutional delivery and postnatal care service utilization. Conclusion: The findings implicated that maternal and child health services appear as continuum actions/behavior where utilization of one affects the likelihood of the next service types. The study indicated that promoting proper ANC services is very beneficial in increasing the likelihood of mothers utilizing subsequent services such as delivery and postnatal care services.

Ethiopia is the second-most populous nation in Africa with an estimated population of 109 million people [18]. Children (0–14 years) account for about 40% of the total population of the country [19]. Administratively, the country is divided into nine regions and two autonomous cities. The country has an agrarian economy, where agriculture accounts for more than 60% of the GDP and employs nearly 85% of the population[16]. According to World Bank estimates, Ethiopian economy was the third-fastest growing among those having 10 million or more population in the world (for the period 2000 to 2018), as measured by GDP per capita [20]. However, nearly a third of its population still lives below the poverty line and two-thirds have no education and limited access to health care services [21]. Despite remarkable improvements in child survival rates, both infant and child mortality rates are one of the highest in Sub-Saharan African countries [15]. Ethiopian national health policy emphasizes health care decentralization and prioritization of health promotion, disease prevention and basic curative services[22]. At the micro-level, the Essential Health Service Package (EHSP) has been used to guide service provision with a clear stratification of service delivery and financial arrangements [22]. The Ethiopian health system is a four-tier health care system, which is organized into Primary Health Care Units (PHCUs), District Hospitals, General Hospitals and Specialized Hospitals [23, 24]. Under each PHCU, there are five satellite Health Posts, each post serving approximately 5000 people. The PHC provides essential health care usually free for people living in rural areas [23, 24]. Health Extension Workers (HEW), deployed to each health post, are mandated to provide antenatal care, administer vaccines, conduct normal and safe deliveries, conduct monitoring of growth, provide nutrition counseling, offer family planning services, and organize referrals for services, hygiene and environmental sanitation, and health education and Communication [23, 24]. The EDHS of 2016 collected health-related information from women of reproductive ages 15–49 [15]. It is a cross-sectional household survey which employed a stratified two-stage cluster sample design. For the present analysis, the recoded data file of the EDHS, which contains entries for 10,641 respondents who had children under five years of age, was used. The EDHS data were collected from 645 enumeration areas (EA’s). The data file contains household and women’s characteristics, as well as child health information for the most recent birth. For the present analysis, only those who had the most recent birth (within three years prior to the survey date) were considered. Permission to use the data for the purposes of the present study was granted by ICF international (U.S.) and Central Statistics Authority (Ethiopia) (http://dhsprogram.com/data/Access‐Instructions’). Ethical approval was also received by the University of Saskatchewan Behavioral Research Ethics Board. For the regression analysis, four outcome variables were used. The first outcome was the child health service utilization score, which was constructed from the affirmative responses of six key child health interventions associated with the most recent birth: (1) ANC service (> 4 visits), (2) delivery of the last child at health facilities, (3) postnatal care services, (4) vitamin A intake, (5) iron supplementation and (6) intake of deworming by the index child. This outcome variable thus took a count form ranging from 0 to 6; taking a value of ‘0’ if the mothers’ response to the six indicators is “no,” and 6 if mothers respond ‘yes’ to all the six indicators. The three key health services (ANC, delivery, and postnatal care) were also used as separate outcome variables of their own to assess the likelihood of institutional delivery and postnatal care. Health service utilization behavior is thought to depend on a set of individual, parental, household, and community-level characteristics. Thus, the exposure variables in the current analysis were categorized into three major groups: maternal and child factors (which includes, birth order, mothers’ education, age, work status, mother’s level of exposure to intimate partners violence, ever experienced pregnancy termination, parity, access to information/radio), household factors (which include non-monetary wealth index, religion, and type of family structure) and community variables (residence and type of region). The type of region was constructed based on clustering/grouping of the 11 regions based on their urbanization level and categorized as highly urbanized (Addis Ababa, Dire Dawa andHarari), medium-level urbanization (Tigray, Amhara, Oromia, SNNP, Gambella) and least urbanized (Afar, Benishangul Gumuz and Somali). Most of the background variables (child’s sex, age, parental education, type of family structure, parity) were used the way they were coded in the original data. DHS constructed wealth index from selected key household assets and other characteristics that relate to economic status [25]. Intimate partner violence (IPV) was constructed from a set of dichotomous responses on a mother’s exposure to violence during a reference period of 12 months. The EDHS data are clustered (i.e., individuals are nested within households, and households are nested within the 645 enumeration areas/EAs) [25]. It is thus expected that mothers within the same cluster may have similarity. This violates the assumption of independence of observations across the clusters and, hence, limits the use of conventional regression as an outcome may be measured more than once on the same person [26]. Thus, a mixed effects regression was used. For the present analysis, the enumeration areas/EAs were used as clustering women respondents. mixed effects models are useful with data that have more than one source of random variability [26]. In this analysis, level one represents the individual (children characteristics), whereas level two is the cluster (community characteristics). Data were analyzed using STATA version 12 [27]. Two sets of analyses were conducted. In the primary analysis, a mixed effect Poisson regression model was used to assess the determinants of service utilization score, which takes a form of count/rate, and skewed to the right (Fig. 1). In the secondary analysis, mixed effect logistic regression was used to assess the role of ANC in subsequent service utilization. The analysis began with checking if there was any multicollinearity between the explanatory variables using tolerance test/variance inflation factors (VIF). Using the routine Collin in Stata, a VIF > 10 or mean VIF > 6 represents severe multicollinearity [28]. Then, the bivariate association between child health service utilization and each potential predictor was examined. All predictors statistically associated with a p value of < 0.2 at bivariate level were subsequently included in the multivariable regression models. The model selection criterion was the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC), and the level of statistical error was set to be 5%. In the final model, we used a p value of < 0.05 to define statistical significance. The ratio of Deviance and Degree of Freedom (Deviance/DF) was used to test the model fitness [29]. The fitness of the model was also compared with a negative binomial regression model using AIC values and dispersion scores. Distribution of the outcome variable: health service utilization scores, Ethiopia Further analysis of the continuum adherence to the health care service utilization was carried out using a mixed effect logistic regression model. The model hierarchically builds three separate models; model 1 contained predictors of ANC, model 2 adds ANC as a factor of the place of delivery, and model 3 included ANC and delivery place as key factors of postnatal care service utilization. All the analyses were weighted using the weight variable given by EDHS.

