Keywords:
Maternal mortality
Prevention programs
Health interventions
Comprehensive
Health personnel
Training
Equipment supply
Cost sharing
Obstetric services
Emergency obstetric care
Cesarean sections
Quality of care
Accessibility
Standards
Burkina Faso
Africa, West
Abstract:
OBJECTIVE: To assess the effects of a comprehensive intervention (staff training, equipment, internal clinical audits, cost sharing system, patients-providers meetings) in improving cesarean delivery access and quality in an urban district of Burkina Faso. METHODS: We conducted a before-after study in the health district sector 30 in Ouagadougou between 2003 and 2006. We measured cesarean delivery quality (accessibility, diagnosis, procedure, postoperative follow-up) and maternal and neonatal health in 1371 sections. RESULTS: The number of cesarean deliveries performed increased each year, from 42 in 2003 to 630 in 2006. This increase happened without increase in maternal and perinatal post-cesarean mortality (respectively 1.1% and 3.6% in 2006). The cesarean delivery rate for women of the district increased from 1.9% to 3.3% of expected births between 2003 and 2005. CONCLUSION: To improve access to quality cesarean delivery, we have shown that it was necessary to have a systemic approach combining technical, operational, sociocultural, and political factors.