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Introduction: Nigeria has one of the highest maternal mortality ratios in the world as well as high perinatal mortality. Unfortunately, the country does not have the resources to assess this critical indicator with the conventional health information system and measuring its progress toward the goal of ending preventable maternal deaths is almost impossible. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) conducted a cross-sectional study to assess maternal and perinatal mortality in Makoko Riverine and Badia East, two of the most vulnerable slums of Lagos. Materials and methods: The study was a cross-sectional, community-based household survey. Nearly 4,000 households were surveyed. The sisterhood method was utilized to estimate maternal mortality and the preceding births technique was used to estimate newborn and child mortality. Questions regarding health seeking behavior were posed to female interviewees and self-reported data were collected. Results: Data was collected from 3963 respondents for a total of 7018 sisters ever married. The maternal mortality ratio was calculated at 1,050/100,000 live births (95% CI: 894-1215), and the lifetime risk of maternal death at 1:18. The neonatal mortality rate was extracted from 1967 pregnancies reported and was estimated at 28.4/1,000; infant mortality at 43.8/1,000 and under-five mortality at 103/1,000. Living in Badia, giving birth at home and belonging to the Egun ethnic group were associated with higher perinatal mortality. Half of the last pregnancies were reportedly delivered in private health facilities. Proximity to home was the main influencing factor (32.4%) associated with delivery at the health facility. Discussion: The maternal mortality ratio found in these urban slum populations within Lagos is extremely high, compared to the figure estimated for Lagos State of 545 per 100,000 live births. Urgent attention is required to address these neglected and vulnerable neighborhoods. Efforts should be invested in obtaining data from poor, marginalized, and hard-to-reach populations in order to identify pockets of marginalization needing additional resources and tailored approaches to guarantee equitable treatment and timely access to quality health services for vulnerable groups. This study demonstrates the importance of sub-regional, disaggregated data to identify and redress inequities that exist among poor, remote, vulnerable populations – as in the urban slums of Lagos.
We conducted a cross-sectional, community-based household survey, with the primary objective of estimating the maternal mortality ratio through the direct sisterhood method [16]. We also aimed to estimate perinatal mortality and to assess women’s health seeking behavior around pregnancy and childbirth. Perinatal mortality was assessed through the preceding births technique [17, 18, 19]. Data were collected from February to March 2012 within the framework of the ongoing activities of MSF-OCBA in Lagos. Ethical approval for this study was obtained from Lagos University Teaching Hospital, the Lagos State Ministry of Health and MSF’s Ethical Review Board. The survey targeted all males and females living in the urban slum communities of Makoko Riverine and Badia East between the ages of 15 and 49 years, who voluntarily agreed to participate in the study. The sampling frame was the population of each of the 2 catchment communities (Badia East and Makoko Riverine) and the sampling unit was the household. Data were obtained from approximately 4,000 households, randomly selected in two stages. Following a probability proportional to size approach, systematic random sampling was used to select households within the study communities. By proportion, as originally planned, 2,666 households (66.5%) were to be randomly selected in Makoko Riverine and 1,334 (33.5%) in Badia East, for an overall total of 4,000 households. However, after the study began, these proportions were adjusted slightly–increased for Makoko Riverine (to 3,015) and decreased for Badia East (to 948)–to take into account the unfortunate and unforeseen demolition of houses and consequent displacement of persons that occurred during the survey in Badia East, as well as the likely initial overestimation of the population residing full-time in Badia, as confirmed by MSF community outreach workers, in consultation with local community leaders in Badia East. Since estimating the maternal mortality ratio was the primary objective of this study, by estimating a total fertility rate (TFR) of 5.4, this sample size was chosen to be large enough to detect a MMR of 500 with a margin of error of 20% and a confidence interval of 95% [20]. One female or male who met the inclusion criteria of the study was randomly selected per household for the interview. In cases where no eligible respondent was present in the household, data collectors marked the house for a return visit. If, after one further attempt, still no eligible respondent was found at home, data collectors went on to the next nearest household with an eligible respondent present. In case of female household respondents, they were queried regarding their previous pregnancies through the preceding birth technique (within a recall period of 5 years) to estimate perinatal mortality, neonatal mortality, and infant mortality. Questions related to women’s health seeking behavior during pregnancy, delivery, and after delivery were also asked in relation to their last pregnancy (within a recall period of 2 years). Both men and women were asked questions about socio-economic status, survival or deaths of their adult sisters and births and deaths in the household over the preceding year, in order to estimate maternal mortality, under-five mortality, and crude (household) mortality rates of the previous year. Interviewers administered the questionnaires only after obtaining written informed consent from the interviewee. All questionnaires were anonymous. In accordance with the study objectives of estimating maternal and perinatal mortality specifically in Lagos, data were collected only on births and deaths that took place in Lagos. Thus, to avoid confounding factors of differing health systems, policies, and contexts beyond Lagos, births and deaths that occurred outside of Lagos, whether in another state of Nigeria or in another country such as Benin Republic or Togo, were excluded from the analysis. All questionnaires were pre-tested, piloted in the field, translated, and back-translated into the most common local languages in the study communities (Egun, Pidgin, and Yoruba). A data management strategy and field manual were developed to ensure clear and appropriate procedures were followed, including quality control. The quantitative data from household survey forms were double entered into EpiData version 3.1 statistical package (Lauritsen JM. (Ed.) EpiData Data Entry, Data Management and basic Statistical Analysis System. Odense Denmark, EpiData Association, 2000–2008). Completed data were initially exported to SPSS version 16 for first level data cleaning before being subsequently exported to STATA version 13 (StataCorp. 2013. Stata Statistical Software: Release 13. College Station, TX: StataCorp LP) for analysis. Results were reported as proportions for the descriptive, univariate analysis and chi-square test was used to determine whether there is an association (or relationship) between two categorical variables. Preference for the place of delivery has been modeled in a logistic regression with ethnic group, neighborhood of residence, illiteracy and working as a sex worker to assess any possible correlation: in this case we included the predictor in the model if the test had a p value ≤0.3. With the same approach we also investigated any possible association with PNM. All the hypotheses tested were 2-tailed, and we considered statistical significance only in the presence of p values <0.05. The calculation of the maternal mortality ratio was based on the sisterhood method expounded by Graham et al. [21]:MMR = 100,000 x (1- [1- total lifetime risk](1/Total Fertility Rate)). In our study, early neonatal death was defined as: death of a liveborn infant occurring fewer than 7 completed days from the time of birth out of the total live births; late neonatal death as: death of a liveborn infant occurring after 7 completed days of age but before 28 completed days out of the total live births; infant mortality: the number of deaths of children under one year of age out of the total live births; perinatal mortality rate: any death from the 22nd week of gestation up to the first week of life out of the total live births. We expressed these indicators as the number of such deaths per 1000 live births
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