Background: Aggregate urban health statistics mask inequalities. We described maternity care in
vulnerable slum communities in Mumbai, and examined differences in care and outcomes between
more and less deprived groups.
Methods: We collected information through a birth surveillance system covering a population of
over 280 000 in 48 vulnerable slum localities. Resident women identified births in their own
localities and mothers and families were interviewed at 6 weeks after delivery. We analysed data
on 5687 births over one year to September 2006. Socioeconomic status was classified using
quartiles of standardized asset scores.
Results: Women in higher socioeconomic quartile groups were less likely to have married and
conceived in their teens (Odds ratio 0.74, 95% confidence interval 0.69–0.79, and 0.82, 0.78–0.87,
respectively). There was a socioeconomic gradient away from public sector maternity care with
increasing socioeconomic status (0.75, 0.70–0.79 for antenatal care and 0.66, 0.61–0.71 for
institutional delivery). Women in the least poor group were five times less likely to deliver at home
(0.17, 0.10–0.27) as women in the poorest group and about four times less likely to deliver in the
public sector (0.27, 0.21–0.35). Rising socioeconomic status was associated with a lower
prevalence of low birth weight (0.91, 0.85–0.97). Stillbirth rates did not vary, but neonatal mortality
rates fell non-significantly as socioeconomic status increased (0.88, 0.71–1.08).
Conclusion: Analyses of this type have usually been applied across the population spectrum from
richest to poorest, and we were struck by the regularly stepped picture of inequalities within the
urban poor, a group that might inadvertently be considered relatively homogeneous. The poorest
slum residents are more dependent upon public sector health care, but the regular progression
towards the private sector raises questions about its quality and regulation. It also underlines the
need for healthcare provision strategies to take account of both sectors