Factors influencing modes of transport and travel time for obstetric care: a mixed methods study in Zambia and Uganda.
@article{Sacks2016FactorsIM,
title={Factors influencing modes of transport and travel time for obstetric care: a mixed methods study in Zambia and Uganda.},
author={Emma Sacks and Daniel Vail and Katherine Austin-Evelyn and Dana Greeson and Lynn Atuyambe and Mubiana Macwan'gi and Margaret E. Kruk and Karen Ann Gr{\'e}pin},
journal={Health policy and planning},
year={2016},
volume={31 3},
pages={
293-301
}
}Transportation is an important barrier to accessing obstetric care for many pregnant and postpartum women in low-resource settings, particularly in rural areas. However, little is known about how pregnant women travel to health facilities in these settings. We conducted 1633 exit surveys with women who had a recent facility delivery and 48 focus group discussions with women who had either a home or a facility birth in the past year in eight districts in Uganda and Zambia. Quantitative data were…
26 Citations
Factors affecting home delivery among women living in remote areas of rural Zambia: a cross-sectional, mixed-methods analysis
- MedicineInternational journal of women's health
- 2018
Interventions to reduce home deliveries should potentially target not only those residing farthest away, but multigravida women, those who attend fewer antenatal visits, and those who do not utilize MWHs.
An assessment of geographical access and factors influencing travel time to emergency obstetric care in the urban state of Lagos, Nigeria
- MedicineHealth policy and planning
- 2021
The study objectives were to estimate more realistic travel times for pregnant women in emergency situations using Google Maps, determine system-level factors that influence travel time and use these estimates to assess CEmOC geographical accessibility and coverage in Lagos state, Nigeria.
Out-of-Pocket Expenditures for Delivery for Maternity Waiting Home Users and Non-users in Rural Zambia.
- Medicine, Political ScienceInternational journal of health policy and management
- 2021
Findings suggest that for women coming from far away, utilizing MWHs while awaiting delivery is not costlier overall than for women who deliver at a health facility but do not utilize a MWH.
Willingness to Pay for a Maternity Waiting Home Stay in Zambia
- Medicine, Political ScienceJournal of midwifery & women's health
- 2017
While Zambians seem to value and be willing to contribute a modest amount for maternity waiting home services, planners must still address potential barriers that may prevent women from staying at the shelters and address cash availability and affordability for the poorest households.
How a woman's interpersonal relationships can delay care-seeking and access during the maternity period in rural Zambia: An intersection of the Social Ecological Model with the Three Delays Framework
- MedicineSocial science & medicine
- 2019
Did Saving Mothers, Giving Life Expand Timely Access to Lifesaving Care in Uganda? A Spatial District-Level Analysis of Travel Time to Emergency Obstetric and Newborn Care
- MedicineGlobal Health: Science and Practice
- 2019
A spatial analysis of facility accessibility, taking into account road networks and environmental constraints on travel, suggests that the Saving Mothers, Giving Life (SMGL) initiative increased…
Institutional delivery and its associated factors: A community based cross-sectional study in Kavre district
- Medicine
- 2017
Utilization of institutional delivery was much higher than national figure and was associated with both educational status of mothers and their husband, and decision made by husband, mother in-law, father in-laws and other family members were also associated with institutional delivery.
Utilization of The Place of Delivery Based on Childbirth Assurance and Community Habits
- Medicine
- 2019
Childbirth assurance and community habits in choosing the place of delivery had a significant correlation with the use of delivery place, and logistic regression test showed that childbirth assurance and customs of the people in choosing where labor was the strongest determinant to use birth place.
Local adaptations to a global health initiative: penalties for home births in Zambia.
- Political Science, MedicineHealth policy and planning
- 2016
Findings indicate that community leaders in some districts-independently of formal programme directive-used fines to penalise women who delivered at home rather than in a facility, effectively introduced a new tax on poor rural women and may have deterred their utilization of postnatal and child health care services.
References
SHOWING 1-10 OF 30 REFERENCES
Distance, Transportation Cost, and Mode of Transport in the Utilization of Facility-Based Maternity Services: Evidence from Rural Bangladesh
- Medicine, Political ScienceInternational quarterly of community health education
- 2014
Findings suggest that facility-based maternal healthcare service utilization was very poor in Bangladesh, and women faced long distances and significant transportation cost to deliver at health facilities.
Utilization and Factors Affecting Delivery in Health Facility Among Recent Delivered Women in Nkasi District
- Medicine
- 2012
Maternal health services need to continuously sensitize to the community so that the number of pregnant mothers delivered in health facility increased to attain the National target and reduced maternal morbidity and mortality.
Determinants of delays in travelling to an emergency obstetric care facility in Herat, Afghanistan: an analysis of cross-sectional survey data and spatial modelling
- MedicineBMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
- 2015
Delays were mostly explained by the number of health facilities visited, and a husband’s large social network contributed to a delay, which needs to be clarified whether time is spent appropriately at lower-level facilities.
Travel time to maternity care and its effect on utilization in rural Ghana: a multilevel analysis.
- BusinessSocial science & medicine
- 2013
Barriers to skilled birth attendance: a survey among mothers in rural Gambia.
- Psychology, MedicineAfrican journal of reproductive health
- 2014
The findings suggest that the participants hold the knowledge and motivation that is necessary if practices are to be changed, and interventions aiming at ensuring timely transport of women to health facilities seem key to increased use of skilled birth attendants.
Assessing access barriers to maternal health care: measuring bypassing to identify health centre needs in rural Uganda.
- Medicine, Political ScienceHealth policy and planning
- 2009
The phenomenon of bypassing provides additional insight into the relative importance of distance or transport as opposed to internal facility factors preventing use of maternal health facility use in rural Uganda.
Drivers and deterrents of facility delivery in sub-Saharan Africa: a systematic review
- PsychologyReproductive Health
- 2013
Multivariate analysis suggests that maternal education, parity / birth order, rural / urban residence, household wealth / socioeconomic status, distance to the nearest facility, and number of antenatal care visits were the factors most consistently associated with FBD.
Facilitators and barriers to facility-based delivery in low- and middle-income countries: a qualitative evidence synthesis
- Medicine, Political ScienceReproductive Health
- 2014
Qualitative evidence related to the facilitators and barriers to delivering at health facilities in low- and middle-income countries are synthesized to provide a useful framework for better understanding how various factors influence the decision-making process and the ultimate location of delivery at a facility or elsewhere.
Using Vouchers to Increase Access to Maternal Healthcare in Bangladesh
- MedicineInternational quarterly of community health education
- 2009
Test of the feasibility and effectiveness of introducing financial support for poor rural women to improve utilization of antenatal care, delivery and postnatal check-up from trained service providers in Bangladesh shows that institutional deliveries have increased and utilization of ANC from trained providers has increased.
Women are still deprived of access to lifesaving essential and emergency obstetric care
- Medicine, Political ScienceInternational journal of gynaecology and obstetrics: the official organ of the International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics
- 2009