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Based on the provided description, here are some potential innovations that could improve access to maternal health in Ethiopia:

1. Mobile Health (mHealth) Solutions: Implementing mobile health technologies, such as text message reminders for antenatal care appointments and medication adherence, can help improve access to maternal health services, especially in remote areas.

2. Telemedicine: Introducing telemedicine services can enable pregnant women to consult with healthcare providers remotely, reducing the need for travel and increasing access to medical advice and support.

3. Community Health Workers: Expanding the role of community health workers can help bridge the gap between healthcare facilities and remote communities. These workers can provide basic maternal health services, education, and referrals, improving access to care.

4. Transportation Solutions: Developing innovative transportation solutions, such as mobile clinics or ambulance services, can help overcome geographical barriers and ensure that pregnant women can reach healthcare facilities in a timely manner.

5. Financial Incentives: Implementing financial incentives, such as conditional cash transfers or vouchers, can encourage pregnant women to seek and utilize maternal health services, particularly for those facing financial constraints.

6. Public-Private Partnerships: Collaborating with private healthcare providers can help expand the availability and accessibility of maternal health services, especially in underserved areas.

7. Health Education and Awareness: Implementing targeted health education campaigns can raise awareness about the importance of maternal health services and encourage women to seek care during pregnancy, delivery, and postnatal periods.

8. Strengthening Health Systems: Investing in the overall strengthening of health systems, including infrastructure, equipment, and healthcare workforce, can improve the quality and availability of maternal health services.

These are just a few potential innovations that could be considered to improve access to maternal health in Ethiopia. It’s important to assess the feasibility, effectiveness, and sustainability of these innovations in the local context before implementation.
AI Innovations Description
The recommendation based on the study is to promote proper antenatal care (ANC) services in order to improve access to maternal health services. The study found that ANC had a consistent positive impact on the utilization of delivery and postnatal care services. Specifically, ANC had the strongest effects on both institutional delivery and postnatal care service utilization.

