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Volume 98, Issue 3, Pages 285-290 (September 2007)


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Declining maternal mortality ratio in Uganda: Priority interventions to achieve the Millennium Development Goal

A.K. MbonyeaCorresponding Author Informationemail address, M.G. Mutabazia, J.B. Asimweb, O. Sentumbwec, J. Kabarangirad, G. Nandae, V. Orindad

Received 15 November 2006; accepted 21 May 2007. published online 18 June 2007.

Abstract 

Purpose

We conducted a survey to determine availability of emergency obstetric care (EmOC) and to provide data for advocating for improved maternal and newborn health in Uganda.

Methods

The survey, covering 54 districts and 553 health facilities, assessed availability of EmOC signal functions, documented maternal deaths and the related causes. Three levels of health facilities were covered.

Findings

Few health units had running water; electricity or a functional operating theater. Yet having these items had a protective effect on maternal deaths as follows: theater (OR 0.56, P<0.0001); electricity (OR 0.39, P<0.0001); laboratory (OR 0.71, P<0.0001) and staffing levels (midwives) OR 0.20, P<0.0001. The availability of midwives had the highest protective effect on maternal deaths, reducing the case fatality rate by 80%. Further, most (97.2%) health facilities expected to offer basic EmOC, were not doing so. This is the likely explanation for the high health facility-based maternal death rate of 671/100,000 live births in Uganda.

Conclusion

Addressing health system issues, especially human resources, and increasingaccess to EmOC could reduce maternal mortality in Uganda and enable the country to achieve the Millennium Development Goal (MDG).

a Ministry of Health, Kampala, Uganda

b Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda

c WHO, Kampala, Uganda

d UNICEF, Kampala, Uganda

e Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, USA

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +256 772411668; fax: +256 41 321572.

PII: S0020-7292(07)00307-4

doi:10.1016/j.ijgo.2007.05.019


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