"Delivering" on the MDGs?: Equity and Maternal Health in Ghana, Ethiopia and Kenya
Objective(s): The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) have put maternal health in the mainstream, but there is a need to go beyond the MDGs to address equity within countries. We argue that MDG focus on maternal health is necessary but not sufficient. This paper uses Demographic and Health Survey (D...
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Veröffentlicht in: | East African journal of public health 2009-03, Vol.5 (3) |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Objective(s): The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) have put
maternal health in the mainstream, but there is a need to go beyond the
MDGs to address equity within countries. We argue that MDG focus on
maternal health is necessary but not sufficient. This paper uses
Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data from Kenya, Ethiopia and Ghana
to examine a set of maternal health indicators stratified along five
different dimensions. The study highlights the interactive and multiple
forms of disadvantage and demonstrates that equity monitoring for the
MDGs is possible, even given current data limitations. Methods: We
analyse DHS data from Ghana, Kenya and Ethiopia on four indicators:
skilled birth attendant, contraceptive prevalence rate, AIDS knowledge
and access to a health facility. We define six social strata along five
different dimensions: poverty status, education, region, ethnicity and
the more traditional wealth quintile. Data are stratified singly (e.g.
by region) and then stratified simultaneously (e.g. by region and by
education) in order to examine the compounded efect of dual forms of
vulnerability. Results: Almost all disparities were found to be
significant, although the stratifier with the strongest effect on
health outcomes varied by indicator and by country. In some cases,
urban-dwelling is a more significant advantage than wealth and in
others, educational status trumps poverty status. The nuances of this
analysis are important for policymaking processes aimed at reaching the
MDGs and incorporating maternal health in national development plans.
Conclusion(s): The article highlights the following key points about
inequities and maternal health: 1) measuring and monitoring inequity in
access to maternal health is possible even in low resource
settings-using current data 2) statistically significant health
gaps exist not just between rich and poor, but across other population
groups as well, and multiple forms of disadvantage confer greater risk
and 3) policies must be aligned with reducing health gaps in access to
key maternal health services. |
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ISSN: | 0856-8960 0856-8960 |
DOI: | 10.4314/eajph.v5i3.38991 |