To implement this recommendation, efforts should be made to ensure that pregnant women have access to and receive adequate ANC services. This can be achieved through various strategies, such as:

1. Strengthening healthcare infrastructure: Improving the availability and quality of ANC services by investing in healthcare facilities, equipment, and trained healthcare professionals. This includes ensuring that ANC services are accessible in both urban and rural areas.

2. Increasing awareness and education: Conducting awareness campaigns to educate pregnant women and their families about the importance of ANC and the benefits of utilizing maternal health services. This can be done through community outreach programs, media campaigns, and health education sessions.

3. Enhancing healthcare provider training: Providing training and capacity building programs for healthcare providers to ensure they have the necessary skills and knowledge to deliver high-quality ANC services. This includes training on best practices for ANC, communication skills, and cultural sensitivity.

4. Addressing barriers to access: Identifying and addressing barriers that prevent pregnant women from accessing ANC services, such as financial constraints, transportation issues, cultural beliefs, and lack of awareness. This may involve providing financial support, improving transportation options, and engaging with communities to address cultural barriers.

5. Monitoring and evaluation: Establishing a system for monitoring and evaluating the implementation and impact of ANC services. This includes tracking the utilization of ANC services, measuring the quality of care provided, and assessing the health outcomes of pregnant women and their infants.

By implementing these recommendations, it is expected that access to maternal health services will be improved, leading to better health outcomes for both mothers and infants.
AI Innovations Methodology
To improve access to maternal health in Ethiopia, here are some potential recommendations:

1. Strengthening Antenatal Care (ANC) Services: ANC plays a crucial role in promoting maternal health and preventing complications during pregnancy. Enhancing ANC services by increasing the number of visits, improving the quality of care, and providing comprehensive services can improve access to maternal health.

2. Promoting Institutional Delivery: Encouraging women to give birth in health facilities with skilled birth attendants can reduce maternal and neonatal mortality. Strategies such as providing financial incentives, improving transportation infrastructure, and addressing cultural barriers can help increase institutional delivery rates.

3. Enhancing Postnatal Care (PNC) Services: Postnatal care is essential for monitoring the health of both the mother and newborn after delivery. Expanding access to PNC services through home visits, community-based programs, and integrating PNC into existing health services can improve postpartum care utilization.

4. Increasing Health Education and Awareness: Educating women and communities about the importance of maternal health services, including ANC, institutional delivery, and PNC, can help overcome misconceptions and cultural barriers. Health promotion campaigns, community engagement, and targeted messaging can be effective strategies.

Methodology to simulate the impact of these recommendations on improving access to maternal health:

1. Data Collection: Collect data on key indicators related to maternal health, such as ANC visits, institutional delivery rates, and PNC utilization. This can be done through surveys, health facility records, and existing data sources like the Ethiopian Demographic and Health Surveys.

2. Baseline Assessment: Analyze the current state of access to maternal health services in Ethiopia, including identifying gaps and disparities. This will provide a benchmark against which the impact of the recommendations can be measured.

3. Modeling and Simulation: Use statistical modeling techniques, such as regression analysis or simulation models, to estimate the potential impact of the recommendations on improving access to maternal health. This involves analyzing the relationships between the recommendations and the desired outcomes, considering factors such as socio-demographic characteristics, geographic location, and health system capacity.

4. Sensitivity Analysis: Conduct sensitivity analysis to assess the robustness of the results and explore different scenarios. This can involve varying the parameters or assumptions used in the model to understand the potential range of outcomes.

5. Policy Recommendations: Based on the simulation results, provide evidence-based policy recommendations to stakeholders, policymakers, and healthcare providers. These recommendations should focus on addressing the identified barriers and promoting the implementation of effective interventions to improve access to maternal health services.

6. Monitoring and Evaluation: Continuously monitor and evaluate the implementation of the recommendations to assess their effectiveness and make necessary adjustments. This can involve tracking key indicators, conducting follow-up surveys, and engaging with stakeholders to ensure accountability and sustainability.

By following this methodology, policymakers and healthcare providers can gain insights into the potential impact of specific recommendations on improving access to maternal health in Ethiopia and make informed decisions to prioritize interventions and allocate resources effectively.

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