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Wealth-related inequalities in the coverage of reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health interventions in 36 countries in the African Region

Fernando C. Wehrmeister, Cheikh Fayé, Inácio Crochemore‐Silva, Agbessi Amouzou, Leonardo Z. Ferreira, Safia S Jiwani, Dessalegn Y. Melesse, Martin Kavao Mutua, Abdoulaye Maïga, Tomé Cá, Estelle Sidze, Chelsea Maria Taylor, Kathleen Strong, Liliana Carvajal–Aguirre, Tyler Porth, Ahmad Reza Hosseinpoor, Aluísio J. D. Barros, Ties Boerma

2020Bulletin of the World Health Organization36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether sub-Saharan African countries have succeeded in reducing wealth-related inequalities in the coverage of reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health interventions. METHODS: We analysed survey data from 36 countries, grouped into Central, East, Southern and West Africa subregions, in which at least two surveys had been conducted since 1995. We calculated the composite coverage index, a function of essential maternal and child health intervention parameters. We adopted the wealth index, divided into quintiles from poorest to wealthiest, to investigate wealth-related inequalities in coverage. We quantified trends with time by calculating average annual change in index using a least-squares weighted regression. We calculated population attributable risk to measure the contribution of wealth to the coverage index. FINDINGS: We noted large differences between the four regions, with a median composite coverage index ranging from 50.8% for West Africa to 75.3% for Southern Africa. Wealth-related inequalities were prevalent in all subregions, and were highest for West Africa and lowest for Southern Africa. Absolute income was not a predictor of coverage, as we observed a higher coverage in Southern (around 70%) compared with Central and West (around 40%) subregions for the same income. Wealth-related inequalities in coverage were reduced by the greatest amount in Southern Africa, and we found no evidence of inequality reduction in Central Africa. CONCLUSION: Our data show that most countries in sub-Saharan Africa have succeeded in reducing wealth-related inequalities in the coverage of essential health services, even in the presence of conflict, economic hardship or political instability.

Topics & Concepts

InequalityIndex (typography)Psychological interventionPopulationGeographyComposite indexDeveloping countryDemographySocioeconomicsMedicineComposite indicatorEnvironmental healthEconomic growthEconomicsMathematicsMacroeconomicsWorld Wide WebPsychiatryComputer scienceMathematical analysisSociologyGlobal Maternal and Child HealthHealthcare Systems and ReformsChild Nutrition and Water Access
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