48 research outputs found
A multiple-method approach to studying childcare in an urban environment
This document summarizes findings from the Accra Urban Food and Nutrition Study (AUFNS) about the importance of care as an input to child nutrition and the relative contribution of various maternal and household resources to the provision of care.FCND ,Child care. ,Nutrition Ghana. ,
A multiple-method approach to studying childcare in an urban environment
This document summarizes findings from the Accra Urban Food and Nutrition Study (AUFNS) about the importance of care as an input to child nutrition and the relative contribution of various maternal and household resources to the provision of care.Child care. ,Nutrition Ghana. ,
Evaluating the economic outcomes of the policy of fee exemption for maternal delivery care in Ghana
Background: The Government of Ghana’s fee exemption policy for delivery care introduced in September 2003, aimed at reducing financial barriers to using maternal services. This policy also
aimed to increase the rate of skilled attendance at delivery, reduce maternal and perinatal mortality rates and contribute to reducing poverty. Objective: To evaluate the economic outcomes of the policy on households in Ghana. Methods: Central and Volta regions were selected for the study. In each region, six districts were selected. A two stage sampling approach was used to identify women for a household cost survey. A sample of 1500 women in Volta region (made up of 750 women each before and after the exemption policy) and 750 women after the policy was introduced in Central region. Outcome Measures: Household out-of-pocket payment for maternal delivery and catastrophic out-of-pocket health payments. Results: There was a statistically significant decrease in the mean out-of-pocket payments for caesarean section (CS) and normal delivery at health facilities after the introduction of the policy. The percentage decrease was highest for CS at 28.40% followed by normal delivery at 25.80%. The incidence of catastrophic out-of-pocket payments also fell. At lower thresholds, the incidence of catastrophic delivery payment was concentrated more amongst the poor. For the poorest group (1st quintile) household out-of-pocket payments in excess of 2.5% of their pre-payment income dropped from 54.54% of the households to 46.38% after the exemption policy. The policy had a more positive impact on the extreme poor than the poor. The richest households (5th quintile) had a decline in out-of-pocket payments of 21.51% while the poor households (1st quintile) had a 13.18% decline. Conclusions: The policy was beneficial to users of the service. However, the rich benefited more than the poor. There is need for proper targeting to identify the poorest of the poor before policies are implemented to ensure maximum benefit by the target group.This work was undertaken as part of an international research programme . Immpact (Initiative for Maternal Mortality Programme Assessment), funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Department for International Development, the European Commission and USAID
Impact of urban agriculture on livelihoods, food and nutrition security in Greater Accra
Meeting: Cities Feeding People : Lessons Learned From Projects in African Cities, 21-25 June 1998, Nairobi, K
Hospital based maternity care in Ghana : findings of a confidential enquiry into maternal deaths
Background: In Ghana, a universal free delivery policy was implemented to improve access to delivery care in health facilities, thereby improving access to skilled attendance and reducing maternal mortality. Objective: A confidential enquiry was conducted to ascertain if changes had occurred in the care provided by reviewing the care given to a sample of maternal deaths before and after introduction of the policy. Method: Twenty women who died as a result of pregnancy-related complications (maternal deaths) in selected hospitals in two regions were assessed by a clinical panel, guided by a maternal death assessment form. Unlike the traditional confidential enquiry process, both adverse and favourable factors were identified. Findings: Clinical care provided before and after the introduction of the fee exemption policy did not change, though women with complications were arriving in hospital earlier after the introduction of the policy. On admission, however, they received very poor care and this, the clinical panel deduced could have resulted in many avoidable deaths; as was the case before the implementation of the policy. Consumables, basic equipment and midwifery staff for providing comprehensive emergency obstetric care were however found to be usually available. Conclusion: Our findings suggest that the already poor delivery care services women received remained unchanged after introduction of the policy.This work was undertaken as part of an international research programme - Immpact (Initiative for Maternal Mortality Programme Assessment). See: http://www.abdn.ac.uk/immpact, funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Department for International Development (DFID), the European Commission and the Unites States Agency for International Development (USAID)
National fee exemption schemes for deliveries: comparing the recent experiences of Ghana and Senegal
Chapter in 'Reducing the financial barriers to access to obstetric care', edited by Richard, F., Witter, S. and De Brouwere, V. Studies in Health Services Organisation and Policy series. Antwerp: ITG Press.Continuing high maternal mortality ratios, especially in Africa, and high
discrepancies between richer and poorer households in relation to access to
maternal health care and maternal health status have focussed attention on
the importance of reducing financial barriers to skilled care.
