Malawi three district evaluation: Community-based maternal and newborn care economic analysis

被引:8
|
作者
Greco, Giulia [1 ]
Daviaud, Emmanuelle [2 ]
Owen, Helen [1 ]
Ligowe, Reuben [3 ]
Chimbalanga, Emmanuel [3 ]
Guenther, Tanya [4 ]
Gamache, Nathalie [4 ]
Zimba, Evelyn [3 ]
Lawn, Joy E. [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, Keppel St, London WC1E 7HT, England
[2] South African Med Res Council, Cape Town, South Africa
[3] Save Children, Lilongwe, Malawi
[4] Save Children, Saving Newborn Lives, Washington, DC USA
基金
英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
cost; economic; maternal; community; community health worker; health promotion; health surveillance assistants; home visit; Malawi; newborn; WOMENS GROUPS; RURAL MALAWI; HEALTH; SURVIVAL; TRIAL; RATES;
D O I
10.1093/heapol/czw079
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Malawi is one of few low-income countries in sub-Saharan Africa to have met the fourth Millennium Development Goal for child survival (MDG 4). To accelerate progress towards MDGs, the Malawi Ministry of Health's Reproductive Health Unit - in partnership with Save the Children, UNICEF and others - implemented a Community Based Maternal and Newborn Care (CBMNC) package, integrated within the existing community-based system. Multi-purpose Health Surveillance Assistants (HSAs) already employed by the local government were trained to conduct five core home visits. The additional financial costs, including donated items, incurred by the CBMNC package were analysed from the perspective of the provider. The coverage level of HSA home visits (35%) was lower than expected: mothers received an average of 2.8 visits rather than the programme target of five, or the more reasonable target of four given the number of women who would go away from the programme area to deliver. Two were home pregnancy and less than one, postnatal, reflecting greater challenges for the tight time window to achieve postnatal home visits. As a proportion of a 40 hour working week, CBMNC related activities represented an average of 13% of the HSA work week. Modelling for 95% coverage in a population of 100,000, the same number of HSAs could achieve this high coverage and financial programme cost could remain the same. The cost per mother visited would be US$6.6, or US$1.6 per home visit. The financial cost of universal coverage in Malawi would stand at 1.3% of public health expenditure if the programme is rolled out across the country. Higher coverage would increase efficiency of financial investment as well as achieve greater effectiveness.
引用
收藏
页码:64 / 74
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Uganda Newborn Study (UNEST) trial: Community-based maternal and newborn care economic analysis
    Ekirapa-Kiracho, Elizabeth
    Barger, Diana
    Mayora, Chripus
    Waiswa, Peter
    Lawn, Joy E.
    Kalungi, James
    Namazzi, Gertrude
    Kerber, Kate
    Owen, Helen
    Daviaud, Emmanuelle
    HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING, 2017, 32 : 42 - 52
  • [2] Bolivia programme evaluation of a package to reach an underserved population: Community-based maternal and newborn care economic analysis
    Barger, Diana
    Pooley, Bertha
    Roger Dupuy, Julien
    Cardenas, Norma Amparo
    Wall, Steve
    Owen, Helen
    Daviaud, Emmanuelle
    HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING, 2017, 32 : 75 - 83
  • [3] Improving Newborn Survival in Southern Tanzania (INSIST) trial; community-based maternal and newborn care economic analysis
    Manzi, Fatuma
    Daviaud, Emmanuelle
    Schellenberg, Joanna
    Lawn, Joy E.
    John, Theopista
    Msemo, Georgina
    Owen, Helen
    Barger, Diana
    Hanson, Claudia
    Borghi, Josephine
    HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING, 2017, 32 : 33 - 41
  • [4] Overview, methods and results of multi-country community-based maternal and newborn care economic analysis
    Daviaud, Emmanuelle
    Owen, Helen
    Pitt, Catherine
    Kerber, Kate
    Jassir, Fiorella Bianchi
    Barger, Diana
    Manzi, Fatuma
    Ekipara-Kiracho, Elizabeth
    Greco, Giulia
    Waiswa, Peter
    Lawn, Joy E.
    HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING, 2017, 32 : 6 - 20
  • [5] South-Africa (Goodstart III) trial: community-based maternal and newborn care economic analysis
    Daviaud, Emmanuelle
    Nkonki, Lungiswa
    Ijumba, Petrida
    Doherty, Tanya
    Lawn, Joy E.
    Owen, Helen
    Jackson, Debra
    Tomlinson, Mark
    HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING, 2017, 32 : 53 - 63
  • [6] Contribution of community-based newborn health promotion to reducing inequities in healthy newborn care practices and knowledge: evidence of improvement from a three-district pilot program in Malawi
    Jennifer A Callaghan-Koru
    Bareng AS Nonyane
    Tanya Guenther
    Deborah Sitrin
    Reuben Ligowe
    Emmanuel Chimbalanga
    Evelyn Zimba
    Fannie Kachale
    Rashed Shah
    Abdullah H Baqui
    BMC Public Health, 13
  • [7] Contribution of community-based newborn health promotion to reducing inequities in healthy newborn care practices and knowledge: evidence of improvement from a three-district pilot program in Malawi
    Callaghan-Koru, Jennifer A.
    Nonyane, Bareng A. S.
    Guenther, Tanya
    Guenther, Tanya
    Sitrin, Deborah
    Ligowe, Reuben
    Chimbalanga, Emmanuel
    Zimba, Evelyn
    Kachale, Fannie
    Shah, Rashed
    Baqui, Abdullah H.
    BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2013, 13
  • [8] Assessing Maternal Adherence to WHO's Essential Newborn Care Practices in Libo Kemekem District: A Community-Based Study
    Workie, Hailemariam Mekonnen
    Esey, Habtamu Tadele
    Shiferaw, Birhanu Melaku
    Asress, Fetlework Workineh
    GLOBAL PEDIATRIC HEALTH, 2024, 11
  • [9] Multi-country analysis of the cost of community health workers kits and commodities for community-based maternal and newborn care
    Barger, Diana
    Owen, Helen
    Pitt, Catherine
    Kerber, Kate
    Sitrin, Deborah
    Mayora, Chrispus
    Guenther, Tanya
    Daviaud, Emmanuelle
    Lawn, Joy E.
    HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING, 2017, 32 : 84 - 92
  • [10] Community-based newborn care: are we there yet?
    Bhutta, Zulfiqar A.
    Soofi, Sajid
    LANCET, 2008, 372 (9644): : 1124 - 1126