학술논문

Long travel times from health center to hospital reduce caesarean section access : a study from Kirehe District, Rwanda
Document Type
Source
Pan African Medical Journal. 46
Subject
Africa
C-section
decentralization
global surgery
Medicin och hälsovetenskap
Hälsovetenskap
Folkhälsovetenskap
global hälsa
socialmedicin och epidemiologi
Medical and Health Sciences
Health Sciences
Public Health
Global Health
Social Medicine and Epidemiology
Language
English
ISSN
1937-8688
Abstract
Introduction: timely access to safe cesarean section (c-section) delivery can save the lives of mothers and neonates. This paper explores how distance affects c-section access in rural sub-Saharan Africa, where women in labor present to health centers before being referred to district hospitals for surgical care. Methods: this study included all adult women delivering via c-section between April 2017 and March 2018 in Kirehe District, Rwanda. We assessed the association between travel times and village-level c-section rates. Results: the estimated travel time from home-to-health center was 26 minutes (IQR: 13, 41) and from health center-to-hospital was 43 minutes (IQR: 2, 59). There was no significant association between travel time from home-to-health center and c-section rates (RR=1.01, p=0.42), but the association was significant for health center-to-hospital travel times (RR=0.96, p=0.01); for every 15-minute increase in travel time, there was a 4% decrease in c-sections for a health center catchment area. Conclusion: in the context of decentralized health services, minimizing health center to hospital referral barriers is of utmost importance for improving c-section access in rural sub-Saharan Africa.