Skilled birth attendant services in Nepal: overcoming barriers to utilization
Abstract
Background
Skilled birth attendants (SBAs) provide important services that improve maternal and newborn health and reduce maternal and newborn mortality. Utilization and coverage of SBA services reveal wide disparities between the rural and urban areas of Nepal.
Aims
This thesis aimed to identify the barriers to SBA service utilization in Nepal and develop and test a community intervention to address those barriers and increase service utilization.
Methods
Mixed-methods research was applied to identify barriers to SBA service utilization, followed by an intervention to address those barriers. Status of SBA service utilization and associated factors were investigated using cross-sectional surveys in rural settings of mid- and far-western Nepal and in an urban setting in the Jhaukhel-Duwakot Health Demographic Surveillance Site, Bhaktapur, Nepal. The qualitative study explored perceptions of service users and providers regarding barriers to SBA service utilization and suggestions to overcome those barriers. After identifying such barriers, we designed, implemented, and evaluated a five-component community intervention. The intervention was designed as a cluster-randomized controlled trial involving 36 Village Development Committees.
Results
Cross-sectional surveys showed that the utilization of SBA services at delivery was 48% in mid- and far-western Nepal and 93.1% in the JD-HDSS. Distance to a health facility and inadequate transport were major barriers to SBA service utilization. Similarly, inadequate knowledge of women and their families regarding the importance of SBA services and low prioritization of birth care hindered such utilization. Women’s knowledge of danger signs of pregnancy and delivery and their educational attainment were determining factors in SBA service utilization. Women who had completed at least four antenatal care (ANC) visits were more likely to use skilled birth care. Our one-year intervention was associated with increased use of skilled birth care services (OR=1.57; CI: 1.19–2.08). However, there was no significant association of the intervention with the use of ANC services.
Conclusions
There is an urgent need to increase the utilization of SBA services in rural areas of Nepal and address the rural–urban gap in such utilization. An effective intervention for increasing SBA utilization includes mobilizing active community groups, improving service quality and physical infrastructure at health facilities, providing adequate SBAs at health facilities, and implementing longer-term and repeated interventions. Community mobilization efforts are effective, but such efforts require supervision and support to ensure quality of the implementation.
Parts of work
I. Choulagai B, Onta S, Subedi N, Mehata S, Bhandari GP, Poudyal A, Shrestha B, Mathai M, Petzold M, Krettek A.
Barriers to using skilled birth attendants' services in mid- and far-western Nepal: a cross-sectional study
BMC International Health and Human Rights 2013; 13:49. ::DOI::10.1186/1472-698X-13-49 II. Onta S*, Choulagai B*, Shrestha B, Subedi N, Bhandari GP, Krettek A.
Perceptions of users and providers on barriers to utilizing skilled birth care in mid- and far-western Nepal: a qualitative study (*Shared first authorship)
Global Health Action 2014; 7:24580. ::DOI::10.3402/gha.v7.24580 III. Choulagai BP, Aryal UR, Shrestha B, Vaidya A, Onta S, Petzold M, Krettek A. Jhaukhel-Duwakot Health Demographic Surveillance Site, Nepal: 2012 follow-up survey and use of skilled birth attendants
Global Health Action 2015; 8:29396.
::DOI::10.3402/gha.v8.29396 IV. Choulagai BP, Onta S, Subedi N, Bhatta DN, Shrestha B, Petzold M, Krettek A. A cluster-randomized evaluation of an intervention to increase skilled birth attendant utilization in mid- and far-western Nepal. Health Policy and Planning 2017 May 4. ::DOI::10.1093/heapol/czx045
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Medicine)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Inst of Medicine. Department of Internal Medicine and Clinical Nutrition
Disputation
Fredagen den 9 juni 2017, kl. 9.00, Hörsal Arvid Carlsson, Academicum, Medicinaregatan 3, Göteborg
Date of defence
2017-06-09
bishnu.p.choulagai@gu.se
bishnuc@gmail.com
Date
2017-05-18Author
Choulagai, Bishnu Prasad
Keywords
Public health
Epidemiology
Maternal health
Newborn health
Intervention
Cluster-randomized controlled trial
Health services research
Implementation research
Mixed-methods research
Nepal
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-629-0186-8 (PDF)
978-91-629-0165-1 (Print)
Language
eng