Uganda’sโค Maternal & Newborn Care Faces Critical Gapsโ Despite Increased Facility โBirths, New Analysis Reveals
KAMPALA,โ UGANDA -โฃ Despite aโ rise โคin births occurring at health facilities acrossโ Uganda, a new analysis of national survey data reveals important shortcomings in teh quality ofโ maternal and newborn care, potentially undermining the gains made in access to deliveryโ services. The study, published in BMC Health Services Research in November 2023, highlights critical gaps in essential interventions, supply chain functionality, and emergency obstetric care, raising concerns about the well-being of mothers โandโค newborns nationwide.
The analysis, leveraging data from the 2022 Uganda Demographic โand Health Survey (UDHS)โ and the 2023 Harmonized Health Facility Assessment (HHFA), underscores that simply โขdelivering at a health facilityโค does not guarantee effective care. While facility births have increased, the availability ofโฃ crucial resources – like functional medical equipment, essential medicines,โฃ and skilled โbirth attendants consistently providingโ quality care – remains unevenly distributed and often inadequate, notably in โrural โฃareas and public facilities. This posesโค a ample risk โto maternal โขand newborn healthโค outcomes in a contry where, despite progress, maternal โmortality remains a significant public health challenge.
Researchers found substantial โvariations in the provision of key โmaternal and newborn health services.The study points to deficiencies in antenatal care,including inconsistent screening โfor โขpre-eclampsia and gestational diabetes. Postnatal care also โlags,with limited access to essential โservices like postpartum hemorrhage management and newborn resuscitation. These โgaps โขareโฃ compounded by weaknesses inโข the health supplyโ chain, impacting theโข consistent availability of vital commodities.
Specifically, theโค analysisโ draws on data indicating โฃchallenges in emergency โobstetric โcare (EOC) โฃaccess. A 2024 โstudy published in Global health Science and Practice (Birabwa et al., 2024, pmid:39662976) detailed the complexities of care-seeking pathways inโ kampala, revealing barriers to accessing timely EOC even in an โฃurban setting.This alignsโค with findings from the 2018 Service โฃAvailability and Readiness Assessment (SARA) โคconducted by the Uganda Ministry of Health, which identified systemic issues inโค the functionality of health facilities andโ the availability of essential supplies (Uganda Ministry ofโฃ Health, 2018).
Further exacerbating โขthe situation are documented issues within the health supply chain system. Studies by Lugada et al. (2022, pmid:35232485 & 36199111)โฃ highlight current issues, structural weaknesses, โฃand performance deficits impacting the delivery of essential health commodities to facilities. Theseโ supply chainโ challenges directly affect the availability of life-saving medicationsโ andโ equipment needed for both routine and emergencyโ maternal andโ newborn care.
The study emphasizes โthe โขneed for a comprehensive approach to strengthening maternalโ and newborn health services โฃin Uganda. This includesโข targeted investments in infrastructure,workforce development,supply chain management,and qualityโ enhancement initiatives.โ Addressingโ these systemic โฃchallenges is crucial to โคtranslate โincreased facility births intoโค tangible improvementsโ in maternal and newborn survival and well-being, and to โขensure equitable access to quality care for all Ugandan womenโข and their newborns. The findings โcall for renewed โfocus on notโข just where โค births take โplace,โค but how care is delivered โwithin those facilities.