This article compares the findings of two studies on national policies
exempting women from user fees for deliveries, conducted in Ghana in
2005-6 and in Senegal in 2006-7. The evaluations used a combination of
research methods, including key informant interviews, household surveys,
financial flows tracking, health worker incentive surveys, confidential
enquiry, clinical case note record extraction, community level interviews and
focus group discussions.
The detailed findings from each evaluation are presented, followed by
the broad lessons learnt from these similar (but not identical) policies. The
policies shared goals, and both were implemented in poorer regions initially
but then scaled up, using national resources. They demonstrate the potential
of fee exemption policies to increase utilisation. The cost per additional
assisted delivery was 21 (normal delivery) and
$467 (caesarean section) in Senegal. There was also some evidence of
reductions in inequalities of access.sch_iih24pub2731pu
Does geographic targeting of nutrition interventions make sense in cities?
Although most developing country cities are characterized by pockets of substandard housing and inadequate service provision, it is not known to what degree low incomes and malnutrition are confined to specific neighborhoods. This analysis uses representative household surveys of Abidjan and Accra to quantify small-area clustering in service provision, demographic characteristics, consumption, and nutrition. Both cities showed significant clustering in housing conditions but not in nutrition, while income was clustered in Abidjan, but less so in Accra. This suggests that neighborhood targeting of poverty-alleviation or nutrition interventions in these and similar cities could lead to undercoverage of the truly needy.Food consumption. ,Human Nutrition. ,Urban poor Africa. ,Malnutrition Africa. ,Africa. ,
Good care practices can mitigate the negative effects of poverty and low maternal schooling on children's nutritional status
This study uses data from a representative survey of households with preschoolers in Accra, Ghana to (1) examine the importance of care practices for children's height-for-age z-scores (HAZ); and (2) identify subgroups of children for whom good maternal care practices may be particularly important. Good caregiving practices related to child feeding and use of preventive health services were a strong determinant of children's HAZ, specially among children from the two lower income terciles and children whose mothers had less than secondary schooling. In this population, good care practices could compensate for the negative effects of poverty and low maternal schooling on children's HAZ. Thus, effective targeting of specific education messages to improve child feeding practices and use of preventive health care could have a major impact on reducing childhood malnutrition in Accra.Health services. ,Child care. ,Child Feeding. ,Poverty. ,
The constraints to good child care practices in Accra
Life in urban areas presents special challenges for maternal child care practices. Data from a representative survey of households with children less than 3 years of age in Accra were used to test a number of hypothesized constraints to child care, including various maternal (education, employment, marital status, age, health, ethnic group, migration status) and household-level factors (income, calorie availability, quality of housing and asset ownership, availability of services, household size, and crowding). An age-specific child care index was created using recall data on maternal child feeding practices and use of preventive health services. A hygiene index was created from spot check observations of proxies of hygiene behaviors. Multivariate analyses showed that maternal schooling was the most consistent constraint to both the care and the hygiene index. None of the household-level characteristics were associated with the care index, but better housing quality and access to garbage collection services were associated with better hygiene. Female head of household and larger family size were associated with poorer hygiene. The programmatic implications of these findings for nutrition education and behavior change interventions in Accra are discussed. The focus is on using the information to target the right practices to be modified as well as the main constraints to their adoption.FCND ,Child care. ,Ghana. ,Maternal and infant welfare Developing countries. ,Urban health. ,
Urban livelihoods and food and nutrition security in Greater Accra, Ghana
Published in collaboration with the Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research and WH